Zero Hunger
End hunger everywhere. Clean water and sanitation included — one physiological baseline.
17 contributions
End hunger everywhere. Clean water and sanitation included — one physiological baseline.
A 12-minute video reading of the World Bearers manifesto, recorded in three languages (English, Japanese, Swahili) with hand-drawn title cards between sections.
A roof for every person. Modular, replicable, dignified.
Kibera community's own program combining Earth Keeper traditions with local practices. The community meal tradition is adapted to include a water-sharing ceremony at the Kibera Water Hub.
Energy as a commons. Decentralized generation, open grids, zero marginal cost.
The Osaka urban farming collective's adoption of Earth Keeper. Weekly community meals happen at the Tsurumi warehouse, seasonal check-ins follow the Japanese agricultural calendar.
All knowledge accessible. Open curricula, free research, no paywalls.
A large-format ink illustration showing tree roots forming a network under a city grid. Each root system connects to a different neighbourhood, each neighbourhood has a different colour.
Work that matters. Not bullshit jobs — real contribution to real problems.
The minimum viable program. One morning tradition, one evening reflection. For people who want to start somewhere without committing to a full canon.
Distribute opportunity beyond megacities. Connect, don't concentrate.
A program for living closer to the land. Combines seasonal awareness, community meals from local produce, and regular skill-building around food systems.
An acoustic folk song about the weight of knowing what needs to change and choosing to carry it anyway. Written after the first community meal in Kibera.
Community rainwater collection and filtration point at the edge of Kibera. Gravity-fed distribution to reduce reliance on trucked water. Maintenance funded by a micro-cooperative model with transparent ledger.
Monthly gathering where one person teaches a practical skill to the group. No slides, no theory — hands on. Past sessions: water filtration, basic electrical wiring, seed saving, first aid.
Step-by-step documentation for building modular emergency shelters from locally available materials. Follows the Solar Grid Standard for optional electrical integration.
Install solar canopies along the elevated S-Bahn ring between Ostkreuz and Treptower Park. The railway owns the airspace rights; the panels shade platforms in summer and feed surplus into the neighbourhood grid.
A weekly shared meal where each participant brings one dish. No money changes hands. The only rule: you eat what others bring before your own. Builds trust faster than any meeting.
Convert the abandoned Tsurumi warehouse district into a community-run vertical farming complex. The existing concrete structures provide thermal mass for year-round growing. Revenue model: 70% community, 30% open market.
An open dataset mapping crop yields, soil conditions, and climate variables across 40+ regions. Designed for small-scale farmers who lack access to proprietary agri-data platforms.
At each solstice and equinox, gather to review what the community accomplished in the past quarter, what fell through, and what the next season demands. Honesty over optimism.
Start each day by naming three specific things you are grateful for. Not abstract concepts — concrete, recent, particular. The practice trains attention toward what already works.
An open standard for connecting residential solar panels into cooperative micro-grids. Defines the communication protocol, safety thresholds, and load-balancing rules so any neighbourhood can pool surplus energy without a central utility.