One Earth Magazine – 25 Years Later (1987)
This issue of One Earth Magazine (Volume 7, Issue 4, Summer 1987) has a theme of '25 Years Later'. Also in this fascinating edition are features on Defining The New Age and also Community As
This issue of One Earth Magazine (Volume 7, Issue 4, Summer 1987) has a theme of '25 Years Later'. Also in this fascinating edition are features on Defining The New Age and also Community As
This issue of One Earth Magazine (Volume 5, Issue 3, March/April 1985) carries the main theme of Findhorn Community: Moving Ahead. Other articles to dive into include From Community To Village (An Economic Perspective) and
One Earth, 2nd edition, volume 2, issue number 3, was originally published in January / February 1982. Inside this magazine you can find such features as Life As Service; The New Essenes; and Redefining
One Earth Magazine (Volume 1, Issue 1, August/September 1980). Following the evolution of this publication from its earliest form as the Findhorn News through Open Letter/Onearth and the issues of One Earth Image to this current
In 1972 the Findhorn Foundation was set up as a charitable trust. The chairman, Captain Ross Stewart, wrote a letter to friends and supporters to announce this new development and referred to this booklet for
Faces of Findhorn The book Faces of Findhorn - Images of a Planetary Family was published by Findhorn Publications in 1980. It describes itself as "a celebration of the reality underlying the myth", and
In March 2016, shortly after the intensive five weeks of “Time Together” meetings in the Findhorn Foundation, which lead to a significant changes in the organisational structure, I invited Roger Doudna and Mari Hollander to
The Findhorn Foundation (FF) charitable trust is a legal construct created by the Community in 1972 to enable it to accept the donation of The Park property bought by Pauline Tawse, from Captain Gibson and
A Brief Historical Perspective When Cornelia asked me to look into some archival material that she was interested in adding to COIF’s store of knowledge on this subject, I came across a document that listed
Is Decision-making/Governance here in the Community really only managed by ‘divine muddling’ as David Spangler once jokingly said? How can we meet the challenge to create governance structures in a community without an agreed name,