Author
Listed:
- Marc Buckley
(UNFCCC, Resilience Frontiers, Expert Network for WEF, UNSDSN, HLWG of the UN Climate Change Global Innovation Hub on Nutrition and Health, United Nations Climate Change Global Innovation Hub (UGIH), Berlin School for Sustainable Futures, and ALOHAS Regenerative Foundation)
Abstract
Social innovations are impact innovations for purpose that have the power to achieve the 6 major transformations needed to get us out of the Anthropocene into the Symbiocene. They empower us all to fulfill our role as crew members on this spaceship earth by solving human suffering and our global grand challenges. They are also the most impactful way to move cultural evolution forward into the twenty-first century to keep pace with our exponentially growing world. It is such a beautiful way to get humanity to a lifestyle within the safe operating spaces of our planetary boundaries and provides us with resilience and regenerative economies for all global citizens. It is about people who want to save the entire sacred, cellular basis of existence, the entire planet and all its inconceivable diversity. The term environmental social governance encompasses socially innovative organizations that are the largest social movement in history. There are evolving regenerative civilization frameworks in existence that can work for all humanity and cultures. There are more than seventeen ecological economic models in our world with new ones emerging daily, any of these combined with regenerative platform systems dynamic life models, and sustainable social innovations for purpose can harness the gravitation pull/assist of humanity in symbiosis here on earth also known as the slingshot effect to keep all life within the safe operating spaces of our planetary boundaries indefinitely, well beyond the twenty-first century. A world that works for everyone is one of SEVA (Sanskrit), regeneration – selfless service to life!
Suggested Citation
Marc Buckley, 2022.
"Regeneration: A World that Works for Everyone!,"
Management for Professionals, in: Alexander Ruthemeier & Seda Röder & Kathleen Schröter & Philipp Plugmann (ed.), The Global Impact of Social Innovation, pages 145-155,
Springer.
Handle:
RePEc:spr:mgmchp:978-3-031-03849-5_12
DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-03849-5_12
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