Skip to content
Book a Call
contact
Book a Call
contact

JohnThackara

designing for life

JohnThackara

designing for life

  • most read
  • biodiversity
  • bioregioning
  • care
  • civic ecology
  • commoning
  • development
  • earth repair
  • energy
  • food systems
  • green finance
  • knowing
  • moving
  • nature-connection
  • urban-rural
  • Blog
  • About
    • About my work
    • Profile
    • Talks & Conversations
    • Publications
    • Urban-Rural Projects
    • Videos
  • Meet in France
    • Meet in France
    • MeetUp
    • Offsite
    • Retreat (self directed)
  • Handouts
  • Archive
Homeadmin2023-08-09T18:07:42+00:00
  • January 22, 2010

    energy

    20. Bubble-glazing

    bubbleglazing.jpg
    Here is a late addition – number 20 – to our story of last week: 19 reasons to be cheerful after Copenhagen.
    Instructions: cut-to-fit; spray with water; bubbles face inwards. Done.
    (thx Miranda, for the new word)

  • January 18, 2010

    most read

    Doors of Perception projects portfolio

    green-shoot-in-rock.png
    Bulb-planting has started early at Doors HQ:
    – We’ve posted summary descriptions of the last ten years’ Doors of Perception projects – the idea being that we plan to do more projects like these ones, only better.
    – All City Eco Lab posts [continue …]

  • December 19, 2009

    most read

    19 reasons to be cheerful after Copenhagen (+1)

    The outcome of Copenhagen is depressing if you only look at what happened at the official summit, and persist in the belief that those guys are “world leaders”. They are not: they are followers, guardians of a dying regime. So don’t look at them. Hundreds of thousand [continue …]

  • December 15, 2009

    civic ecology

    Designing an associative life

    Government departments or ministries responsible for sustainability, or “the environment”, are too often constrained by small budgets and modest influence. Their very existence allows traditional departments – “industry”, “economic affairs”, “finance” or “transport” – to carry on their ecocidal ways as normal.

    A similar problem persists in business where Corporate Social [continue …]

  • December 15, 2009

    urban-rural

    Territorial development books

    rencontre_fete.jpg
    It has always been a point of pride at Doors of Perception events to curate the bookstore as carefully as we curate the speakers. We do this because when a conference theme cuts across disciplines – as ours do – no single bookseller is likely [continue …]

  • December 12, 2009

    development

    Hand-made clothes for all

    IMG_2894.JPG
    This Louis Vuitton ad features shoes which cost about 600 euros (US$700) in the shops. I don’t know how much Louis Vuitton pays for them, and I don’t know how much they will be paying Tony Blair to help [continue …]

  • December 3, 2009

    development | most read

    From King Parakramabahu to ethical fashion

    KingRaindrops.png
    Some people blame the Enlightenment for our present troubles.

    The scientific revolution, they say, gave man ideas above his station. We frequently harm natural systems, goes the charge, because of our delusional belief that we are separate from, and have dominion over, nature.

    This [continue …]

  • November 23, 2009

    knowing

    In the Palace of the Popes

    Is culture something that’s produced to be sold, or a description of the ways people live? It’s an old question, but last week’s Forum d’Avignon (see also my story below) put a new spin on it: could the culture industries lead the way out of the economic crisis?
    The debate [continue …]

  • November 18, 2009

    green finance

    Post-GDP: metrics, aesthetics, or ethics?

    1653-1258553610-statues-iles-de-paques---450x337.jpg
    So on Friday I’m immoderating a panel discussion about “After GDP” at the Forum d’Avignon, a uniquely French event which brings the worlds of culture, economy and media together in the Palais des Papes. By way of throwing an advance stone into the [continue …]

  • November 15, 2009

    perception

    epa!

    pic-4-jt_blog.jpg
    The highlight of my visit to Musashino Art University’s 80th Anniversary was this stunning fashion show called epa! (Thanks, Tatsu, for the pictures). An incredible amount of fine handwork was involved in the clothes and acccessories, but what struck me most was the [continue …]

  • November 12, 2009

    food systems

    From FarmVille to TransitionVille

    articleLarge.jpg
    If I were a PsyOps specialist at Monsanto, I’d have invented FarmVille. More than 62 million people have signed up to play the Facebook game since it made its debut in June, with 22 million logging on at least once a [continue …]

  • November 9, 2009

    urban-rural

    Spacing in

    spacing-radio011.jpg
    As you may have read in this month’s newsletter, I’m a new fan of Spacing. This excellent new-paradigm magazine and multi-city blog (Toronto, Montreal, Ottawa, Atlantic, including Halifax) features daily dispatches from the streets of these places on “just about anything that involves the [continue …]

