Helena Norberg-Hodge: Difference between revisions
Information about Helena Norberg-Hodge's book |
No edit summary |
||
(14 intermediate revisions by 11 users not shown) | |||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
{{External links|date=July 2020}} |
{{External links|date=July 2020}} |
||
{{Infobox person |
{{Infobox person |
||
|name = Helena Norberg-Hodge |
| name = Helena Norberg-Hodge |
||
|image = Helena Norberg-Hodge, 2015 (cropped).jpg |
| image = Helena Norberg-Hodge, 2015 (cropped).jpg |
||
|caption =Norberg-Hodge in 2015 |
| caption = Norberg-Hodge in 2015 |
||
|birth_name = |
| birth_name = |
||
|birth_date = {{ |
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1946|01|10|df=y}} |
||
|birth_place = Sweden |
| birth_place = Sweden |
||
|death_date = |
| death_date = |
||
| awards |
| awards = 1986 [[Right Livelihood Award]] and 2012 Goi Peace Award |
||
|death_place = |
| death_place = |
||
|occupation = linguist, writer, activist |
| occupation = linguist, writer, activist |
||
}} |
}} |
||
'''Helena Norberg-Hodge''' is founder and director of Local Futures, previously known as the International Society for Ecology and Culture (ISEC). Local Futures is a non-profit organization "dedicated to the revitalization of cultural and biological diversity, and the strengthening of local communities and economies worldwide."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.localfutures.org|title=Local Futures – Local Futures|website=Local Futures| |
'''Helena Norberg-Hodge''' (born 10 January 1946) is founder and director of Local Futures, previously known as the International Society for Ecology and Culture (ISEC). Local Futures is a non-profit organization "dedicated to the revitalization of cultural and biological diversity, and the strengthening of local communities and economies worldwide."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.localfutures.org|title=Local Futures – Local Futures|website=Local Futures|access-date=7 October 2017}}</ref> |
||
Norberg-Hodge is the author of the international best-selling book ''[[Ancient Futures]]'' (1991), about tradition and change in the Himalayan region of [[Ladakh]], available in |
Norberg-Hodge is the author of the international best-selling book ''[[Ancient Futures]]'' (1991), about tradition and change in the Himalayan region of [[Ladakh]], available in multiple languages, as an ecobook and audiobook versions. She is also the author of ''Local is Our Future'' (2019), in which she advocates for localized alternatives to the global economy, particularly involving the creation of robust [[local food]] systems and democratic structures that can effectively resist [[authoritarianism]].<ref name="Local is Our Future">{{cite web|url=https://www.localfutures.org/publications/local-is-our-future-book-helena-norberg-hodge/|title=Local is Our Future book|website=LocalFutures.org|access-date=24 February 2020}}</ref> An outspoken critic of [[economic globalization]], she co-founded – along with Jerry Mander, Doug Tompkins, Vandana Shiva, Martin Khor and others – the International Forum on Globalization (IFG) in 1994.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://ifg.org/about/history/|title=History – INTERNATIONAL FORUM ON GLOBALIZATION|website=Ifg.org|access-date=7 October 2017}}</ref> She is a leading proponent of localization as an antidote to the problems arising from globalization, and founded the International Alliance for Localization (IAL) in 2014. |
||
Norberg-Hodge produced and co-directed the award-winning documentary film ''[[The Economics of Happiness]]'' (2011), which lays out her arguments against economic globalization and for localization.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.localfutures.org/the-economics-of-happiness/the-film/film/|title=About the film – Local Futures|website=Localfutures.org| |
Norberg-Hodge produced and co-directed the award-winning documentary film ''[[The Economics of Happiness]]'' (2011), which lays out her arguments against economic globalization and for localization.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.localfutures.org/the-economics-of-happiness/the-film/film/|title=About the film – Local Futures|website=Localfutures.org|access-date=7 October 2017}}</ref> Recently she initiated World Localization Day (WLD), which broadcasts globally online. In 1986, she was awarded the [[Right Livelihood Award]] for "preserving the traditional culture and values of Ladakh against the onslaught of tourism and development." In 2012, she received the Goi Peace Award for "her pioneering work in the localization movement".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.goipeace.or.jp/en/work/award/award-2012/|title=2012 Goi Peace Award Laureate|website=Goi Peace Foundation|date=August 2012 |access-date=24 February 2020}}</ref> |
