July/August 2006
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Desperately seeking solutions
Why are Indian cotton farmers committing suicide? And what can be done to help them? Marco Visscher

Editor's letter: Pro authenticity
Dressed in white Jurriaan Kamp

Making the most of this historic moment
The green movement is ready to come back home Jay Walljasper

Think like a fish
Iceland's Orri Vigf Andi McDaniel

Why green is the new black
Ecological living makes a hit in the mainstream media Marco Visscher


One last thing...
"We need a tax on energy and natural resources" Eckart Wintzen

Survival of the real-est
Authenticity is the word on everyone's tongues right now. More than a trend, it's a revolution that is transforming our work, our politics and our lives. Jay Walljasper

The biggest city you've never heard of
With 10 million inhabitants and half a million more each year, Chongqing is the fastest-growing urban centre on the planet. Jonathan Watts spends 24 hours in the city of tomorrow. Jonathan Watts

The incredible edible landscape
There's a bounty of delicious food right under your feet--and in the bushes, and over by that fence Michiel Bussink

Think global, act natural
Nature directs us to the best solutions for pollution and poverty. Ode sat down for a conversation with biologist Elisabet Sahtouris. Tijn Touber


Healing by design
The hospital of the future may not look like a hospital at all Kim Ridley

I love orange juice
Research points to lack of vitamin C, rather than fat, as the leading cause of heart disease Tijn Touber

Our natural instinct to heal
No more Freud. No more Prozac. French psychiatrist David Servan-Schreiber shows how the body can heal stress, anxiety and depression. Tijn Touber


Be The Beatles
It's time to remake the world the way they did Tijn Touber

The bad effects of good conscience
German therapist Bert Hellinger makes the case for knowing your dark side Tijn Touber

Don't just do something, stand there
Next time you want to fix someone's problems, try listening instead Kim Ridley

My Morocco
A globe-trotting photographer kept returning to his homeland, Morocco, to capture his love. Bruno Barbey



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