URL:
A podcast interview (with links for listening and the full transcript) around regenerative economics.
The prompting questions, called out at the top of the episode:
How do we let go of the sense of scarcity, separation and powerlessness that defines the ways we live, care and do business together? How can we best equip our young people for the world that is coming – which is so, so different from the future we grew up believing was possible?
I love the host's introduction to the podcast:
Manda: Hey people. Welcome to Accidental Gods. To the podcast where we believe that another world is still possible, and that if we all work together, there is still time for us to lay the foundations for a future that we would be proud to lead to the generations that come after us
About the guest:
Jennifer Brownsburg Engelman is an educator, a regenerative, and I would say renegade Economist. Who is lead at the project for regenerative economics in secondary schools and lead author of the online textbook of the same name. Jennifer has been teaching economics for nearly 30 years, but as you’ll hear, the global financial crash led her to rethink the rules and structures of the system, the entire paradigm that underpins all the ways that we live and work and do business. And now she’s one of the world’s leading thinkers on regenerative economics. How we can focus away from business markets and the structures of neoliberalism to towards ways of being that are grounded in reciprocity, respect and responsibility in the realities of what it is to be a human being in the 21st century.