Permaculture Blue Mountains

Enabling permaculture knowledge and action in the Blue Mountains

Blue Mountains Permaculture is an informal network enabling permaculture knowledge and action to emerge in the Blue Mountains, Australia. We seek to build beneficial connections both within the Blue Mountains bioregion and beyond.  

GROUP DETAILS

Created: May 13, 2008

Updated: Nov 23, 2009

Membership: Open To Apply

Semi-Private

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Created: Oct 09, 2007
Updated: Apr 29, 2008
Viewed: 2 times

Robert DuBois

GlobalGiving
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User Info 

Email: rdubois [at] globalgiving.com
 
Address: Washington, District of Columbia
United States
 
I Speak: micro-philanthropy
 
I Am: Philanthropist
 
Member Since: October 09, 2007
 
Local Time: Tue Nov 24 19:08:56
 

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Areas of Focus 

Socially Responsible Investment (2760 people)  |  Electric Power (947 people)  |  Education, Government and Sustainability (2053 people)  |  Culture and Sustainability (2703 people)  |  Gender Equality (1676 people)  |  Forest Ecology and Conservation (1042 people)  |  Fair Trade (2545 people)  |  Economic Development (1763 people)  |  Malnutrition, Diet, Disease, and Education (1164 people)  |  Local Food Systems (2859 people)  |  Youth Participation (1571 people)  |  Youth Leadership (2021 people)  |  Child Labor (863 people)  |  Women's Education (1074 people)  |  Energy Pollution (754 people)  |  Global Pollution (1153 people)  |  Social Entrepreneurship (3671 people)  |  Philanthropy (1381 people)  |  Community Enterprise (1851 people)  |  Microcredit (1289 people)  |  Sustainability and Technology (2121 people)  |  Groundwater (744 people)  |  Health Care Access (1062 people)  |  Conservation and the Commons (890 people)  |  Sustainable Building (3011 people)  |  Tuberculosis (224 people)  |  Global Food Supply and Sustainability (2442 people)  |  Globalization Impacts (2072 people)  |  Hazardous Solid Waste (535 people)  |  Female Genital Cutting (406 people)  |  Trafficking of Women (658 people)  |  Fundraising (1585 people)  |  Rural Development (1494 people)  |  Coastal Ecology (984 people)  |  Human Trafficking and Slavery (752 people)  |  Community Resources (1765 people)  |  Community Participation (3633 people)  |  Alternative Fuels (2875 people)  |  Water Quality and Health (1106 people)  |  Water Supply and Conservation (1555 people)  |  Sustainable Living (3473 people)  |  Sustainable Forestry (1853 people)  |  Arts Education (1601 people)  |  Sanitation (446 people)  |  Sustainable Agriculture (4014 people)  |  Community Service/Volunteerism (2370 people)  |  Microfinance (1332 people)  |  Conservation Area Protection (834 people)  |  Wilderness (1761 people)  |  Women's Health (1191 people)  |  Hunger and Food Security (1327 people)  |  Women's Rights (1302 people)  |  Indigenous Peoples and Cultures (2793 people)  |  Child and Youth Protection (1808 people)  |  Public Health (1207 people)  |  Human Rights Education (1031 people)  |  Human Rights Protection (1110 people)  |  Children's Health (1479 people)  |  Access To Education (2287 people)  |  Social Development (1977 people)  

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wholearthbuilder about 1 year ago
I use the WholEarth system to quickly indentify the problems facing any environmental situation where humans are involved.

First, I review the five elements. I use it like a mantra.

Housing
Water
Food
Energy
Occupation

It is very likely that the root cause of the problem is based in one or more of these five things.

Your thoughts please.
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