Bioregionalism is a term used to describe an approach to political, cultural, and environmental issues based on naturally-defined regional areas, consistent with the concept of bioregions. These areas are usually based on a combination of physical and environmental features, including watershed boundaries and soil and terrain characteristics. Bioregionalism stresses that the determination of a bioregion is also a cultural phenomenon, with phrases such as "the politics of place" and "terrain of conciousness" appearing in bioregionalist writings, and places emphasis on local populations, knowledge and solutions."Bioregionalism: The Need For a Firmer Theoretical Foundation", Don Alexander, Trumpeter v13.3, 1996.
The term appears to have originated in work by Peter Berg and Raymond Dasmann in the early 1970s."Reinhabiting California", Peter Berg and Raymond Dasmann, The Ecologist 7, no. 10 (1977)
Bioregionale Demokratie | Democracia Bioregional | Démocratie biorégionale
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