Less talking, More Doing.

Reality Check

  • We all want a world that works for all life
  • But we continue to experience the decline of public and planetary health and public trust in our institutions and leaders worldwide.
  • These breakdowns exist because the systems, services and policies were designed for a world that no longer exists.
  • Those systems were designed for extraction, exploitation and colonization.
  • Since those systems were designed by people–then we can design systems that serve all life–without harming our big beautiful home planet with sustains and nourishes us.
  • Solving these ongoing problems and crises requires open collaboration and cooperation—not the proprietary institutional thinking that brought on this mess.

We have established this network and platform to put these ideas into motion.

  • Less talking. More Doing.

Design for Life is a Mobilized News experience that brings experts, communities, and solution-builders together to show how the systems we depend on can be redesigned to restore health, dignity, resilience, and well-being.

It is not just a conversation series.

It is a practical pathway from:

Awareness → Understanding → Connection → Coordination → Action

The goal is simple:

Help every community see what is connected, discover what is working, and put ideas into action.

Six connected media experiences for restoring health, community, and planetary well-being

Design for Life is a Mobilized News media experience showing how communities can move from crisis awareness to practical capability by redesigning the systems we depend on every day.

The series asks one central question:

What would our communities look like if every system was designed to restore life instead of extract from it?

Each experience focuses on one sector, but the real story is interdependence: food depends on soil, water, energy, transportation, finance, democracy, digital tools, and circular design. No system stands alone. Every solution becomes stronger when connected to the others.


The Six Experiences

Circularity: Designing Waste Out of Community Life

Theme: From throwaway culture to local resource recovery

Big question:
How can communities turn waste into value, jobs, resilience, and healthier local environments?

Topics

  • Repair, reuse, refill, sharing, remanufacturing
  • Composting and organic waste recovery
  • Building material reuse
  • Local circular marketplaces
  • Product design for durability
  • Waste as a failure of design
  • Circular procurement by cities, schools, hospitals, and businesses

Questions to ask

  • What materials are leaving our community that could be reused locally?
  • What would it take to make repair easier than replacement?
  • How can circular systems create local jobs?
  • How can cities use purchasing power to reduce waste?
  • How do food waste, packaging, energy use, and transportation connect?

Local action pathway
Create a Community Circularity Map showing local repair shops, reuse centers, compost sites, tool libraries, makerspaces, thrift systems, and businesses already reducing waste.

Health connection
Less waste means less pollution, lower costs, cleaner neighborhoods, reduced landfill burden, and more local economic activity.


Democracy: Designing Participation Into Everyday Life

Theme: From politics as performance to democracy as public service

Big question:
How can communities rebuild trust by giving people meaningful ways to participate, solve problems, and shape local decisions?

Topics

  • Civic trust
  • Participatory budgeting
  • Citizens’ assemblies
  • Community listening systems
  • Local journalism and civic information
  • Public-interest media
  • Open data and transparency
  • Youth civic leadership
  • Democracy between elections

Questions to ask

  • Why do so many people feel unheard?
  • What would democracy look like if it helped people solve everyday problems?
  • How can communities move from outrage to organized capability?
  • What information do residents need to participate wisely?
  • How can media become civic infrastructure?

Local action pathway
Host a Community Listening Lab where residents identify shared pressures, local assets, practical needs, and solutions already emerging.

Health connection
When people are heard, trusted, and included, communities become more resilient, less polarized, and better able to respond to emergencies, public health needs, and economic stress.


Ecological Economics: Designing Money to Serve Life

Theme: From extraction to community wealth and shared well-being

Big question:
How can money circulate locally in ways that restore people, place, and planet?

Topics

  • Community wealth building
  • Local purchasing
  • Public banking
  • Credit unions and cooperative finance
  • Regenerative enterprise
  • Local investment funds
  • Social procurement
  • True-cost accounting
  • Measuring well-being, not just growth

Questions to ask

  • Does our local economy keep wealth in the community or drain it away?
  • How can local institutions buy from local businesses?
  • What would finance look like if it rewarded restoration?
  • How can communities fund food, energy, housing, circularity, and care?
  • What should we measure besides GDP, profit, and growth?

Local action pathway
Create a Local Wealth Flow Map identifying where money enters the community, where it leaks out, and where it can be redirected toward local needs.

Health connection
A healthier economy reduces stress, supports livelihoods, strengthens local businesses, and funds the conditions people need to live well.


Energy + Mobility: Designing Clean Power and Movement Together

Theme: From fossil dependence to connected local infrastructure

Big question:
How can communities design energy and transportation systems that are cleaner, cheaper, more reliable, and accessible to all?

Topics

  • Community solar
  • Microgrids
  • Building efficiency
  • Electric buses and fleets
  • EV charging
  • Walkable and bikeable communities
  • Transit access
  • Mobility as a public health issue
  • Energy resilience for schools, clinics, shelters, and homes

Questions to ask

  • Who suffers first when energy or transportation systems fail?
  • How can clean energy reduce household costs?
  • What would transportation look like if designed around people, not traffic?
  • How can electric mobility strengthen the grid instead of stressing it?
  • How can communities protect critical services during outages?

Local action pathway
Build a Resilient Access Map showing energy burden, transit gaps, cooling centers, clinics, schools, food access points, EV charging, and potential microgrid sites.

