The Regenerative Future Podcast Podcast By Ecohubs Community cover art

The Regenerative Future Podcast

The Regenerative Future Podcast

By: Ecohubs Community
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What would it take to redesign how humans live together?

The EcoHubs Podcast explores the emerging movement to build regenerative communities — places where ecology, culture, governance, and technology work together as living systems.

Around the world, many people feel that the dominant models of society are no longer working. Cities often create isolation instead of belonging. Economic systems reward extraction instead of regeneration. Decision-making structures concentrate power rather than empowering communities.

EcoHubs is working to change that.

We are co-creating an open-source blueprint for regenerative communities — human settlements designed like living ecosystems: resilient, diverse, cooperative, and deeply connected to the land.

In this podcast, we explore the ideas, tools, and real-world experiments that can help make this possible.

Topics include:

  • Regenerative agriculture and ecological land design
  • Intentional communities and social architecture
  • DAO governance and decentralized coordination
  • Contribution economies and community finance
  • Eco-construction and human-scale habitat design
  • Conflict resolution and community culture
  • Open-source systems for collaborative societies

Through conversations with community builders, permaculture designers, technologists, economists, and cultural pioneers, we are inspired to explore how humanity can move from extractive systems toward regenerative ones.

This podcast is not just about theory.

EcoHubs is actively building and testing these ideas — developing an open knowledge base, digital coordination tools, and pilot communities that can serve as living laboratories for the future.

The goal is simple but ambitious:

To create a shared blueprint that anyone, anywhere in the world, can use to build thriving regenerative communities.

If you believe the future of humanity lies in cooperation, ecological intelligence, and new models of living together — this podcast is for you.

Welcome to the regenerative future.

Ecohubs Community
Science Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Sociocracy: Principles and Applications of Consent-Based Governance
    Mar 18 2026

    This podcast series explores "Ecological Resistance in Intentional Communities," focusing on the "real-world laboratory" of Arterra Bizimodu, an ecovillage in Navarre, Spain. Founded in 2014, Arterra serves as the headquarters for GEN-Europe (Global Ecovillage Network) and models a life centered on cooperation, sustainability, and shared governance.

    The show dives deep into Sociocracy (also known as Dynamic Governance), a non-authoritarian organizational structure developed by Dutch engineer Gerard Endenburg in the 1970s. Listeners will learn how this system replaces traditional "power-over" hierarchies with a "power-with" circular structure, where authority is distributed among semi-autonomous teams called circles.

    Key themes include:

    • Consent vs. Consensus: We analyze why many communities are shifting away from traditional consensus, which can lead to "unanimity paralysis," in favor of consent decision-making. In sociocracy, a proposal moves forward if it is "good enough for now and safe enough to try," meaning no member has a "paramount and reasoned objection" that could harm the group's ability to achieve its aims.
    • Structural Innovation: The podcast breaks down the pillars of sociocratic design: nested circles that align authority with expertise; double-linking, which uses two distinct roles (leader and delegate) to ensure two-way information flow between circles; and elections by consent, where roles are filled based on qualifications and group trust rather than popularity.
    • The Neo-Rural Journey: We feature the lived experiences of Arterra's approximately 40 residents, many of whom left urban careers to search for an ecologically aligned existence. The show explores how they use permaculture design, Non-Violent Communication (NVC), and "inner work" to foster mutual trust and emotional responsibility.
    • The Reality of the "Utopia": The series provides a balanced critique, addressing the significant learning curve, the time investment required for participatory governance, and the risk of creating a "soft technocracy" that privileges those most comfortable with structured dialogue.

    Ultimately, this podcast highlights how communities like Arterra Bizimodu act as "seeds" for socio-ecological transition, demonstrating that alternative worldviews grounded in interdependence and shared responsibility are not just ideals, but daily practices.

