By Jessica Stites
June 11, 2013
| When I set out to investigate the appeal of
Transition ,
a sustainability movement that has spread to 1,105 towns in 43
countries over the past eight years, I started with what I thought was a
basic question: What are “Transition Towns” transitioning to?
“Resilience,”
I was told. “What does that mean?” I asked, thinking vaguely of steel.
“The ability to absorb shocks to a system!” was the reply. Well, yes,
but …? Pressed for details, Nina Winn, who runs a Transition initiative
at the
Institute of Cultural Affairs in
Chicago, said, “I don’t think there’s a conclusion. Like when a
person’s trying to self-improve, it’s a constant growth. Our communities
would grow to be a lot more intimate. We wouldn’t be hesitant to ask
for that cup of sugar or tomato. The streets would be narrower instead
of expanding; there would be fresh produce on every corner that was
grown just down the street. You would see people on the street because
of that—because where there’s food, there’s people.”
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