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Regenerative Economy

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  1. Module 01: Introduction
    1.1 Lesson-1: Interested in Regeneration?
  2. 1.2 Lesson-2: What is Regenerative Economy?
  3. 1.3 Lesson-3: Principles of Regenerative Economy
    9 Topics
  4. 1.4 Lesson-4: Towards Regenerative Economy
    1 Quiz
  5. Module-02: Go Beyond the Circles
    2.1 Lesson-1: From Linear to Circular Economy
  6. 2.2 Lesson-2: The Nested System
  7. 2.3 Lesson-3: From Focusing on the Product to Focusing on the Process
    1 Quiz
  8. Module-03: Regenerative Economy Mindset Shifting
    3.1 Lesson-1: Shift Mindset to Transform the System
    1 Topics
  9. 3.2 Lesson-2: Shift Mindset: ?Doing? to ?Being?
    2 Topics
  10. 3.3 Lesson-3: Shift Mindset: ?Ego? to ?Soul?
    1 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  11. Module 04: Regenerative Economy Framework
    4.1 Lesson-1: Levels of Paradigm
    6 Topics
  12. 4.2 Lesson-2: Understanding Levels of Paradigm as a System
  13. 4.3 Lesson-3: Evolving a Practice of Regenerative Economics
    5 Topics
  14. 4.4 Lesson-4: Quantitative Growth to Qualitative Growth
    2 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  15. Module 05: Collaborative Approach to Regenerative Economy
    5.1 Lesson-1: Ecology and Regenerative Economy 1
  16. 5.2 Lesson-2: Economy of Human Development
    9 Topics
  17. 5.3 Lesson-3: Regenerative Approach to Whole Economic Development
    7 Topics
  18. 5.4 Lesson-4: Regenerative Culture
    3 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  19. Module 06: Regenerative Investment
    6.1 Lesson-1: The Role of Businesses
    2 Topics
  20. 6.2 Lesson-2: Investing from a Regenerative Mind
    1 Topics
  21. 6.3 Lesson-3: Food System Investing in a Regenerative Economy
    4 Topics
    |
    1 Quiz
  22. Conclusion
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When working on a community’s economic growth, one strategy to prevent fragmentation is to evaluate progress in terms of state changes as well as tangible goals. A community that is expanding its capacity and capacities will undergo internal transformation, becoming smarter and better able to function as an integrated system to achieve challenging and long-term objectives. Any given community will go through several states that are specific to it. Nonetheless, there are a few common patterns:

  • Being Body

A community must develop a live sense of its place in order to embrace its particular features and special prospects as a source of economic potential. It can then feel itself as a whole, a living thing that is connected to and reflective of its landscapes, environments, cultures, and story as a result of this. This gives a community a deeply ingrained and genuine identity from which it can expand in the future.

  • Self-Organizing

A community can start to take the reins of the transformation process at this point because its members have attained a sufficient level of self-awareness and agency. Instead of individual self-interest or personal agenda, decisions regarding which activities to undertake are influenced by thoughts about how to express and evolve the intrinsic wealth of location. It takes constant dedication to one’s own personal development to persuade people to put aside their own limited interests in favor of aiding in collective development. When people come together for the same goal, however, collective will inevitably develops.

  • Field Generation

The level of energy and spirit in a town affects thought and behavior, which in turn affects how people occupy their place. It can be vibrant and uplifting or depressed and dejected. The long-term effectiveness of a regenerative process depends on creating an energy field that encourages individuals to embrace and seek change because it supports their ownership of and dedication to this difficult but gratifying effort. A society must learn to continuously regenerate the quality of energy required to maintain cooperation and alignment among its members because energy fields have a propensity to collapse or degrade over time.

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