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Glossary›Regenerative Culture

Glossary

Regenerative Culture

A way of living and organizing human communities that actively restores and enhances the health of ecosystems and social systems, creating conditions for life to flourish.

What is Regenerative Culture?

Regenerative culture is a framework in which communities maintain right relationship with all relations—human and more-than-human—such that actions contribute to ever more life on earth. Unlike sustainability, which aims to maintain current conditions, regenerative culture seeks to actively improve the health, resilience, and adaptability of both ecological and social systems. A living system is regenerative if it keeps creating more life or creates the conditions conducive to more life.

A regenerative culture consciously builds the capacity of everybody in a particular place to respond and change. It recognizes that human thriving depends on healthy ecosystems and a life-supporting biosphere, and shifts human communities from extractive relationships with the living world toward reciprocal, generative ones. A regenerative human culture understands that human and planetary health are intrinsically linked.

This approach moves beyond the binary logic of “sustaining” what exists toward actively co-creating conditions for increased vitality, diversity, and resilience across nested scales—from the local to the bioregional to the planetary.

Origins & Lineage

The term “regenerative culture” emerged from multiple streams of thought converging in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. The term permaculture was developed by David Holmgren and Bill Mollison at the University of Tasmania in 1978. The word permaculture originally referred to “permanent agriculture,” but was expanded to stand also for “permanent culture,” as it was understood that social aspects were integral to a truly sustainable system.

Regenerative sustainability originates from regenerative agriculture, which stems from ancient indigenous practices. Indigenous culture’s deep connection with land allows for agricultural practice that works with rather than against natural systems, with practices highly customized to the land and viewed as an active learning process.

Daniel Christian Wahl published his book “Designing Regenerative Cultures” in 2016. Wahl is an international sustainability consultant and educator specializing in biologically inspired whole systems design and transformative innovation. His work synthesized permaculture ethics, indigenous wisdom, systems thinking, and biomimicry into a comprehensive cultural framework.

John Thackara is a British-born designer, writer, and educator specializing in regenerative design, social innovation, and ecological transitions. The Design for Planet Fellowship brings together experts who work at the cutting edge of sustainability and regenerative design, prototyping new ways of working on climate and biodiversity action.

The concept also draws from the Regenesis Group’s work on regenerative development and Herbert Girardet’s research on regenerative cities.

How It’s Practiced

Regenerative cultures take many different forms, rooted in place and responsive to local and regional environmental, ecological, economic, social, and cultural conditions. Practice involves multiple dimensions:

Regenerative Agriculture & Land Management: Farmers and land stewards apply practices that build soil health, increase biodiversity, and sequester carbon—from no-till farming to agroforestry to holistic grazing.

Bioregional Design: Communities design settlements, economies, and social structures adapted to the unique ecological and cultural characteristics of their bioregion, understanding watershed boundaries and ecosystem capacities.

Collaborative Economics: In strengthening regenerative economic activities, practitioners learn to balance efficiency and resilience, collaboration and competition, diversity and coherence, and small, medium, and large organizations and needs.

Relational Practice: A regenerative culture emerges from finding and living new ways of relating to self, community, and to life as a whole. This includes nature connection practices, community decision-making processes, and “inner work” for personal growth that many practitioners see as inseparable from outer transformation.

Social Justice Integration: A regenerative culture is necessarily one that is rooted in equity, upholds the sovereignty of all living things, practices interdependence, and supports generative conflict and healing.

Regenerative Culture Today

Seekers encounter regenerative culture through multiple channels. Design schools and universities now offer programs in regenerative design and eco-social design. Organizations like Gaia Education, the Regenerative Design Institute, and Schumacher College provide immersive courses blending permaculture, systems thinking, and transformative learning.

Regeneration International maps regenerative agriculture projects around the world, and events like Regeneration 2030 and The Regenerative Business Summit bring global experts together to explore how to deliver well-being and shared prosperity on a healthy planet.

Urban-rural reconnection initiatives, bioregional learning centers, and community-supported agriculture projects provide hands-on entry points. Online platforms feature videos, podcasts, and case studies documenting regenerative projects from natural farming in India to wetland restoration in France to regenerative fashion hubs in the UK.

Retreat centers and gathering spaces host workshops on subjects ranging from regenerative economics to nature reconnection to Work That Reconnects (developed by deep ecologist Joanna Macy).

Common Misconceptions

It’s Not Just Environmentalism: Regenerative culture is not solely about ecological restoration. It equally addresses social systems, economic structures, governance, education, and culture itself—the stories and relationships that shape how communities organize.

It’s Not a Fixed Blueprint: The work is focused on questions rather than answers and solutions, because in each place and cultural context, a regenerative culture will manifest differently, which is why the title uses the plural “cultures.” There is no single model to replicate.

It’s Not Brand-New: While the language gained prominence in the 2010s, the practices draw heavily from indigenous knowledge systems that have sustained human communities for millennia. As Diana Martin from the Rodale Institute cautioned in 2019, “It’s the new buzzword. There is a danger of it getting greenwashed.”

It’s Not Separate from Justice: Regenerative culture cannot be disentangled from questions of equity, land rights, food sovereignty, and decolonization. Extractive economic systems and oppressive social structures are inherently degenerative.

It’s Not Magical Thinking: The approach requires rigorous systems thinking, ecological literacy, practical skill-building, and willingness to engage with complexity and uncertainty without demanding premature certainty or control.

How to Begin

Read: Start with Daniel Christian Wahl’s Designing Regenerative Cultures (Triarchy Press, 2016), which provides both theoretical foundations and practical frameworks. Explore David Holmgren and Bill Mollison’s permaculture writings, particularly Permaculture: Principles and Pathways Beyond Sustainability.

Learn Locally: Seek permaculture design courses, regenerative agriculture workshops, or bioregional gatherings in your area. Many are structured as hands-on learning experiences connected to specific landscapes.

Study Your Bioregion: Begin mapping your local watershed, native species, seasonal patterns, and ecological history. Understanding place is foundational to regenerative practice.

Engage Community: The process of creating regenerative cultures is the process of living these questions together in community with focus. Find others asking similar questions—in farmers markets, community gardens, maker spaces, or study groups.

Practice Reconnection: Spend regular time in direct contact with the more-than-human world. Observe natural patterns. Develop sensory attunement to the living systems around you, recognizing this as both personal practice and cultural transformation.

Related terms

permaculturebioregionalismbiomimicrysystems thinkingdeep ecologysocial ecology
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