Health connection
Cleaner energy and better mobility reduce air pollution, heat risk, isolation, household costs, and emergency vulnerability.


Food: Designing Local Nourishment Systems

Theme: From fragile supply chains to healthy local food webs

Big question:
How can communities create food systems that nourish people, restore land, reduce waste, and strengthen local economies?

Topics

  • Local food production
  • Regenerative agriculture
  • Urban farms and community gardens
  • Food hubs
  • Farm-to-school programs
  • Food waste prevention
  • Compost and soil health
  • Healthy food access
  • Cellular agriculture and precision fermentation
  • Emergency food resilience

Questions to ask

  • Where does our food come from, and what happens if supply chains break?
  • Who lacks access to healthy food?
  • How can food waste become soil, energy, or economic value?
  • How can schools, hospitals, and institutions support local growers?
  • How does food connect to water, energy, transportation, health, and jobs?

Local action pathway
Create a Community Food Web Map connecting growers, distributors, food banks, schools, restaurants, composters, kitchens, and health providers.

Health connection
Food is the most direct bridge between planetary health and public health. Healthy soil, healthy food, and healthy people are one connected system.


ICT + Public Intelligence: Designing Digital Tools for Human Capability

Theme: From information overload to shared intelligence

Big question:
How can communities use technology, media, data, and AI to help people understand what is changing and act wisely together?

Topics

  • Community information systems
  • Public-interest AI
  • Cybersecurity
  • Digital democracy
  • Local data commons
  • Misinformation resilience
  • Open knowledge networks
  • Digital inclusion
  • Emergency communication
  • Community media platforms

Questions to ask

  • What information do people need before crisis hits?
  • How can AI serve communities instead of replacing human judgment?
  • How can local media become a trusted civic operating system?
  • How do we protect people from misinformation and cyber threats?
  • How can digital tools connect solutions, events, experts, and action?

Local action pathway
Build a Community Intelligence Dashboard that tracks local signals, needs, resources, events, solutions, and opportunities to participate.

Health connection
Better information saves time, reduces fear, improves coordination, protects trust, and helps people respond before problems become emergencies.


The Experience: The Web of Life: How All Systems Connect

Theme: No solution works alone

Big question:
How do circularity, democracy, ecological economics, energy, food, mobility, and ICT work together to restore community health and planetary well-being?

This final experience brings together experts, community leaders, media makers, civic innovators, businesses, and residents to connect the six conversations into one operating picture.

Core story

A healthy community is not built by fixing one system at a time.

A healthy community is created when:

  • Food systems nourish people and restore soil.
  • Energy systems power homes, clinics, schools, and transportation.
  • Mobility systems connect people to food, work, care, education, and community.
  • Circular systems reduce waste and turn materials into local value.
  • Ecological economics keeps money circulating where people live.
  • Democracy gives people a voice in shaping the systems they depend on.
  • ICT and media help communities see what is happening, understand what works, and coordinate action.

Together, these become a living civic operating system.


Capstone Topics

The community as a living system

How food, energy, water, waste, transportation, finance, media, and governance affect one another.

2. Health as the organizing principle

How every sector either improves or harms public health, mental health, economic health, ecological health, and civic health.

3. From isolated projects to connected infrastructure

How local solutions become stronger when mapped, connected, funded, and shared.

4. Media as the connective tissue

How Mobilized News can help communities see the full picture: signals, systems, solutions, events, and action pathways.

5. The local action blueprint

How every community can create its own Design for Life roadmap.


Capstone Questions

  • What does a healthy community actually require?
  • Which systems are currently working against health and well-being?
  • Where are solutions already emerging?
  • What happens when food, energy, mobility, circularity, finance, democracy, and ICT are designed together?
  • What can residents, businesses, schools, local governments, and civic groups do first?
  • How do we move from scattered good ideas to coordinated local action?
  • What should every community map, measure, and mobilize?

The Design for Life Community Blueprint

Each event should produce one practical output. Together, they form a community roadmap.

Experience Practical Output
Circularity Community Circularity Map
Democracy Community Listening Lab
Ecological Economics Local Wealth Flow Map
Energy + Mobility Resilient Access Map
Food Community Food Web Map
ICT + Public Intelligence Community Intelligence Dashboard
Capstone Design for Life Local Action Plan

Suggested Format for Each Experience

 

Opening Signal

What is changing right now?

Human Story

Who feels this first?

Systems View

What other sectors are connected?

Expert Conversation

What do practitioners know that the public needs to understand?

Community Roundtable

What is already working locally?

Action Lab

What can people do in the next 30, 60, and 90 days?

Mobilized Takeaway

One clear summary:
What changed. Why it matters. What we can do now.


Suggested Event Titles

  1. Design for Life: Circularity
    Turning Waste Into Local Wealth
  2. Design for Life: Democracy
    From Public Frustration to Public Capability
  3. Design for Life: Ecological Economics
    Making Money Serve People and Place
  4. Design for Life: Energy + Mobility
    Powering and Moving Communities Differently
  5. Design for Life: Food
    Restoring Health From Soil to Table
  6. Design for Life: ICT + Public Intelligence
    Using Technology to Help Communities Act Wisely
  7. Design for Life: The Web of Life
    How All Systems Connect to Restore Community Health