    Sources:

    • https://ehab-badwi.medium.com/exploring-sociocracy-a-collaborative-and-inclusive-approach-to-organizational-governance-97544cbbb491
    • https://www.educba.com/sociocracy/
    • https://www.sociocracy.info/full-circle-meetings/
    • https://www.collectivespacesfarm.com/how-sociocracy-powers-inclusive-governance-at-collective-spaces-farm/
    • https://www.cohousing.org/sociocracy/
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    24 mins
  • Redesigning Community: Inside the Regenerative Community Operating System (RCOS) and the Future of EcoHubs
    Mar 13 2026

    In this episode, we dive deep into the world of EcoHubs and the Regenerative Community Operating System (RCOS)—a bold, open-source initiative designed to solve the age-old challenges of intentional community living.

    For decades, communities have struggled with the same "failure modes": informal power grabs, invisible workloads, unaddressed conflict, and founder dominance. We explore how Stefan Lessle, a systems thinker and developer, founded EcoHubs to move beyond "good vibes" and provide a practical, structural foundation for human-scale living.

    Key topics discussed in this episode:

    • The "Explicit Beats Implicit" Rule: Why making rules, roles, and exit paths explicit is the single most important factor in preventing community collapse.
    • The 7-Layer Architecture of RCOS: We break down the modular "protocol stack" that governs everything from Identity and Scope (Layer 0) to Evolution and Adaptation (Layer 6).
    • The Power of Human Scale: Why RCOS is optimized for groups of 5 to 150 people (Dunbar’s Number) to ensure trust and accountability without the need for heavy bureaucracy.
    • Technology That Serves Life: How EcoHubs selectively uses Web3 tools like DAOs, Snapshot for gas-free voting, and EcoTokens to create a transparent contribution economy without losing the "human touch".
    • Regeneration vs. Sustainability: Shifting the goal from merely maintaining the status quo to actively healing the land, culture, and social fabric.
    • Stress-Testing the Blueprint: A look at how EcoHubs uses real-world failure cases—like charismatic authority or burnout—to validate the resilience of their system.

    EcoHubs is currently an online-first community of researchers, designers, and builders co-creating this blueprint for the future. Whether you are a permaculturist, a tech innovator, or someone simply looking for a more meaningful way to live, this episode offers a glimpse into a world where technology and ecology finally work in harmony.

    "The future is not a place we are going. It is a place we are creating together, one hub at a time."

    Learn more about the vision and how to join the first 500 founding members at EcoHubs.community.

    Sources:

    • https://ecohubs.community/
    • https://blueprint.ecohubs.community/
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    26 mins
  • Building Cities That Heal the Planet
    Mar 13 2026

    Imagine a city that doesn't just minimize its footprint, but actually acts like a living organism to restore ecosystems and clean the air. In this episode, we reveal how the science of Ekistics can transform our urban "cells" from mechanical networks into regenerative habitats that truly heal the Earth.

    We dive into the visionary work of Constantinos A. Doxiadis, whose multidimensional framework balances nature, society, and technology to achieve maximum human happiness and safety. Learn how the 2km pedestrian cell provides a blueprint for a city where everything you need is within a 10-minute walk, reclaiming "free social space" for humans by moving automobiles to the periphery or underground. We also explore the emergence of Circular Economy Villages (CEVs), which utilize integrated microgrids and regenerative agriculture to create self-sufficient communities that grow out of the landscape. By re-establishing the human scale within a global network of linked settlements—the Ecumenopolis—we can build a future where the built environment contributes net-positive impacts to its surroundings. Join us to discover why the "perfect" design isn't just about doing less harm, but about fostering a thriving partnership between people and place.

    Sources:

    • https://lifestyle.sustainability-directory.com/term/regenerative-architecture-principles/
    • https://www.re-thinkingthefuture.com/rtf-fresh-perspectives/a13755-regenerative-design-restoring-nature-through-architecture/
    • https://ijrar.org/download.php?file=IJRAR19L1957.pdf
    • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ekistics
    • https://www.scribd.com/document/339282349/Planning-341
    • https://ijrar.org/download.php?file=IJRAR19L1957.pdf
    • https://www.researchgate.net/publication/353494822_A_network_of_circular_economy_villages_design_guidelines_for_21st_century_Garden_Cities
    • https://www.researchgate.net/publication/353494822_A_network_of_circular_economy_villages_design_guidelines_for_21st_century_Garden_Cities
    • https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/15/17/13271
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    22 mins
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