||
== Education == |
== Education == |
||
Line 25: | Line 25: | ||
== Ladakh == |
== Ladakh == |
||
Ladakh, also known as Little Tibet, is a remote region on the [[Tibetan plateau]]. Although it is politically part of India, it has more in common culturally with [[Tibet]]. Because it borders both China and Pakistan, countries with which India has had tense relations and frequent border disputes, the Indian government kept Ladakh largely isolated from the outside world. It was not until 1962 that the first road was built over the high mountain passes that separate the region from the rest of India, and even then the region was off-limits to all but the India military. In 1975, the India government decided to open Ladakh to tourism and 'development', and Norberg-Hodge was one of the first westerners to visit the region, accompanying a German film crew as a translator.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.share-international.org/archives/social-justice/sj_mllessons.htm|title=Lessons from an ancient culture, Interview with Helena Norberg-Hodge|author=Monte Leach|website=Share-international.org| |
Ladakh, also known as Little Tibet, is a remote region on the [[Tibetan plateau]]. Although it is politically part of India, it has more in common culturally with [[Tibet]]. Because it borders both China and Pakistan, countries with which India has had tense relations and frequent border disputes, the Indian government kept Ladakh largely isolated from the outside world. It was not until 1962 that the first road was built over the high mountain passes that separate the region from the rest of India, and even then the region was off-limits to all but the India military. In 1975, the India government decided to open Ladakh to tourism and 'development', and Norberg-Hodge was one of the first westerners to visit the region, accompanying a German film crew as a translator.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.share-international.org/archives/social-justice/sj_mllessons.htm|title=Lessons from an ancient culture, Interview with Helena Norberg-Hodge|author=Monte Leach|website=Share-international.org|access-date=7 October 2017|archive-date=28 October 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121028042014/http://share-international.org/archives/social-justice/sj_mllessons.htm|url-status=dead}}</ref> |
||
As she described in an interview with the Indian website Infochange,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://infochangeindia.org/globalisation/related-analysis/localisation-is-about-bringing-the-economy-back-to-a-human-scale.html |title= |
As she described in an interview with the Indian website Infochange,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://infochangeindia.org/globalisation/related-analysis/localisation-is-about-bringing-the-economy-back-to-a-human-scale.html |title=Localisation is about bringing the economy back to a human scale | Analysis | Globalisation |access-date=30 March 2016 |url-status=usurped |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20160412115528/http://infochangeindia.org/globalisation/related-analysis/localisation-is-about-bringing-the-economy-back-to-a-human-scale.html |archivedate=12 April 2016 }}</ref> the culture she observed in those early years was a near-paradise of social and ecological well-being, but quickly broke down under the impact of outside economic forces: "When I first arrived in Leh, the capital of 5,000 inhabitants, cows were the most likely cause of congestion and the air was crystal clear. Within five minutes' walk in any direction from the town centre were barley fields, dotted with large farmhouses. For the next twenty years I watched Leh turn into an urban sprawl. The streets became choked with traffic, and the air tasted of diesel fumes. 'Housing colonies' of soulless, cement boxes spread into the dusty desert. The once pristine streams became polluted, the water undrinkable. For the first time, there were homeless people. The increased economic pressures led to unemployment and competition. Within a few years, friction between different communities appeared. All of these things had not existed for the previous 500 years." |
||
Many of the changes that 'development' brought were psychological, as she described in the film version of ''Ancient Futures'': "In one of my first years in Ladakh, I was in this incredibly beautiful village. All the houses were three stories high and painted white. And I was just amazed. So out of curiosity I asked a young man from that village to show me the poorest house. He thought for a bit, and then he said, 'We don't have any poor houses.' The same person I heard eight years later saying to a tourist, 'Oh, if you could only help us Ladakhis, we're so poor!' And what had happened is that in the intervening eight years he had been bombarded with all these one-dimensional images of life in the West. He'd seen people with fast cars, you know, looking as though they never worked, and with lots of money. And suddenly by comparison his culture seemed backward and primitive and poor." |
