Regeneration Network
Relations between elements are more important than the elements themselves.
Bill Mollison
The most effective action takes place at the scale where the Earth-Humanity relationship is tangible: bioregions.
Earth In Transition supports the creation of a glocal network:
acting locally,
connected globally,
sharing resources, feedback, and tools.
A living, autonomous, decentralized network, connected by collective digital and human intelligence.
The right scale for regeneration
Bioregions are living territories shaped by watersheds, soils, climates, ecosystems, and cultures. Unlike administrative borders, they reflect how life actually organizes itself.
At this scale, regeneration becomes precise and effective: water cycles can be restored, soils regenerated, and food, habitat, and mobility designed in coherence with the land.
Bioregions also carry a shared sense of place and belonging. Landscapes, cultures and ways of living create a natural ground for cooperation. This shared identity makes long-term collective engagement possible and roots transition in culture, not only in technique.
Finally, bioregions operate at the right scale for collective action. They are small enough for trust, relationships, and embodied processes, and large enough to host meaningful transformation.
Beyond political divisions, they offer a resilient foundation for Earth-centred governance and regeneration: locally rooted, globally connected.
Weaving collective intelligence
Like a forest of the Universe itself, the Regeneration Network circulates Life, awareness and resources. It functions as a living network, comparable to a mycelium: decentralized, relational, and resilient.
Through a shared digital infrastructure, experiences, tools, and learnings circulate between and within bioregions, allowing each to remain autonomous while being nourished by the whole.
A shared Mandala acts as an evolving beacon rather than a fixed blueprint. It provides coherence and orientation while remaining open to adaptation. Refined through convergences and lived experience, it enables diversity without fragmentation and keeps the network aligned over time.
Collective intelligence is anchored through shared facilitation processes and regular convergences. Open-source methodologies, training, and embodied gatherings ensure that cooperation is practiced, not theorized. In this continuous cycle of action, reflection, and alignment, regeneration becomes a living process, rooted in place, and empowered through connection.