
Doughnut Economics for Climate Risks and Shocks (Past)
A co-creative webinar to anticipate and address climate-related shocks through the tools of Doughnut Economics

Please Note: This event has now finished and can no longer be joined.
This 2 hour webinar will explore how to turn some core concepts of Doughnut Economics into game-based learning tools for local and international communities of practitioners working on climate-related disasters. It will be co-hosted by Doughnut Economics Action Lab and the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre, and led by Kate Raworth and Pablo Suarez. Anyone who enjoys co-creating in groups is welcome to join - no prior expertise required.
We will work with two of DEAL's concepts: the Doughnut ; and the Embedded Economy diagram, especially with its focus on four key modes of provisioning - through markets, households, the commons and the state.
What happens to people in contexts of, say, a drought or flood? How do these shock affect families - what vulnerabilities does it expose them to, and how might they seek to cope? What compounding risks might they face, in the context of failed states and power inequalities? What measures could be taken to build resilience and protect human wellbeing by preventing such outcomes? With better awareness of these likely effects, what can humanitarian actors and others do to help protect people from the risk of these impacts?

We have created the beginnings of an engaging, game-based approach to exploring these issues and we invite you to help us improve, adapt and expand this so that we can publish it as a co-created resource for all to use. will be to explore ways of making these useful tools for practitioners working

Join the webinar ready to work together online to come up with new ideas and approaches that could be brought into the tool.
We look forward to working with you on this tool.
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Andy Middleton
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Member
Miranda Fan
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Blair Evans
Idlewild, Michigan, United States of America
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Member
Ajay Yadav
India
I want to work on the root of the problems. I feel that economics is the root of the current problems of the world. I am finding answers for how can we downscale the economy without impacting the common people so that if for environment, we want to reduce consumerism, then it should not impact the common people. I don't know if it is possible or not doughnut model but I want to understand the ideas behind doughnut
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Member
Lucy Bramley
Ringwood, England, United Kingdom
Coach, permaculturist, lifelong learner
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Jeremy Johnson
Cambridge, England, United Kingdom
A member of the Cambridge Doughnut Economics Action Group in Cambridge, UK. Interested in thinking about Doughnut Economic and using it in a situation to help transformative change.
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cheryl lee
Oxford
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Dominic Dibble
Bodegraven, the Netherlands
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Gaukhar Aliyeva
Almaty, Kazakhstan
Social Innovation at Eurasia Foundation of Central Asia
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Alyssa Stanhope-Bosumpim