Economía Regenerativa
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Módulo 01: Introducción1.1 Lección 1: ¿Interesado en la regeneración?
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1.2 Lección 2: ¿Qué es la economía regenerativa?
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1.3 Lección 3: Principios de la Economía Regenerativa9 Temas
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1.3.1 Principio 1: Mantener una fuerte circulación entre escalas de flujos clave, como energía, información, recursos y dinero.
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1.3.2 Principio 2: Reinversión regenerativa y sostenida
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1.3.3 Principios 3 y 4: Mantener entradas confiables y salidas saludables
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1.3.4 Principio 5: Mantener un buen equilibrio entre los diferentes tipos de organizaciones.
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1.3.5 Principio 6: Mantener una combinación equilibrada de resiliencia y eficacia.
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1.3.6 Principio 7: Mantener suficiente diversidad
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1.3.7 Principio 8: Fomentar relaciones y principios cooperativos compartidos por todos
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1.3.8 Principio 9: Fomentar la acción positiva y restringir el comportamiento especulativo y demasiado extrovertido
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Principio 10: Fomentar el aprendizaje grupal eficiente y flexible
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1.3.1 Principio 1: Mantener una fuerte circulación entre escalas de flujos clave, como energía, información, recursos y dinero.
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1.4 Lección 4: Hacia la Economía Regenerativa1 Cuestionario
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Módulo-02: Ir más allá de los círculos2.1 Lección 1: De la Economía Lineal a la Circular
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2.2 Lección 2: El sistema anidado
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2.3 Lección 3: De centrarse en el producto a centrarse en el proceso1 Cuestionario
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Módulo-03: Cambio de mentalidad de economía regenerativa3.1 Lección 1: Cambiar la mentalidad para transformar el sistema1 Tema
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3.2 Lesson-2: Shift Mindset: “Doing” to “Being”2 Temas
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3.3 Lesson-3: Shift Mindset: “Ego” to “Soul”1 Tema|1 Cuestionario
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Módulo 04: Marco de Economía Regenerativa4.1 Lección 1: Niveles de Paradigma6 Temas
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4.2 Lección 2: Comprender los niveles del paradigma como sistema
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4.3 Lección 3: Desarrollo de una práctica de economía regenerativa5 Temas
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4.4 Lección 4: Crecimiento cuantitativo a crecimiento cualitativo2 Temas|1 Cuestionario
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Módulo 05: Enfoque colaborativo de la economía regenerativa5.1 Lección-1: Ecología y Economía Regenerativa 1
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5.2 Lección-2: Economía del Desarrollo Humano9 Temas
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5.3 Lección 3: Enfoque regenerativo para el desarrollo económico integral7 Temas
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5.3.1 Riesgos asociados al crecimiento económico tradicional
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5.3.2 Una estrategia evolutiva regenerativa para crear riqueza comunitaria
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5.3.3 Desarrollo de inteligencia comunitaria de origen local: una estrategia de tres fases
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5.3.4 Fase Uno: Pensar Estratégicamente
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5.3.5 Fase dos: Cambio de sistemas
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5.3.6 Fase Tres: Institucionalización de Patrones y Campos de Planificación Estratégica
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5.3.7 Los Cambios
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5.3.1 Riesgos asociados al crecimiento económico tradicional
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5.4 Lección 4: Cultura Regenerativa3 Temas|1 Cuestionario
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Módulo 06: Inversión Regenerativa6.1 Lección 1: El papel de las empresas2 Temas
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6.2 Lección 2: Invertir desde una mente regenerativa1 Tema
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6.3 Lección 3: Inversión en el sistema alimentario en una economía regenerativa4 Temas|1 Cuestionario
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Conclusión
Participantes 5727
1.2 Lección 2: ¿Qué es la economía regenerativa?
julio 20, 2025
First of all, the study of economics nowadays is primarily focused on the creation, exchange, and consumption of products and services. This description conjures up ideas like resources, labor, commerce, capital equipment, etc. in a world of tangible existence and exchange. The focus on commodities and services, which is separate from the creation of systemic impacts, quietly supports the perception that there are both winners and losers in a zero-sum game where scarce resources are taken, refined, sold, and used up. Adam Smith attempted to apply Newton’s scientific reasoning to human contact with a view to reducing its complications to identifiable material mechanisms guided by universal principles. This effort gave rise to the science of contemporary economics.
Yet, Aristotle described economics as the pragmatic science of leading a virtue-filled life as a part of the polis through shrewd family administration in Ancient Greece, which is where the word “economics” originates. This definition provides a totally new framework for considering economics. The family unit is a complete living system that is nested inside bigger community and landscape systems, to start. Second, prudent management is prioritized in a home over output and consumption. Third, a household’s entire business is focused on building stronger, more attractive communities through the attributes that are fostered in their residents.
They can be transformed into a regenerative framework for a twenty-first-century setting by using them as seeds. The ultimate household is Earth itself, as ecological understanding and the effect of indigenous science have taught us. When one views economics as the prudent management of the planet as a whole, one starts to realize that the concept of externality, or a cost to a third party that did not choose to bear it, is no longer valid. For example, manufacturing pollution imposed on a local community. Instead, it is essential to take into account how every economic action will impact the world and its nested socio-ecological systems. The emphasis in a regenerative economy shifts from production and consumption as essentially mechanical activities to smart management as a developmental activity. Aristotle suggests that one needs to plan beyond the present by using the word wisdom. It’s important to consider how the households fits into the interconnected systems of the community and the land, as well as how one’s decisions will affect future generations.
This suggests that an economy with intelligent management aims to increase not only wealth but also everyone’s ability to create wealth. Having a lot of valuable belongings or money that may be utilized in transactions is how most people define wealth. Yet, the word’s etymological root has a collection of connotations that include contentment, success, and wellbeing or health. Hence, at its core, the idea of wealth includes all the things that make it possible for us to survive well.
So, the essential competency that a post-extractive economy needs its people to master if they are to live in healthier and more attractive communities is the capacity to engage in smart management of a whole system. It may be argued that economies are created by civilizations to organize and support their own evolutionary growth. The knowledge required from a regeneration standpoint must be grounded in a change from viewing the world in term of closed or even open systems to viewing it in the context of living systems.