Relocalisation and the Transition Movement

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Relocalisation and the Transition Movement Rob Hopkins Looking back over The Transition Handbook, the book I wrote in 2007 which helped to create what is now an international movement in 44 countries, it is alarming to see how much of what was predicted in there has come to be. It talked about a time when oil prices would consistently be above $100 a barrel, when the Age of Cheap Energy would be conclusively a thing of the past, when the impacts of climate change would be clear, everyday and commonplace, when denial would start to become socially unacceptable and when economies would start to unravel. We are in those times now. We’re there. What the book also rather boldly suggested was that we would see a response kicking in. A response that started with ordinary people working at the scale over which they felt they could have an influence. Rolling up their sleeves and transmuting this deep sense of unease and uncertainty into creativity and a sense of purpose. Starting, without permission, to build a new economy around them, one based on the idea of community resilience as a form of economic development. A form of economic development that starts on our streets, in our neighbourhoods, in the places we live. Transition is that response, or at least, it is one manifestation of that response. It is a response founded on the concept of resilience. Resilience was once famously described by football manager Iain Dowie as referring to ‘bouncebackability’. Many definitions use it to refer to this idea of bouncing back after an unexpected shock. I wonder though whether we should actually be thinking about it in terms of ‘bouncing forwards’, using shock, or the expectation of it, to evolve and to see it as an opportunity for great creativity and inventiveness. After all, in a world changing so fast, what would we ‘bounce back’ to? I also, having observed the process of Transition in my town for seven years now, see resilience as referring to the degree of possibility we have breathed into our local community. When we encounter shocks and disruptions, the most powerful things we can have at our disposal are ideas and possibilities. Possibilities enable us to see times of rapid change as a huge opportunity. Encountering shocks with no possibilities at our fingertips would be bleak indeed. ❙ 27


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