
Stepping into the Doughnut
Exploring methods to introduce the Doughnut with Devon, Guildford and Milton Keynes

I'm currently writing it up as a workshop guide here on the DEAL Community Platform for anyone to pick up and use, adapt and evolve, so look out for that in next month's newsletter. And I warmly invite your reflections, questions and ideas in the comments section below. You can also read our brief online introduction to the Doughnut (in slide form) here.
So starting from the beginning...
A workshop idea is born

With story in mind and object in hand, everyone was invited to locate their story of change in or around the space of the Doughnut, according to whether it related to ecological harm (stand beyond the outer ring), to people not meeting their needs (stand in the hole of the inner ring), or to either ecological thriving or a time when a particular need is being universally met (stand within the Doughnut itself)?
- Making the Doughnut with two large ropes is great fun. It has weight and everyone can hold on and make it together. But what other ways could the Doughnut be made on the floor? With ribbon, with chalk, with sand?
- And what other ways might people powerfully connect with a story of change they’d like to see in the world? With an action? With a form of artistic expression?
Taking a step further and mapping our place to the Doughnut
"We wanted to run a workshop with councillors, community leaders, and residents of Guildford because we feel that it's impossible to tackle the climate crisis without wide understanding of the links between environmental degradation, climate breakdown, poverty, and racial, gender, and class inequality. That our current economic model doesn't even acknowledge that economics takes place within the biosphere can only lead to devastation of our planet, and the DEAL workshop looked like a fantastic way to introduce some of the concepts around regenerative practice and decentralisation to people. " Ben McCallan - Zero Carbon Guildford.
Similar to the power of the objects, there’s something special about putting your words onto something that has weight, texture and three-dimensionality. It's tactile. It makes a sound when you write. It's engaging more of your senses. And by being a curiously different approach to writing things down I believe it invites you to think differently.
- Transforming systems that are degenerative by default to those that are regenerative by design, and
- Transforming systems that are divisive by default to those that are distributive by design.
Here's what introducing these can look like with props...



- What are the ways in which anyone can present the transformations of degenerative to regenerative design, and divisive to distributive design? With props, as a group activity, with videos from DEAL? What other options might there be?
- What other ways might you map the challenges and changes already underway onto the Doughnut without using pens and paper? With props, with art? Maybe making reusable chalkboards out of cardboard?
Pivoting our thinking into the space of possibility

Wendy, who had organised the workshop, also brought props to illustrate eight of the social and ecological challenges in Milton Keynes. This was really engaging way to bring these topics to the group and we then collectively chose where to locate them in and around the Doughnut. You can see some of these in the picture above.
Bringing together the room and zoom
In lockdown, when in-person meetings were not possible, and online meetings became the norm, people began to recognise that meaningful connection could actually be made online and that some barriers to participation were reduced, such as travel and capacity limits.
In places where people are able to meet in person again, some events are now combining the two elements, offering both an in-person experience and an online experience. But this brings new design challenges. How do you meaningfully combine two very different experiences of 'In real life' (IRL) and online (URL)? Of being together in the room and on zoom?
This is something Transition Town MK wanted to explore as they recognised some participants couldn't make the workshop, so they set up a camera, a screen and a laptop.

The camera captured what was going on in the room, then when participants in the room started a particular part of the process, I then briefed the zoom participants directly with another explanation of what was happening and what their zoom version would be.
For example, before the workshop in the room started, I briefed the zoom participants about finding an object in their home, in preparation for later. Then when participants in the room were sharing their objects and stories in pairs, I briefed the zoom participants that they would go into groups of 5 and share their objects and stories one-by-one - 2 minutes each - then collectively share at the end.
Throughout the workshop, whenever we had a moment of whole group sharing - with everyone in the room and on zoom - we had the zoom participants on screen also sharing. So having the big screen was important so they were seen clearly.
So how can we evolve this method? Here are some questions that gesture towards some further experimentation and iterations:
- What are the methods that promote connection between the in-person experience with the online experience?
- Are there methods that can bring in movement and play for the online participants, as well as for in-person participants?
- What roles are needed to facilitate this process well?
Ideas and methods that spread
- Actionable: so that anyone around the world can pick them up and apply them in many different contexts.
- Connecting: so that the methods connect us with each other and what we care about.
- Extensible: so that people can pick them up and make them their own. Adapting, evolving, pivoting them. Adding bits, changing bits, whilst staying true to the integrity of the core ideas.
We've created the DEAL Community platform and these methods within the spirit of a healthy living system; that is, to experiment, learn, adapt and evolve. We'd love for you to try them out, to iterate and evolve them and to bring your creativity to adapting them further. Powerful ideas + playful methods = an exciting combination, so what ways can you think of to make the methods of exploring Doughnut Economics as tasty, irresistible and 'ACE' as possible?

I'm currently writing this up as a workshop guide here on the DEAL Community Platform for anyone to pick up and use, adapt and evolve, so look out for that in next month's newsletter. And I warmly invite your reflections, questions and ideas in the comments section below.
And thank you for reading!
Rob
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Member
Ann Davidson
Moray, Scotland, United Kingdom
Environmentalist and community worker
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Member
Bernard ULM
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Member
Christiane Lellig
Aldershot, England, United Kingdom
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Member
Justyna Markowicz
Legionowo, województwo mazowieckie, Polska
Podcaster @Zrównoważony Biznes Podcast (ang. Sustainable Business Podcast)
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Member
Suzanne Schwartz
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Member
Leanne Hughes
Wokingham, England, United Kingdom
My name is Leanne and I am a design and technology teacher in Wokingham
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Member
Sílvia de Sousa
Full Sutton, England, United Kingdom
Hello! Olá! I am a firm believer in the Doughnut Economics - as a good rogue economist!! I have two children and I really do want Economic thinking and acting to change, to see a clean, fair, just and sustainable World for them to grow and thrive in! Utopia? I am interested in rural food poverty in "rich countries" and how we can wiggle out of it using the Doughnut! I also believe that children are our future, and we should strive to include "doughnuts" in our children's education, as early and as often as possible. So, if you can, please HELP!
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Member
Ellen Sjong
Tønsberg, Vestfold, Norge
Ellen Sjong is a trained special education teacher and lecturer with a master's degree in pedagogy, educational management. She has worked at all levels of the school from kindergarten to high school and taught systemic thinking and Appreciative Inquiry at the college level. She was the initiator og "Smultringøkonomi Tønsberg" and the first Doughnut Festival in Norway (2022) together with Bjørn Hauger. In 2024 she cofounded "Nettverket Smultringøkonomi Norge" together with a group of others. This network is now working to build a coalition of organizations in Norway for a new and truely sustainable economy. Ellen has created the tool "Doughnut model for children" associated with planetary boundaries cards for different ages. She is particularly interested in how we must learn to think and act systemically.

