
Creating City Portraits
An earlier methodological guide for downscaling the Doughnut to the city (newer version available)

NOTE FROM DEAL (April 2022): We have substantively updated this methodological handbook and incorporated it into a wider set of 'Doughnut Unrolled' tools for applying the ideas of Doughnut Economics to your place.
DEAL is keeping this legacy tool available on our platform for archiving but it will not be updated.
For DEAL's latest guidance on selecting targets and indicators, please use the Doughnut Unrolled: Data Portrait of Place tool (available in English, French, German, Spanish, and Brazilian Portuguese).
Version 1.1 (February 2021)
* También disponible en español abajo (PDF) *
* 下面也提供葡萄牙语(PDF) *
* Também disponível em português abaixo (PDF) *
Overview
The DEAL Team collaborated with Biomimicry 3.8, C40 Cities and Circle Economy – through the Thriving Cities Initiative – to create the City Portrait methodology, and pilot the approach in Philadelphia, Portland and Amsterdam.
We created this methodological guide available as a PDF below with accompanying supplementary spreadsheet, which was published in July 2020 (with Spanish, Portuguese and Chinese translations published in February 2021).
Acknowledgements
The City Portrait methodology was conceptualised by Kate Raworth of Doughnut Economics Action Lab and Janine Benyus of Biomimicry 3.8, and this methodological guide was written by Andrew Fanning, Olya Krestyaninova, Kate Raworth, Jamie Dwyer, Nicole Hagerman Miller, and Fredrik Eriksson.
The methodology was greatly enriched by comments from colleagues and advisers including: Julia Lipton, Tom Bailey, Josh Alpert, Elvia Rufo Jimenez, Zach Tofias, Cécile Faraud, Mehrnaz Ghojeh, Chantal Oudkerk Pool, and Krisztina Campbell from the C40; Ilektra Kouloumpi, Annerieke Douma, Max Russell, and Jurn de Winter from Circle Economy; Paul van Schaik from Integral Institute; Ieva Rozentale from Mindworks; Philip Vergragt, Manisha Anantharaman, Halina Brown, and Christoph Rupprecht from SCORAI; Anne Owen from the University of Leeds; Kate Meyer from the Planetary Accounting Network; Nicolas Esposito, Haley Jordan, and Helena Rudoff from The City of Philadelphia; Kyle Diesner and Amanda Watson from The City of Portland, Oregon; Eveline Jonkhoff and Juan-Carlos Goilo from the City of Amsterdam; Christoph Gran and Tabea Waltenberg from ZOE Institute; Laure Malchair from Co-Create; Philippe Roman and Geraldine Thiry from ICHEC; Francesca Zecca from the University of Edinburgh; and Carlota Sanz and Rob Shorter from Doughnut Economics Action Lab.
Share
Share
-
Story
TEDx Talk celebrating Doughnut Practitioners
A TEDx Talk by Kate Raworth on how changemakers are bringing Doughnut Economics to life
-
Story
Yerevan embraces “Doughnut mindset”
Reprioritizing priorities; Yerevan embraces “Doughnut mindset” on its way to sustainable development
-
Story
Tokyo meets the Doughnut
The first meet-up event in Tokyo was held online and around 50 people got together.
-
Story
Doughnut of the Greater Paris Area (Grand Paris)
The Grand Paris has an incredible regional GDP but its Doughnut shows a different reality
-
Story
Video: Thrive v/s Growth
Motivational video to implement Creating City Portrait Methodology
-
Story
How we apply Doughnut Economics in Berlin
Talk: How to Think like a Doughnut Economist and Transform the City - a Journey of Donut Activism in Berlin
-
Story
The Amsterdam Doughnut Coalition in 10 minutes
A short 10 minute video about the journey of the Amsterdam Doughnut Coalition
-
Story
Community Hall Self-Build Education Project
Our community self-build education project turns the radical idea of Doughnut Economics into transformative action.
-
Member
Hannah Hernandez
Troy, Montana, United States of America
I am a magical creature inhabiting a large home range in NW Montana. As a life long advocate for the rights of nature, I choose creative avenues to give voice to the mountains, rivers, forests while promoting social justice for marginalized rural communities. I enjoy imagining what a compassionate, kind, generous, joyful, and rejuvenating culture looks like.
-
Member
Kerry Ann Christelow
Oxford, England, United Kingdom
I have worked in the construction industry for the past 25 years as a change and improvement project manager. I am now semi-retired and pursuing all the interests that have taken a back seat for so many years. I'm exploring Doughnut Economics because I believe our society at all levels is fundamentally broken. Doing the same things and expecting different results is futile. Doughnut Economics is the first time I've seen an alternative vision of human behaviour and responsibility that I believe can change things.
-
Member
Cassia Moraes
São Paulo, Brazil
Cassia is the Founder and CEO of Youth Climate Leaders, a social enterprise that trains and connects young people with networks and opportunities to start their careers as climate leaders. She is also member of the Regional Coordinating Committee (LatAm), UNDRR’s MCR2030 initiative: cities and climate change. Cassia has experience working on sustainable development and international cooperation in the public, private and third sectors. Previously, she has served as Deputy Executive Coordinator at the Brazilian Forum on Climate Change, and worked as consultant at CIVICUS, UNDP and the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN). Cassia holds a MPA in Development Practice degree from Columbia University.
-
Member
Christiane Lellig
Aldershot, England, United Kingdom
-
Member
Julián Andrés Posada Orozco
-
Member
Carolina Cardoso Eboli
I am an Urban Designer and Architect with a deep interest in urban metabolism and circular economy and how they interrelate to the doughnut economics.
-
Member
Jenny Cave
Cambridge, New Zealand
My work engages with the precarity of enterprise alternatives and diverse economies, seeking fair futures through co-creative processes in the cultural sector, community governance and tourism on a community's own terms in the South Pacific, the Caribbean, North America, UK and Europe.
-
Member
yael brendel
israel