Many of the changes that 'development' brought were psychological, as she described in the film version of ''Ancient Futures'': "In one of my first years in Ladakh, I was in this incredibly beautiful village. All the houses were three stories high and painted white. And I was just amazed. So out of curiosity I asked a young man from that village to show me the poorest house. He thought for a bit, and then he said, 'We don't have any poor houses.' The same person I heard eight years later saying to a tourist, 'Oh, if you could only help us Ladakhis, we're so poor!' And what had happened is that in the intervening eight years he had been bombarded with all these one-dimensional images of life in the West. He'd seen people with fast cars, you know, looking as though they never worked, and with lots of money. And suddenly by comparison his culture seemed backward and primitive and poor." |
||
In 1978 Norberg-Hodge founded The Ladakh Project, for which Local Futures is now the parent organization, in order to counter the overly rosy impressions of life in the urban consumer culture, and to re-instill respect for the traditional culture. She also helped establish several indigenous NGOs in Ladakh including the Women's Alliance of Ladakh (WAL), the Ladakh Environment and Health Organisation (LEHO), and the |
In 1978 Norberg-Hodge founded The Ladakh Project, for which Local Futures is now the parent organization, in order to counter the overly rosy impressions of life in the urban consumer culture, and to re-instill respect for the traditional culture. She also helped establish several indigenous NGOs in Ladakh including the Women's Alliance of Ladakh (WAL), the Ladakh Environment and Health Organisation (LEHO), and the Ladakh Ecological Development Group (LEDeG). LEDeG has designed, built and installed a wide range of small-scale appropriate technologies, including solar water heaters, cookers, passive space heaters, and greenhouses. In 1986, Norberg-Hodge and LEDeG were awarded the [[Right Livelihood Award]] (also known as the 'Alternative Nobel Prize') in recognition of these efforts.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rightlivelihood.org/ladakh.html |title=Right Livelihood Award: 1986 - LEDEG |work=www.rightlivelihood.org |access-date=8 January 2009 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090108164840/http://www.rightlivelihood.org/ladakh.html |archivedate=8 January 2009 }}</ref> |
||
== Publications == |
== Publications == |
||
[[File:Helena Norberg-Hodge.jpg|thumb|Norberg-Hodge in 2009]] |
[[File:Helena Norberg-Hodge.jpg|thumb|Norberg-Hodge in 2009]] |
||
Norberg-Hodge's most recent book, ''Local is Our Future'' (2019) describes how a systemic shift from a globalized economy towards a network of decentralized, localized economies could address a number of problems simultaneously, ranging from economic inequality to the climate crisis to mental illness epidemics.<ref name="Local is Our Future" /> The book has received praise from a number of public figures including [[Bill McKibben]], [[Douglas Rushkoff]], [[David Suzuki]], [[Charles Eisenstein]], [[Alice Waters]], and others.<ref name="Local is Our Future" /><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.localfutures.org/publications/local-is-our-future-book-helena-norberg-hodge/endorsements/|title=Local is Our Future: Endorsements|website=LocalFutures.org| |
Norberg-Hodge's most recent book, ''Local is Our Future'' (2019) describes how a systemic shift from a globalized economy towards a network of decentralized, localized economies could address a number of problems simultaneously, ranging from economic inequality to the climate crisis to mental illness epidemics.<ref name="Local is Our Future" /> The book has received praise from a number of public figures including [[Bill McKibben]], [[Douglas Rushkoff]], [[David Suzuki]], [[Charles Eisenstein]], [[Alice Waters]], and others.<ref name="Local is Our Future" /><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.localfutures.org/publications/local-is-our-future-book-helena-norberg-hodge/endorsements/|title=Local is Our Future: Endorsements|website=LocalFutures.org|access-date=24 February 2020}}</ref> |
||