  • November 6, 2009

    energy

    Tech push and social pull

    I’ve been reading a special issue of Innovations called “Energy for Change: Creating Climate Solutions” which claims to be “as thorough a survey of energy and climate solutions as has yet been compiled”. (I’m not putting a link here because the publisher – naughtily – has changed a contents page [continue …]

  • November 2, 2009

    food systems

    Melons we can believe in

    Simon Johnson, former chief economist of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), told the US Congress last week that Japan’s debt path was out of control. Simon warned of “a real risk that Japan could end up in a major default”. [The IMF expects Japan’s gross public debt to reach [continue …]

  • November 1, 2009

    knowing

    High entropy? Moi?

    tokyo-mirrors.png
    When I first came to Tokyo, fashionable parts of the city would be lined with hundreds of heavy taxis sitting in queues with their engines running, for hours on end. Every powered item was always on, 24/7. Tokyo Metropolitan Government has [continue …]

  • October 11, 2009

    development

    Transition countries and transition towns

    I went to Poznan, in Poland, to speak at a conference called World Innovation Days. In brushing up on the history of the Wielkopolska region [of which Poznan is the capital] I was reminded that Central and Eastern countries of Europe are still called “Transition Countries” – as in, transitioning [continue …]

  • October 6, 2009

    green finance

    Do true cost economics spell finito for the Milan design scene?

    Few artefacts embody so much mental, but also material energy, as a high design furniture from Milan. Will this sector be viable when the true social and environmental costs of industrial production start to be charged, rather than hidden?
    Well maybe, and maybe not: my lecture is followed by [continue …]

  • October 5, 2009

    urban-rural

    Cities of Design

    site1254369633.jpg
    At a conference in St Etienne next month ‘Cities of Design’ including Minneapolis, Montreal, Quebec, Toronto, Seoul, Portland, Eindhoven and Dortmund will all be represented. Personally I think either that all cities should be design cities – or perhaps that none should if the [continue …]

  • October 5, 2009

    development

    Do you want to be exhibited in New Delhi? in three days from now?

    Our good friends at Quicksand in Delhi (together with B.L.O.T. and Codesign) are curating an art event from start to finish in four days. It’s called “Pop Up Arthouse” and they invite creative people everywhere to submit works that will be shown at Mocha Arthouse, Vasant Kunj, in [continue …]

  • October 5, 2009

    perception

    The Buckminster Fuller Challenge

    ENTER_challenge_logo_website.jpg
    I’m extremely honoured to be on the jury for the next Buckminster Fuller Challenge. More importantly, there’s a $100,000 prize at stake – so do check it out. I quote the introduction: “There is a movement afoot–of highly motivated individuals all over the world [continue …]

  • September 8, 2009

    development

    Classroom design competition – two winners announced

    AllListApril3_Winners_xArea_2_Image.jpg
    Our friends at Architecture for Humanity ask that we spread the word that the winners of its 2009 challenge have been announced – and we are happy to do that.
    The accompanying press release quotes a World Bank estimate [continue …]

  • September 7, 2009

    development

    China’s clean little secret

    180px-River_algae_Sichuan.jpg
    As an experiment this weekend, I went through all 192 stories tagged “China” on a major eco website. More than 90 per cent of its posts were about at least bad, and often terrible, environmental news and developments.
    It’s not that [continue …]

  • August 11, 2009

    food systems | most read

    Fish systems and design

    fishmonger_seattle.jpg
    A grim new film, The End of the Line, reveals the impact of overfishing on our oceans. It exposes the extent to which global stocks of fish are dwindling; features scientists who warn we could see the end [continue …]

  • August 3, 2009

    food systems

    How much is a school garden worth?

    48328356.jpg
    One in nine Americans already relies on federal food stamps to help buy groceries – a startling number that will grow as unemployment rises. At the same time, medical spending on obesity – a major cause of diabetes, stroke and heart [continue …]

  • July 29, 2009

    development

    From philanthrocapitalism to an eco-social economy

    ReachingforImpact.jpg
    This scary hand smashing through the wall to get you is the logo of last month’s Insead conference on social entrepreneurship; its slogan was “Reaching For Impact”.
    I’ve written critically here before about the assumptions that underly “design [continue …]

  • July 8, 2009

    food systems

    From permaculture punks to anaerobic digesters

    digestor-03.jpg
    I came across a fascinating essay about permaculture and energy descent in Mexico that introduces me for the first time to the existence of so-called permaculture punks in Mexico City. Its author, Holger Hieronimi, has spent the last seven years developing a permaculture [continue …]

  • July 5, 2009

    knowing

    Metrics and Aesthetics (cont.)

