Transition Towns (also known as Transition network or Transition
Movement) is a grassroots network of communities that are working to
build resilience in response to peak oil, climate destruction, and
economic instability. Transition Towns is a brand for these
environmental and social movements “founded (in part) upon the principles of permaculture” [1], based originally on Bill Mollison’s seminal Permaculture, a Designers Manual published in 1988. The Transition Towns brand of permaculture uses David Holmgren’s 2003 book, Permaculture: Principles and Pathways Beyond Sustainability. [2]
These techniques were included in a student project overseen by
permaculture teacher Rob Hopkins at the Kinsale Further Education
College in Ireland. The term transition town was coined by Louise Rooney[3] and Catherine Dunne. Following its start in Kinsale, Ireland it then spread to Totnes, England where Rob Hopkins and Naresh Giangrande developed the concept during 2005 and 2006.[4] The aim of this community project is to equip communities for the dual challenges of climate change and peak oil. The Transition Towns movement is an example of socioeconomic localisation. In 2007, the UK-based charity Transition Network
started up in order to help spread the ideas of transition and support
communities around the world as they adopted/adapted the transition
model to turn their locale into a more resilient, lower carbon
settlement.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transition_Towns
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