Her previous book, ''Ancient Futures: Learning from Ladakh'' (Sierra Club, 1991), was based on Norberg-Hodge's first-hand experience of Ladakh's traditional culture and the impacts of conventional development on it. The book was very well received, and has remained in print ever since. (A second edition, with a different subtitle, "Lessons from Ladakh for a Globalizing World", was published in 2009; a third edition, with no subtitle, is to be published in April 2016). ''Ancient Futures'' has been described as an "inspirational classic" by The London ''Times'' and "one of the most important books of our time" by author Susan Griffin.<ref name="Chelsea Green">{{cite web|url=https://www.chelseagreen.com/science-nature-environment/ancient-futures-3rd-edition|title=Chelsea Green Publishing – Ancient Futures, 3rd Edition|website=Chelsea Green Publishing| |
Her previous book, ''Ancient Futures: Learning from Ladakh'' (Sierra Club, 1991), was based on Norberg-Hodge's first-hand experience of Ladakh's traditional culture and the impacts of conventional development on it. The book was very well received, and has remained in print ever since. (A second edition, with a different subtitle, "Lessons from Ladakh for a Globalizing World", was published in 2009; a third edition, with no subtitle, is to be published in April 2016). ''Ancient Futures'' has been described as an "inspirational classic" by The London ''Times'' and "one of the most important books of our time" by author Susan Griffin.<ref name="Chelsea Green">{{cite web|url=https://www.chelseagreen.com/science-nature-environment/ancient-futures-3rd-edition|title=Chelsea Green Publishing – Ancient Futures, 3rd Edition|website=Chelsea Green Publishing|date=28 January 2016 |access-date=7 October 2017}}</ref> Together with the film version of the book, ''Ancient Futures'' has been translated into more than 40 languages.<ref name="Chelsea Green" /> |
||
Norberg-Hodge is also co-author of ''Bringing the Food Economy Home: Local Alternatives to Global Agribusiness'' (Kumarian, 2002) and ''From the Ground Up: Rethinking Industrial Agriculture'' (Zed Books, 1992). |
Norberg-Hodge is also co-author of ''Bringing the Food Economy Home: Local Alternatives to Global Agribusiness'' (Kumarian, 2002) and ''From the Ground Up: Rethinking Industrial Agriculture'' (Zed Books, 1992). |
||
Line 49: | Line 49: | ||
*[http://www.tikkun.org/nextgen/strengthening-local-economies-the-path-to-peace/ "Strengthening Local Economies: The Path to Peace?"], Tikkun, 29 July 2015 |
*[http://www.tikkun.org/nextgen/strengthening-local-economies-the-path-to-peace/ "Strengthening Local Economies: The Path to Peace?"], Tikkun, 29 July 2015 |
||
*[http://www.resurgence.org/magazine/article4444-a-new-call-for-resistance-and-renewal.html/ "A New Call for Resistance and Renewal"], Resurgence, July–August 2015 |
*[http://www.resurgence.org/magazine/article4444-a-new-call-for-resistance-and-renewal.html/ "A New Call for Resistance and Renewal"], Resurgence, July–August 2015 |
||
*[http://www.ecotrust.org/the-economics-of-climate-change/ "The Economics of Climate Change"] Ecotrust, 23 February 2015 |
*[http://www.ecotrust.org/the-economics-of-climate-change/ "The Economics of Climate Change"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210422232557/https://ecotrust.org/the-economics-of-climate-change/ |date=22 April 2021 }} Ecotrust, 23 February 2015 |
||
== Lectures, workshops, webinars and presentations == |
== Lectures, workshops, webinars and presentations == |
||
Line 67: | Line 67: | ||
== Recognition == |
== Recognition == |
||
* [[Right Livelihood Award]] as recognition for her work with LEDeG, 1986.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rightlivelihood.org/ladakh.html|title=Right Livelihood Laureates|website=Rightlivelihood.org|access-date=7 October 2017|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20090108164840/http://www.rightlivelihood.org/ladakh.html|archivedate=8 January 2009}}</ref> |
|||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | * Goi Peace Award from the [[Goi Peace Foundation]] in Japan (2012), "in recognition of her pioneering work in the new economy movement to help create a more sustainable and equitable world.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.goipeace.or.jp/english/activities/award/award2012.html|title=2012 Goi Peace Award Laureate|website=Goipeace.or.jp|date=August 2012 |access-date=7 October 2017}}</ref> |
||
* The Environment Award at the [https://www.tignano.it/ Tignano Festival], Tuscany - Italy (2023). |
|||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | |||
== Affiliations == |
== Affiliations == |
||
Norberg-Hodge is a co-founder of the International Forum on Globalization and the [[Global Ecovillage Network]]. She was a founding member of the International Commission on the Future of Food and Agriculture, launched with the support of the government of Tuscany, and was previously on the editorial board of [[The Ecologist]] magazine. |