    OECDB.png
    I can understand why Enrico Giovannini, Chief Statistician of the OECD, is so pleased with with his new visualzation tool, the OECD Factbook Explorer. Few people on the planet can be responsible for a larger volume of statistics than he is [continue …]

  • July 1, 2009

    energy

    New questions for the Internet of Things

    dcfwgkt_8g2dvxgdg_b2.jpg
    For Gunter Pauli it’s the sight of electronic devices that need batteries or electric wires in order to function. For me it’s hard or paved surfaces. For Usman Haque, it’s these pigs in a poke.

    These [continue …]

  • June 30, 2009

    urban-rural

    Four Days Halifax (week of sustainability events, Halifax Nova Scotia, 2009)

    halifaxNS+dog.jpg
    Doors of Perception helped to organize Four Days Halifax – a time-compressed mini-festival whose aim was to help the city get its hands muddy in a green economy
    Our starting point in Four Days was that many elements [continue …]

  • June 25, 2009

    energy

    2012 Imperative Teach-In (Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 2009)

    Teach-in_v2_sm.jpg
    Designers have an important role to play as enablers of the a transition to a sustainable system. As a society, we have the capacity to create systems that will allow us to live within the limits of the earth’s ecosystem. But the necessary changes are [continue …]

  • June 22, 2009

    development

    Do we need any more things?

    Well, it’s a question. All objects use resources, and have consequences. It’s one of the topics i touched on during my lecture at the LIFT conference in Marseille last week.

  • June 10, 2009

    food systems

    Urban farming: the new dot com?

    In September a new event called Agriculture 2.0 will introduce a select group of alternative agriculture entrepreneurs to investors. SPIN-Farming LLC, together with NewSeed Advisors will co-host Agriculture 2.0 in New York.
    Roxanne Christensen, co-author of the SPIN-Farming online learning series, says a wave of innovators is developing [continue …]

  • June 8, 2009

    food systems

    Dodo and chips

    bbb.potatoshelsinkii.jpg
    Before my recent visit to Helsinki, I was told by one of its members, Päivi Raivio, that I needed to know about an environmental organisation there called Dodo. And so it transpired that I was taken in conditions of some secrecy to this [continue …]

  • June 6, 2009

    commoning

    Hackers help government to open up

    Paul Jongsma draws my attention to an intriguing event on 13 June called HackdeOverheid (Hack the government). HackdeOverheid will focus on building prototypes or web platforms that demonstrate in practise how government services can be improved when they are based on open-ness. The idea is to harness the passion of [continue …]

  • June 2, 2009

    urban-rural

    In transition

    Fui So means “ability to rejuvenate” in Mandarin. I learned this from Wong Lai-yin, a Chinese participant in last week’s Transition Towns event in London.
    TTconfBi.jpg
    TTconfAi.jpg
    TTconfDi.jpg [continue …]

  • May 31, 2009

    food systems

    One mound at a time

    I’ve been on the road most of this month talking and meeting and transitioning (see above) like mad – but not actually dong anything practical. So yesterday I spent the day up in the mountains helping to construct a bio-intensive, multi-layered planting bed under the instruction of a noted agro-ecologist [continue …]

  • May 28, 2009

    knowing

    What should Aalto University do, and be?

    A major new university is to be named after the Finnish architect and designer Alvar Aalto. Aalto University which opens in 2010, is the result of a merger between the Helsinki School of Economics (Finland’s top business school, with 4,000 students); the University of Art and Design [continue …]

  • May 26, 2009

    development

    The Landfill Designers (Programme for BBC Radio 4, 2009)

    BBC.landfill.jpg
    The term ‘planned obsolescence’ was coined in the 1950s but has never been more relevant. Our desire to possess the latest style can mean more in landfill, and more children in China and India sifting through toxic waste. But some argue that a fast turnover [continue …]

  • May 8, 2009

    care | commoning

    Doctors with iPhones

    I’ve been back from New York a week and I’m still mesmerised by the story of Hello Health. Tamara Giltsoff, a service designer, introduced me to this wondrous new outfit who are making it easy again to see the doctor.
    helllohealthlve.png
    The [continue …]

  • May 8, 2009

    civic ecology

    After the High life?

