Wasser Unterm Hammer [H2O Up For Sale]
This film follows the results of water privatization in Germany and England.
This film follows the results of water privatization in Germany and England.
This film follows a seventeen-year-old Chinese girl who leaves home in order to work in a Chinese jeans factory.
A couple competes to live with zero waste for a whole year, with comedic results.
This film depicts the clash that occurs in a small American town when Wal-Mart wants to open a store there.
This comedy drama is about a struggling poet who starts a healthy food stand to change the way people eat, and faces the complicated challenges of fighting against the system.
This short film follows a spoiled tomato as it moves through the Brazilian food chain.
This film follows the efforts of the city of San Francisco to reach zero waste.
In this essay, Watt recounts discussions with her students regarding lifestyle patterns; she shows how it will be necessary to change such patterns if we are to take climate change seriously from an economic and policy perspective, and to tackle it realistically.
The paper highlights shortcomings in GMO public consultation practices in the European Union and in one of its member countries, Finland. Specifically, they do not serve democracy, increase consensus, enable better decisions to be made, or establish trust.
Is a world without waste truly achievable? The essays in this volume of RCC Perspectives discuss zero waste as a vision, as a historical concept, and as an international practice. Going beyond the motto of “reduce, reuse, recycle,” they reflect on the feasibility of creating closed material cycles and explore real-world examples of challenges and successes on the way to zero waste.