The articles I have listed here indirectly address the concept of an economics of abundance of life. The articles from 2000 and 2002 set the stage for my later thoughts on abundance of life.
- January 2019. Community solar gardens in Minnesota. Shareable.
- January 2019. A look at the Feed-in-Tariffs scheme in Germany. Shareable.
- September 2018. A look at this mayor-supported civic crowdfunding program in London. Shareable.
- July 2018. Milan’s Sharing Cities policies help to put a dent in car use in the city. Shareable.
- July 2018. Grow Gothenburg connects gardeners with people who own unused land. Shareable.
- April 2018. German citizens invest in a sustainable local food system with Regionalwert AG. Shareable.
- March 2018. How Spacehive enables crowdfunding for civic projects. Shareable.
- February 2018. Community Purchasing Alliance reduces energy and other bills for member organizations. Shareable.
- December 2017. How Swiss group Pro Specie Rara preserves and shares endangered seeds, Shareable.
- September 2017. 11 Reasons Why Germany’s Heidelberg is a Thriving Sharing City. Shareable.
- July/August 2017. Rückkopplungen für lebensfähige Commons (Feedback loops for commons that can thrive). Contraste 394/395.
- June 2017. Three pieces: The Case for Local, Community-Led Sustainable Energy Programs, How Residents of Hamburg Reclaimed the Power Grid, and Danish Energy Cooperative Lets Consumers Collectively Build Wind Turbines. Excerpts from a book published online in September 2017 and printed in March 2018: Sharing Cities: Activating the Urban Commons.
- 2016. Co-Designing the Crowdfunded Sharing City. Shareable
- 2014. Review of David Bollier: Think Like a Commoner. Grassroots Economic Organizing
- April 2002. “The Wealth of Nations at the Turn of the Millennium: A Classification System based on the International Division of Labor.” Economic Geography 78 (2): 221-244.
- 2000. “Geographic Information Engineering and Social Ground Truth in Attappadi, Kerala State, India.“ Annals of the Association of American Geographers 90 (2): 293-321.