Norberg-Hodge is a co-founder of the International Forum on Globalization and the [[Global Ecovillage Network]]. She was a founding member of the International Commission on the Future of Food and Agriculture, launched with the support of the government of Tuscany, and was previously on the editorial board of [[The Ecologist]] magazine. She lives in Australia. |
||
== References == |
== References == |
||
Line 117: | Line 115: | ||
[[Category:21st-century Swedish writers]] |
[[Category:21st-century Swedish writers]] |
||
[[Category:21st-century Swedish women writers]] |
[[Category:21st-century Swedish women writers]] |
||
[[Category:Himalayan studies]] |
Latest revision as of 13:42, 18 September 2024
This article's use of external links may not follow Wikipedia's policies or guidelines. (July 2020) |
Helena Norberg-Hodge | |
---|---|
Born | Sweden | 10 January 1946
Occupation(s) | linguist, writer, activist |
Awards | 1986 Right Livelihood Award and 2012 Goi Peace Award |
Helena Norberg-Hodge (born 10 January 1946) is founder and director of Local Futures, previously known as the International Society for Ecology and Culture (ISEC). Local Futures is a non-profit organization "dedicated to the revitalization of cultural and biological diversity, and the strengthening of local communities and economies worldwide."[1]
Norberg-Hodge is the author of the international best-selling book Ancient Futures (1991), about tradition and change in the Himalayan region of Ladakh, available in multiple languages, as an ecobook and audiobook versions. She is also the author of Local is Our Future (2019), in which she advocates for localized alternatives to the global economy, particularly involving the creation of robust local food systems and democratic structures that can effectively resist authoritarianism.[2] An outspoken critic of economic globalization, she co-founded – along with Jerry Mander, Doug Tompkins, Vandana Shiva, Martin Khor and others – the International Forum on Globalization (IFG) in 1994.[3] She is a leading proponent of localization as an antidote to the problems arising from globalization, and founded the International Alliance for Localization (IAL) in 2014.
Norberg-Hodge produced and co-directed the award-winning documentary film The Economics of Happiness (2011), which lays out her arguments against economic globalization and for localization.[4] Recently she initiated World Localization Day (WLD), which broadcasts globally online. In 1986, she was awarded the Right Livelihood Award for "preserving the traditional culture and values of Ladakh against the onslaught of tourism and development." In 2012, she received the Goi Peace Award for "her pioneering work in the localization movement".[5]
Education
[edit]Norberg-Hodge was educated in Sweden, Germany, Austria, England and the United States. She specialized in linguistics, including studies at the doctoral level at the University of London and at MIT, with Noam Chomsky. Fluent in seven languages, she has lived in and studied numerous cultures at varying degrees of industrialization. The most influential of these in forming Norberg-Hodge's worldview is the Himalayan region of Ladakh.
Ladakh
[edit]Ladakh, also known as Little Tibet, is a remote region on the Tibetan plateau. Although it is politically part of India, it has more in common culturally with Tibet. Because it borders both China and Pakistan, countries with which India has had tense relations and frequent border disputes, the Indian government kept Ladakh largely isolated from the outside world. It was not until 1962 that the first road was built over the high mountain passes that separate the region from the rest of India, and even then the region was off-limits to all but the India military. In 1975, the India government decided to open Ladakh to tourism and 'development', and Norberg-Hodge was one of the first westerners to visit the region, accompanying a German film crew as a translator.[6]
As she described in an interview with the Indian website Infochange,[7] the culture she observed in those early years was a near-paradise of social and ecological well-being, but quickly broke down under the impact of outside economic forces: "When I first arrived in Leh, the capital of 5,000 inhabitants, cows were the most likely cause of congestion and the air was crystal clear. Within five minutes' walk in any direction from the town centre were barley fields, dotted with large farmhouses. For the next twenty years I watched Leh turn into an urban sprawl. The streets became choked with traffic, and the air tasted of diesel fumes. 'Housing colonies' of soulless, cement boxes spread into the dusty desert. The once pristine streams became polluted, the water undrinkable. For the first time, there were homeless people. The increased economic pressures led to unemployment and competition. Within a few years, friction between different communities appeared. All of these things had not existed for the previous 500 years."
