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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 Mga topiko
  4. 1.4 Lesson-4: Towards Regenerative Economy
    1 Pasulit
  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 Pasulit
  8. Module-03: Regenerative Economy Mindset Shifting
    3.1 Lesson-1: Shift Mindset to Transform the System
    1 Hilisgutan
  9. 3.2 Lesson-2: Shift Mindset: ?Doing? to ?Being?
    2 Mga topiko
  10. 3.3 Lesson-3: Shift Mindset: ?Ego? to ?Soul?
    1 Hilisgutan
    |
    1 Pasulit
  11. Module 04: Regenerative Economy Framework
    4.1 Lesson-1: Levels of Paradigm
    6 Mga topiko
  12. 4.2 Lesson-2: Understanding Levels of Paradigm as a System
  13. 4.3 Lesson-3: Evolving a Practice of Regenerative Economics
    5 Mga topiko
  14. 4.4 Lesson-4: Quantitative Growth to Qualitative Growth
    2 Mga topiko
    |
    1 Pasulit
  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 Mga topiko
  17. 5.3 Lesson-3: Regenerative Approach to Whole Economic Development
    7 Mga topiko
  18. 5.4 Lesson-4: Regenerative Culture
    3 Mga topiko
    |
    1 Pasulit
  19. Module 06: Regenerative Investment
    6.1 Lesson-1: The Role of Businesses
    2 Mga topiko
  20. 6.2 Lesson-2: Investing from a Regenerative Mind
    1 Hilisgutan
  21. 6.3 Lesson-3: Food System Investing in a Regenerative Economy
    4 Mga topiko
    |
    1 Pasulit
  22. Konklusyon
Leksyon 16, Hilisgutan 5
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5.2.5 Jobbing to Vocation

Hunyo 26, 2024
Leksyon Progress
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Although systems of oversight function at a macroeconomic level, their impact on people’s lives and jobs can be seen in many microeconomic ways. Although a job and a vocation can both be described as “work,” the latter implies significance while the former just demands subsistence. The economy operates under the assumption that jobbing serves as the primary method of providing. To put it another way, if you don’t have a job, you won’t be able to support your family or yourself. This arrangement ignores the aspect of work that has significance; even if you are fortunate enough to land a job, there’s a considerable chance it won’t be meaningful. In his 2018 book Bullshit Jobs: A Theory, anthropologist David Graeber details how many workers and contractors describe their jobs as useless in their own words.

What could work be? What kind of world would it be if people could devote the majority of their waking hours to fulfilling work? What population traits would be needed to realize this potential? What kind of capacity would the economy need? Real economic constraints include those related to natural resources, labor hours, human and environmental well-being, available technologies, and educational opportunities. The money supply of sovereign states and its distribution, in contrast to these natural restrictions, are within the purview of human agency. Its regulations are fabricated and regenerable.

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