    Highline.jpg
    I was taken on a sneak preview visit to The High Line in New York. It’s an elevated public park on a 1.5 mile elevated railway that runs along the West Side of Manhattan. Everyone is rightly proud that this historic rail structure has [continue …]

  • May 4, 2009

    most read

    Clean Growth: From Mindless Development to Design Mindfulness

    cleangrowthimage.png
    I’ve written this White Paper, called Clean Growth: From Mindless Development to Design Mindfulness for Design Innovation Scotland. It’s the first in a series whose aim is “to stimulate thought and debate about…radical solutions to real-world challenges”. The intended readers are regional economic development professionals [continue …]

  • May 3, 2009

    newsletter

    With the iBorg in New York

    The May edition of Doors of Perception Report (our monthly email newsletter) is now available
    here

  • May 2, 2009

    care

    Call from system: Chill !

    Intel1.png
    Intel2.png
    Mobile phones tend to be personal devices and Intel plans to take that further – a lot further.
    Researchers Margaret Morris and Farzin Guilak are developing “mobile therapy” – a system of just-in-time personal coaching, by the system, that is triggered [continue …]

  • April 20, 2009

    urban-rural

    New York: bat hunting

    ooze.jpg
    Conditions for my talk on Monday were sub-optimal: there was a typhoon *and* a high-energy dispute between students and The New School, parts of which were occupied recently. [Fond memories: I, too, was a revolting student once; during one sit-in I became a dab [continue …]

  • April 19, 2009

    moving

    How to be global, and great, without traveling

    While I’m away, would you help me promote these new editions of my book? In The Bubble has now been translated into French, Italian and Portuguese – and I’d appreciate your support in three ways:
    a) buy-and-send copies for all your French, Italian and Portuguese-speaking friends around the world;
    b) tell everyone [continue …]

  • April 17, 2009

    moving

    Velowala: ternary thinking in practice

    Naomi Klein writes in today’s Guardian that “hope alone won’t save the world. It’s time to hope less, and demand more”.
    I’m not sure. I find Klein’s piece enervating. Will demanding things from mainstream politicians like Obama be more productive than waiting hopefully for them to save [continue …]

  • April 13, 2009

    urban-rural

    My plan to save the city of Nice $250 million

    IMG_1859.JPG
    This blog first proposed the replacement of trophy buildings with street art back in 2002. In a piece called “Trophy buildings are over” we argued that because they are conceived as spectacles, so-called signature architecture would be subject to [continue …]

  • April 13, 2009

    green finance

    How they’re playing the game

    Roughly once a week, I admonish myself for spending too much time reading financial blogs. “Focus on the positive,” I tell myself. “Raging at politicians and banksters is a waste of your life energy. Build an alternative reality to theirs. Go and plant a carrot”.
    So yesterday I went into [continue …]

  • April 4, 2009

    energy

    Are toxic assets a reprieve for the biosphere?

    CreditContraction.jpg
    Last October I first saw this splendid inverted pyramid chart (this version has been smartened up) and put it next to another diagramme about programmed trading. I nicknamed the combination image a “Toxic Sludge Machine”. “Where we’re at now” [continue …]

  • April 3, 2009

    green finance

    Sins of emission (2)

    The Guardian says today [Friday] that the (G20) summit’s biggest loser may have been the fight against climate change. “Hundreds of billions were found for the IMF and World Bank, but for making the transition to a green economy there is no money on the table”.

    The Guardian quotes diplomatic sources [continue …]

Previous678Next

Twitter Feed

john thackara 约翰·萨卡拉 Follow 27,753 12,600

My talks and events are all about sustainability you can touch - designing for life, and caring for place, as a real-world practice

johnthackara
johnthackara avatar; john thackara 约翰·萨卡拉 @johnthackara ·
28 Apr 1916883076438696119

This @scotruralnet news feed is great: informative but light, serious but accessible

This @scotruralnet news feed is great: informative but light, serious but accessible
Scottish Rural Network @scotruralnet

🌟 This Week’s Newsletter is Out! 🤩 Did you get yours? Don’t miss the exciting news and updates! 📩 Sign up for next week’s newsletter—no effort, just inspiration! 🌈
✏️Sign up here 👉https://ow.ly/fKcv50VHMZ8

Reply on Twitter 1916883076438696119 Retweet on Twitter 1916883076438696119 0 Like on Twitter 1916883076438696119 0 Twitter 1916883076438696119
johnthackara avatar; john thackara 约翰·萨卡拉 @johnthackara ·
28 Apr 1916880350023758005

Another reminder that the natural farming and agroecology movements are not anti-tech. But tech will only be used if it is designed and deployed to meet their needs on their terms