Many of the changes that 'development' brought were psychological, as she described in the film version of Ancient Futures: "In one of my first years in Ladakh, I was in this incredibly beautiful village. All the houses were three stories high and painted white. And I was just amazed. So out of curiosity I asked a young man from that village to show me the poorest house. He thought for a bit, and then he said, 'We don't have any poor houses.' The same person I heard eight years later saying to a tourist, 'Oh, if you could only help us Ladakhis, we're so poor!' And what had happened is that in the intervening eight years he had been bombarded with all these one-dimensional images of life in the West. He'd seen people with fast cars, you know, looking as though they never worked, and with lots of money. And suddenly by comparison his culture seemed backward and primitive and poor."
In 1978 Norberg-Hodge founded The Ladakh Project, for which Local Futures is now the parent organization, in order to counter the overly rosy impressions of life in the urban consumer culture, and to re-instill respect for the traditional culture. She also helped establish several indigenous NGOs in Ladakh including the Women's Alliance of Ladakh (WAL), the Ladakh Environment and Health Organisation (LEHO), and the Ladakh Ecological Development Group (LEDeG). LEDeG has designed, built and installed a wide range of small-scale appropriate technologies, including solar water heaters, cookers, passive space heaters, and greenhouses. In 1986, Norberg-Hodge and LEDeG were awarded the Right Livelihood Award (also known as the 'Alternative Nobel Prize') in recognition of these efforts.[8]
Publications
[edit]Norberg-Hodge's most recent book, Local is Our Future (2019) describes how a systemic shift from a globalized economy towards a network of decentralized, localized economies could address a number of problems simultaneously, ranging from economic inequality to the climate crisis to mental illness epidemics.[2] The book has received praise from a number of public figures including Bill McKibben, Douglas Rushkoff, David Suzuki, Charles Eisenstein, Alice Waters, and others.[2][9]
Her previous book, Ancient Futures: Learning from Ladakh (Sierra Club, 1991), was based on Norberg-Hodge's first-hand experience of Ladakh's traditional culture and the impacts of conventional development on it. The book was very well received, and has remained in print ever since. (A second edition, with a different subtitle, "Lessons from Ladakh for a Globalizing World", was published in 2009; a third edition, with no subtitle, is to be published in April 2016). Ancient Futures has been described as an "inspirational classic" by The London Times and "one of the most important books of our time" by author Susan Griffin.[10] Together with the film version of the book, Ancient Futures has been translated into more than 40 languages.[10]
Norberg-Hodge is also co-author of Bringing the Food Economy Home: Local Alternatives to Global Agribusiness (Kumarian, 2002) and From the Ground Up: Rethinking Industrial Agriculture (Zed Books, 1992).
Norberg-Hodge has written numerous articles and contributed chapters to many books over the years. A small sampling of her work published online is listed here:
- "Resist Locally, Renew Globally", Great Transition Initiative, August 2019
- "Unlike a Globalized Food System, Local Food Won't Destroy the Environment", Truthout, December 2018
- "Localisation: a strategic solution to globalised authoritarianism", Transnational Institute, May 2018
- "Localization and the Economics of Happiness", Soka Gakkai International, March 2017
- "Strengthening Local Economies: The Path to Peace?", Tikkun, 29 July 2015
- "A New Call for Resistance and Renewal", Resurgence, July–August 2015
- "The Economics of Climate Change" Archived 22 April 2021 at the Wayback Machine Ecotrust, 23 February 2015
Lectures, workshops, webinars and presentations
[edit]Norberg-Hodge lectures extensively in several languages – most often in English, Swedish, German, and Ladakhi, and occasionally in French, Spanish, and Italian. Over the years, lecture tours have brought her to universities, government agencies and private institutions. She has made presentations to parliamentarians in Germany, Sweden, and England; at the White House and the US Congress; to UNESCO, the World Bank, the European Commission, and the IMF; and at Cambridge, Oxford, Harvard, Cornell and numerous other universities. She also teaches regularly at Schumacher College in England. She frequently lectures and gives workshops for community groups around the world working on localization issues.
In addition, she frequently appears on television and radio programs around the world.
