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<title><string language="fre"><![CDATA[Evolution of the Ecotopian Myth in the Pacific Northwest into a Culture of Sustainability / Steven Reed Johnson]]></string></title>
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<string language="fre"><![CDATA[Evolution of the Ecotopian Myth in the Pacific Northwest into a Culture of Sustainability / Steven Reed Johnson, in symposium international "Regional Becomings in North America" organisé, sous la responsabilité scientifique de Wendy Harding (Cultures Anglo-Saxonnes (CAS), Université Toulouse Jean Jaurès, France) et Nancy Cook (University of Montana, USA), Université Toulouse Jean Jaurès, 7-8 avril 2016. 
Session 2: Bioregional Becomings II.
When Ernest
Callenbach, author of Ecotopia,
embarked on his first book tour in the Pacific Northwest in 1975, Portland, Oregon was hardly an exemplary sustainable community. Callenbach's book tour was sponsored by Rain magazine, a pioneering journal of
sustainable practices. In the pages of Rain
(1974--1988) and the actions of a
handful of grassroots organizations, the origins of the sustainable culture in
the Northwest can be recognized. 
This paper documents the birth of
the myth of ecotopia during Portland's civic reconstruction (1968--1980) period
to the present Portland, an exemplary sustainable community. The transformation is explored as a cultural
shift, not just a political one. In
Portland there is a green way of thinking and solving community problems, born
from utopian ideals; now infused in the civic culture. 
The paper will then explore
current challenges for Portland and any community with sustainable and
resilience goals, including: social
equity, making room for diverse and transformative dialogue, and the danger of
isolation in a global economy.]]></string></description>
<keyword><string language="fre"><![CDATA[environnement (protection)]]></string></keyword>
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NOTE:Steve Johnson has been a community activist, researcher, educator, lecturer and consultant for 40 years.&nbsp; He has worked with over 500 nonprofit organizations, public agencies, and businesses.&nbsp; He returned to university life in the late 1990s. His Ph.D. thesis, The Transformation of Civic Institutions and Practices in Portland, Oregon 1960-1999, (2001) was awarded the best dissertation of the year award on urban politics by the American Political Science Association.&nbsp; Since 2006 he has lectured overseas in 125 cities in 20 countries to over 6,000 people.&nbsp; The subjects of these lectures has been the role of civic engagement in creating vibrant, healthy, and sustainable communities.&nbsp;&nbsp; He is adjunct professor at Portland State University in Portland, Oregon where he teaches undergraduate and graduate courses on citizen participation, community studies, urban watersheds, civic engagement and social institutions, urban planning, and healthy communities. &gt; Voir son website. 
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