Another reminder that the natural farming and agroecology movements are not anti-tech. But tech will only be used if it is designed and deployed to meet their needs on their terms
European Coordination Via Campesina @ECVC1

📢How does digitalisation affect a just food system? Read ECVC's 25 recommendations to ensure that digitalisation in agriculture doesn't reinforce corporate power or exacerbate existing inequalities but rather advances food sovereignty and security! 👉https://www.eurovia.org/publications/ecvc-position-on-digitalisation/

Reply on Twitter 1916880350023758005 Retweet on Twitter 1916880350023758005 0 Like on Twitter 1916880350023758005 1 Twitter 1916880350023758005
Retweet on Twitter john thackara 约翰·萨卡拉 Retweeted
johnthackara avatar; john thackara 约翰·萨卡拉 @johnthackara ·
26 Apr 1916042202972590115

My copy of "El ABC del Diseño de Emiliano Godoy" arrived. During a 30 year career (so far) of learning-by-designing-and-making, Godoy has discovered other reasons to produce than just feeding the economy. https://www.toronjaediciones.com/tienda/p/el-abc-del-diseo-de-emiliano-godoy

Image for the Tweet beginning: My copy of "El ABC Twitter feed image.
Reply on Twitter 1916042202972590115 Retweet on Twitter 1916042202972590115 1 Like on Twitter 1916042202972590115 3 Twitter 1916042202972590115
johnthackara avatar; john thackara 约翰·萨卡拉 @johnthackara ·
28 Apr 1916747836542066826

I just discovered Conservation Job Board who "help environmental employers hire great people, and help environmental professionals land great jobs". https://www.conservationjobboard.com/search/cat=16-6-5-14-7-3-8-13-4-2-15-17-9-12-1/1

Image for the Tweet beginning: I just discovered Conservation Job Twitter feed image.
Reply on Twitter 1916747836542066826 Retweet on Twitter 1916747836542066826 0 Like on Twitter 1916747836542066826 1 Twitter 1916747836542066826
Load More Tweets
cover pic of How To Thrive
order at Amazon
Publisher: Thames & Hudson
Extent: 192pp
Size: 23.4 x 15.6cm
paperback isbn: 9780500292945
  • Newsletter archive

Recent Blog Posts

  • Learning-by-designing-and-making: Emiliano Godoy’s El ABC del Diseño May 8, 2025
  • Bioregioning: Sounds Nice, but I Need a Job April 17, 2025
  • Newsletter & 2025 Thackara Meetup Dates March 24, 2025
  • Can AI enable new ways of knowing – and being? February 27, 2025
  • In a cave with crows January 4, 2025

Blog Topics

  • most read
  • biodiversity
  • bioregioning
  • care
  • civic ecology
  • commoning
  • development
  • earth repair
  • energy
  • food systems
  • green finance
  • knowing
  • moving
  • nature-connection
  • urban-rural

Download

Thackara full CV 2022
(pdf, 35 pages A4)

Thackara Conference Chair / Jury
(pdf, 2 page A4)

Xskool Workshops
(pdf, 2018, 200KB; 7 pages A4)

Translated Editions of “In the Bubble”

SPANISH EDITION of "In the Bubble".
COVER_THACKARA_spanish.pngDiseñando Para un mundo complejo. Acciones para lograr la sustentabilidad
Buy at editorialdesignio.bigcartel.com

DUTCH EDITION of "In the Bubble".
Buy at publisher
or at
Amazon.

FRENCH EDITION bubble-french-cover-lge.jpgtranslated by Anne Despond-Barre and published by Marc Partouche for Cite du Design Editions. Buy at amazon.fr

ITALIAN EDITION bubble_italian_front.jpg"In the Bubble" translated by Niels Betori and published by Pier Paolo Peruccio for Allemandi.
è stato selezionato per la pubblicazione nell’ADI Design Index 2009.


PORTUGUESE EDITION, bubble-planoB-cover.jpg"In the Bubble"
Buy at virgilia.com or at Saraiva.com.


bbl.poland.pngPOLISH EDITION
of In the Bubble
Order here

johnthackara

designing for life

contact
contact

JOHNTHACKARA    designing for life

  • Blog
  • About
    • About my work
    • Profile
    • Talks & Conversations
    • Publications
    • Urban-Rural Projects
    • Videos
  • Meet in France
    • Meet in France
    • MeetUp
    • Offsite
    • Retreat (self directed)
  • Handouts
  • Archive

© The John Thackara blog and website is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at john [at] thackara [d o t com], 1993-2025

Page load link
Go to Top