EcoResolution is an education-for-action platform nurturing a community of learners & doers in order to co-create a world that thrives.
We empower meaningful action and encourage community engagement in the face of ecological breakdown through education and a big-picture approach to change.
Through technology and storytelling, we explore culture, ecology and action and unpick the relationship between individual, collective and systemic change.
Across the key topics which shape our lives, communities, and ecosystems, we make accessible educational resources, gather global leaders and wisdom keepers, create community, organise events and share skills that empower meaningful action.
Underpinning EcoResolution is the knowledge that humans are capable of not only addressing global crises, such as climate change, but of building nature-centered cultures of joy, justice and ecological harmony.
EcoResolution’s work revolves around three key themes:
culture; ecology and action.
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Climate Change is a crisis of culture, and therefore a crisis of the imagination.
We believe that cultural narratives shape the way we relate to the world and therefore how we behave. By unpicking unhealthy cultural narratives we can rewrite our collective story in order to build nature-centered cultures of happiness, justice and freedom.
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As humans, we are part of an interconnected web of existence and as such must nurture, protect and celebrate the ecosystems that we rely on.
By deepening our ecological awareness and by understanding our relational existence, we not only transform how we treat the natural living world but we transform our own physical and mental wellbeing too.
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The solutions to the environmental and social crisis not only exist but also lay the foundations to societies that thrive.
What doesn’t exist is the political will. So, we need social movements to drive forward meaningful change. More importantly, we need communities coming together to take things into their own hands. As Transition Towns say ‘If we wait for governments it will be too late. If we act as individuals, it will be too little. But, if we act as communities, it might just be enough, and it might just be in time’.