Self-sufficiency
This article does not cite any references or sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2007) |
Self-sufficiency refers to the state of not requiring any outside aid, support, or interaction, for survival; it is therefore a type of personal or collective autonomy. On a large scale, a totally self-sufficient economy that does not trade with the outside world is called an autarky.
The term self-sufficiency is usually applied to varieties of sustainable living in which nothing is consumed outside of what is produced by the self-sufficient individuals. Examples of attempts at self-sufficiency in North America include voluntary simplicity, homesteading, survivalism, and the back-to-the-land movement.
According to Michael Allaby and Peter Bunyard, “there is nothing really new in the search of “self-sufficiency”. The pioneers who first colonized the New World, Australia, and parts of Africa were self-sufficient because they had to be and, in this context, the term suggests a kind of rugged independence associated with mastering a new and rather hostile environment.”[1]
Practices that enable or aid self-sufficiency include autonomous building, permaculture, sustainable agriculture, and renewable energy.
The term is also applied to limited forms of self-sufficiency, for example growing one's own food or becoming economically independent of state subsidies.
Contents |
[edit] Influential people
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Allaby, Michael and Peter Bunyard. The Politics of Self-Sufficiency. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1980. ISBN 0-19-217695-1
[edit] External links
Look up self-sufficiency in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. |
Wikibooks has a book on the topic of |
Wikiversity has learning materials about Topic:Self-sufficiency |
- Foundation for Self-Sufficiency in Central America
- Five acres and independence, 1973 book, by Maurice Grenville Kains, Dover books. ISBN 0486209741