Several of Norberg-Hodge's talks have been recorded or filmed, and are available to view online. A small sampling is listed here:
- December 2019- "Is Localization a Solution to the Crisis of Capitalism?" (interview on the Upstream Podcast)
- October 2018- "Helena Norberg-Hodge on Looking at the Big System" (appearance on the television program Renegade Inc)
- May 2017- "Understanding the Economic Equation for Creating Happiness" (interview on the UPLIFT Podcast)
- March 2016- "Debt and Speculation in the Global Economy" (webinar with Charles Eisenstein).
- December 2015- "Going Local" (webinar with Michael Shuman).
- October 2015- "Economics of Happiness – How Human-Scale Is Essential for Solving Our Social and Ecological Problems" at Lingnan University, Hong Kong
- May 2015- Talk at the 'Our Community' Conference in Melbourne, Australia
- July 2011-"The Economics of Happiness." TEDx, Christchurch, New Zealand
Recognition
[edit]- Right Livelihood Award as recognition for her work with LEDeG, 1986.[11]
- One of the world's 'Ten Most Interesting Environmentalists' by the Earth Journal (1993).
- In Carl McDaniel's book Wisdom for a Liveable Planet (Trinity University Press, 2005), she was profiled as one of eight visionaries changing the world today.
- Goi Peace Award from the Goi Peace Foundation in Japan (2012), "in recognition of her pioneering work in the new economy movement to help create a more sustainable and equitable world.[12]
- The Environment Award at the Tignano Festival, Tuscany - Italy (2023).
Affiliations
[edit]Norberg-Hodge is a co-founder of the International Forum on Globalization and the Global Ecovillage Network. She was a founding member of the International Commission on the Future of Food and Agriculture, launched with the support of the government of Tuscany, and was previously on the editorial board of The Ecologist magazine. She lives in Australia.
References
[edit]- ^ "Local Futures – Local Futures". Local Futures. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
- ^ a b c "Local is Our Future book". LocalFutures.org. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
- ^ "History – INTERNATIONAL FORUM ON GLOBALIZATION". Ifg.org. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
- ^ "About the film – Local Futures". Localfutures.org. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
- ^ "2012 Goi Peace Award Laureate". Goi Peace Foundation. August 2012. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
- ^ Monte Leach. "Lessons from an ancient culture, Interview with Helena Norberg-Hodge". Share-international.org. Archived from the original on 28 October 2012. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
- ^ "Localisation is about bringing the economy back to a human scale | Analysis | Globalisation". Archived from the original on 12 April 2016. Retrieved 30 March 2016.
- ^ "Right Livelihood Award: 1986 - LEDEG". www.rightlivelihood.org. Archived from the original on 8 January 2009. Retrieved 8 January 2009.
- ^ "Local is Our Future: Endorsements". LocalFutures.org. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
- ^ a b "Chelsea Green Publishing – Ancient Futures, 3rd Edition". Chelsea Green Publishing. 28 January 2016. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
- ^ "Right Livelihood Laureates". Rightlivelihood.org. Archived from the original on 8 January 2009. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
- ^ "2012 Goi Peace Award Laureate". Goipeace.or.jp. August 2012. Retrieved 7 October 2017.
External links
[edit]- Local Futures/International Society for Ecology and Culture
- Helena Norberg-Hodge's film – Ancient Futures: Learning from Ladakh
- Online interviews with Helena Norberg-Hodge
- The Ecologist magazine
- The Right Livelihood Award website
- The International Forum on Globalizatioon (IFG)
- Helena Norberg-Hodge, on the portal RAI Economy
- Swedish environmentalists
- Swedish women environmentalists
- Anti-globalization activists
- Anti-globalization writers
- Swedish ecologists
- Non-fiction environmental writers
- Sustainability advocates
- Swedish non-fiction writers
- Swedish women non-fiction writers
- Swedish political writers
- 1946 births
- Living people
- Swedish women essayists
- Swedish women activists
- Women ecologists
- Women political writers
- Neo-Luddites
- MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences alumni
- 20th-century non-fiction writers
- 21st-century non-fiction writers
- 20th-century Swedish women writers
- 21st-century Swedish writers
- 21st-century Swedish women writers
- Himalayan studies