In nature, the more genetically diverse a crop species is, the less vulnerable it is to hazards.
Second, as most of our resources are exchanged for money, the ability of a community to survive depends on how much it earns. The more money you have, the more secure you are. But what happens if the value of money significantly decreases?
Here's a scary fact: the world's present currency stock is largely built on the interest created by debt. This means that the money we are spending is still not nearly matched by products in real terms. So to satisfy this exponential growth in currency, we need to keep producing ever more from our already stressed natural resources.
So, it follows that for a community, or country for that matter, to improve its resilience to adverse change it needs to ensure it has a diversity of resources, and an ability to survive independent of conventional currency systems. But how?
We can start by taking back the power of providing for our most basic of needs - food - by decreasing our dependency on systems of food production outside of our control. The new movement to "grow your own" is already increasing in popularity as a simple way of supplementing incomes during the economic downturn.
Creating other forms of currency is equally as important. The Living Economies Educational Trust (LE)
The process of future-proofing communities is an empowering one, which is not only about ensuring survival through times of change, but also about returning to our roots while improving the quality and enjoyment of life.
Written by Denise Bester, and courtesy of the sustainable living website www.ecobob.co.nz