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Glossary›Transition Movement

Glossary

Transition Movement

A grassroots environmental and social movement founded in 2006 that builds community resilience through local action on climate change, peak oil, and economic instability.

What is Transition Movement?

The Transition Movement (also called Transition Towns, Transition Network, or simply Transition) is a decentralized international network of community-led initiatives working to build resilience in response to climate change, resource depletion, and economic instability. Founded on principles of permaculture, community self-organization, and positive visioning, the movement empowers ordinary citizens to reimagine and rebuild local food systems, energy infrastructure, economies, and social connections. Rather than waiting for government or corporate solutions, Transition initiatives create practical, local responses to global challenges—urban gardens, renewable energy cooperatives, local currencies, repair cafés, and skill-sharing networks—while fostering psychological and social resilience within communities.

Origins & Lineage

The Transition Movement originated in Kinsale, Ireland in 2005 when permaculture teacher Rob Hopkins and his students developed the “Kinsale Energy Descent Action Plan,” a community blueprint for reducing oil dependency. In September 2006, Hopkins moved to Totnes, England and launched Transition Town Totnes, the first official Transition initiative. His 2008 book The Transition Handbook: From Oil Dependency to Local Resilience provided the practical framework that catalyzed global replication. By 2009, over 300 communities worldwide had established Transition initiatives. The Transition Network was formally established as a charitable organization in the UK to support this rapidly growing movement. Hopkins drew heavily on permaculture design principles, systems thinking, and the work of environmental thinkers addressing peak oil (Richard Heinberg), climate change, and relocalization.

How It’s Practiced

Transition initiatives typically begin when a small group of concerned citizens form a steering group and initiate community awareness-building through film screenings, talks, and “Great Unleashing” launch events. Communities then self-organize into working groups focused on specific areas: food (establishing community gardens, farmers markets, seed libraries), energy (renewable installations, home insulation programs), economy (timebanking, local currencies like the Totnes Pound), inner transition (addressing psychological dimensions of change), and transport, waste, housing, or other locally relevant themes.

Practical projects include community orchards, tool libraries, repair cafés where volunteers fix broken items, skill-shares teaching food preservation or bicycle maintenance, and transition streets programs where neighbors collaborate on carbon reduction. The movement emphasizes celebration, creativity, and positive visioning—using storytelling, arts, and community festivals rather than doom-laden messaging. Decision-making processes often employ sociocracy or consensus models, and initiatives maintain autonomy while sharing resources through regional and international networks.

Transition Movement Today

As of the mid-2020s, over 1,300 registered Transition initiatives operate across more than 50 countries, with concentrations in the UK, continental Europe, North America, Australia, and New Zealand. The Transition Network provides online resources, training courses, and an annual International Transition Conference. Many initiatives have evolved beyond their initial peak oil focus to emphasize climate action and community wellbeing. Municipal governments in some regions now partner with Transition groups, integrating their approaches into official climate plans. The COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated Transition principles in action as local mutual aid networks, many rooted in Transition communities, rapidly mobilized.

Seekers encounter Transition through local initiative meetings (typically advertised on community boards or social media), online directories at transitionnetwork.org, books by Hopkins and other practitioners, and increasingly through integration with related movements like permaculture, ecovillages, and degrowth economics. Some universities and educational institutions now teach Transition principles within sustainability curricula.

Common Misconceptions

Transition is not survivalism or “prepping”—it rejects isolationist or fear-based responses, emphasizing community connection over individual stockpiling. It is not a back-to-the-past movement romanticizing pre-industrial life, but rather seeks to combine appropriate technology, traditional skills, and innovation. While rooted in environmental concerns, Transition is not exclusively environmental activism—it equally addresses social cohesion, mental health, and economic justice, recognizing that ecological and human wellbeing are inseparable.

Transition initiatives are not centrally controlled franchises; there are no membership dues or official requirements beyond self-identification with core principles. This creates enormous diversity in how initiatives manifest but sometimes leads to inconsistent momentum. Critics note the movement’s origins in relatively affluent, white communities in the Global North, and ongoing work addresses questions of inclusion, diversity, and applicability in different cultural and economic contexts.

How to Begin

Start by searching the Transition Network directory (transitionnetwork.org) for initiatives near you and attending an event or meeting. If no local group exists, gather interested neighbors and screen a documentary like In Transition 2.0 to spark conversation. Read Rob Hopkins’ The Transition Handbook or the more recent From What Is to What If for philosophical grounding and practical steps. The Transition Network offers free online guides for starting initiatives. Begin small—a street-level project like a neighborhood sharing system or community garden—rather than attempting comprehensive transformation. Many find the “inner transition” dimension, which explores the psychological and emotional aspects of change through workshops and support circles, essential for sustaining long-term engagement.

Related terms

permaculturedegrowthecovillagesbioregionalismdeep ecologyregenerative culture
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