Regenerative Economy
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Module 01: Introduction1.1 Lesson-1: Interested in Regeneration?
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1.2 Lesson-2: What is Regenerative Economy?
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1.3 Lesson-3: Principles of Regenerative Economy9 ????????
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1.3.1 Principle 1: Maintain strong, cross-scale circulation of key flows, such as energy, information, resources, and money.
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1.3.2 Principle 2: Regenerative and sustained re-investment
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1.3.3 Principles 3 & 4: Maintain Trustworthy Inputs and Healthy Outputs
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1.3.4 Principle 5: Maintain a good balance between different types of organizations.
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1.3.5 Principle 6: Maintain a balanced mix of resiliency and effectiveness.
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1.3.6 Principle 7: Maintain sufficient diversity
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1.3.7 Principle 8: Encourage cooperative relationships and principles that are shared by all
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1.3.8 Principle 9: Encourage positive action and restrict speculative and overly extroverted behavior
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Principle 10: Encourage efficient, flexible, group learning
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1.3.1 Principle 1: Maintain strong, cross-scale circulation of key flows, such as energy, information, resources, and money.
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1.4 Lesson-4: Towards Regenerative Economy1 ??????
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Module-02: Go Beyond the Circles2.1 Lesson-1: From Linear to Circular Economy
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2.2 Lesson-2: The Nested System
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2.3 Lesson-3: From Focusing on the Product to Focusing on the Process1 ??????
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Module-03: Regenerative Economy Mindset Shifting3.1 Lesson-1: Shift Mindset to Transform the System1 ?????
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3.2 Lesson-2: Shift Mindset: ?Doing? to ?Being?2 ????????
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3.3 Lesson-3: Shift Mindset: ?Ego? to ?Soul?1 ?????|1 ??????
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Module 04: Regenerative Economy Framework4.1 Lesson-1: Levels of Paradigm6 ????????
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4.2 Lesson-2: Understanding Levels of Paradigm as a System
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4.3 Lesson-3: Evolving a Practice of Regenerative Economics5 ????????
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4.4 Lesson-4: Quantitative Growth to Qualitative Growth2 ????????|1 ??????
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Module 05: Collaborative Approach to Regenerative Economy5.1 Lesson-1: Ecology and Regenerative Economy 1
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5.2 Lesson-2: Economy of Human Development9 ????????
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5.3 Lesson-3: Regenerative Approach to Whole Economic Development7 ????????
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5.3.1 Risks Associated with Traditional Economic Growth
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5.3.2 A Regenerative Evolutionary Strategy to Creating Community Wealth
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5.3.3 Developing Place-Sourced Community Intelligence: A Three-Phase Strategy
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5.3.4 Phase One: Thinking Strategically
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5.3.5 Phase Two: Changing Systems
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5.3.6 Phase Three: Institutionalizing Strategic Planning Patterns and Fields
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5.3.7 The Changes
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5.3.1 Risks Associated with Traditional Economic Growth
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5.4 Lesson-4: Regenerative Culture3 ????????|1 ??????
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Module 06: Regenerative Investment6.1 Lesson-1: The Role of Businesses2 ????????
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6.2 Lesson-2: Investing from a Regenerative Mind1 ?????
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6.3 Lesson-3: Food System Investing in a Regenerative Economy4 ????????|1 ??????
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خاتمة
Participants 102
6.3.2 Arrest Disorder
?????? 22, 2024
How to make money from efficiency and optimization is the main factor driving investment decision-making in the paradigm of arrest disorder. This investing paradigm tries to waste less and produce returns through promoting lean corporate processes, technical advancements in efficiency, or decreased resource usage. Investing strategies based on arrest disorders are once again linked to a specific step in the food value chain, albeit with a more thorough analysis of resource use and utilization.
Investments in food products that lessen the consumer’s effort or harm include those that are quicker or easier to consume, have fewer calories, sugar, or fat, or are less problematic from an ethical standpoint. Products like Soylent, “diet” sodas or low-alcohol beers, as well as plant-based meats like Impossible burgers or OmniPork, are specific examples. Ag-tech efficiencies, such as reduced pesticide use, lower water requirements, fewer fertilizer inputs with higher yields, farm software solutions, and labor-saving robots, are the main focus of investments in agricultural production.
Investors operating within this paradigm frequently speak in a defensive manner about the significance and validity of their strategy, which is consistent with the general attitude of Arrest Disorder. Investors in plant-based “meats,” for instance, which have a lower environmental impact than industrial animal protein production, criticize holistic rotational grazing methods that go beyond harm reduction and improve the health of ecosystems and soils. Despite public uproar against ocean pollution and the larger systemic capabilities of carbon-sequestering packaging materials sourced from sustainable forestry, plastics producers aggressively point to the greenhouse greenhouse gas emissions and water efficacy of their single-use packaging.