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§ Foreword

Two allergies that mirror each other.

This essay began from an observation. Just as governments have difficulty with the culture of alternative, hippy-inflected, or intentional communities, many rural communities and regenerative initiatives have difficulty with the culture of government and the system. Two allergies that mirror each other. The question was whether there is research that lays this tension bare, and whether it touches the paradigm shift in which the federation moves.

The answer is that the pattern is real, intensively documented, and has already been described many times under different names. The federation does not stand alone when it names this. It joins a tradition that goes back to 1959 and has by now become operational theory for those doing practical work in this field.

This essay is not a finished position. It is a first sediment of thinking that has been ripening internally for some time. We publish it as a living document because the questions it raises cannot be answered by the federation alone. Contributions are invited. What stands here is open to revision when a reader sees something the federation did not see.

What the regenerative initiatives see

The research confirms every claim. Schifani et al. (2025), in a comparative study of agroecological adoption in the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Portugal, found that “institutional and structural dependencies restrict transitions even when individual motivation exists. Policy interventions that reduce administrative burdens and restore power balances in land and product markets are therefore essential for implementation.” The study explicitly names “the continuing divide between subsistence-oriented and ‘lifestyle-oriented’ regenerative farmers” and “the tensions between symbolic and systemic transformation”.

A literature review in Sustainability and Social Transformation (Roysen et al., 2022) finds that ecovillages and grassroots initiatives “are still being neglected by public policies” despite increasing scientific attention. Research on Mexican ecovillages (Saxena, 2022) describes them explicitly as “exilic spaces”, spaces on the margins of social and economic life “in which people attempt to escape from capitalist relations and processes”. That is a term that names self-chosen institutional withdrawal not as failure but as position.

From another angle: the Agriculture research names Portugal explicitly and concludes that “family farms risk being marginalized in an agricultural sector dominated by large actors”, without “structural reforms that reduce administrative burdens”. The Portuguese context the federation knows from its own experience is therefore no anomaly. It is European reality.

What the government sees

An article in Sustainability (Brombin & Pera, 2019) describes how ecovillagers themselves recognise that their position “is dictated by the confluence of several social forces: what they have access to via the socioeconomic standing of their members, their own conception of progress against a collectively defined mission and what technologies are appropriate within that vision; and what they are allowed to use under state and local regulations”. The tension is therefore double: the regenerative actor knows that the government does not read them, and the government knows that the regenerative actor does not trust them.

An evaluation of corporate regenerative programmes in Agroecology and Sustainable Food Systems (2024) puts it sharply: “Incentives are opaque, poorly timed and decoupled from environmental or economic realities. Farmers face compliance burdens without adequate support or influence over program terms.” The reporters conclude that “institutional design undermines ecological and social transformation”. Not through ill will but through misalignment. Government and market are raised in different logics than the regenerative actors work in.

A Wageningen study on regenerative agriculture in four EU countries (2023) summarises the barriers as: “unresolved operational definition, lack of standardized certification, and limited research to support both producers and extension specialists. A shortage of systemic collaborative support, including consumer interest and demand, hinders regenerative agriculture adoption.” Stated otherwise: the government does not know how to certify regenerative practices, and the regenerative actor does not know how to be certified. They are two parties who want to find each other without a shared vocabulary.

The observation in the foreword is no felt sense. It is the empirical reality recorded in dozens of studies over the past fifteen years.

The pattern of two parties unable to speak each other’s language though they need each other is not a new phenomenon. It has been named by three different traditions, each with its own vocabulary and recommendation. For the federation’s position, all three are relevant.

II.1 The Two Cultures tradition

In his Rede Lecture of 1959, The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution, C.P. Snow described a chasm between the natural-scientific and the literary-humanistic intellectual cultures of the West. His diagnosis: these two cultures were not only different but “divided into ‘two cultures’, and that the growing division between them was a major handicap in solving the world’s problems”.

Snow’s specific claim was about science and the humanities, not about government and grassroots. But the structural pattern is exactly what was named in the foreword. Two cultures of knowledge that lack each other’s vocabulary and mistrust each other, while both are needed to address large questions.

In the years since, this framework has been extended and refined. The Caplan two-communities theory (1979) addressed research versus policy: how researchers and policymakers live in two separated worlds. Recent literature has shifted this to the threefold tension between research, policy, and community. Specifically for the contemporary field, Wesselink and Hoppe (2024) developed a new framework that includes “science-policy-community interfaces”, with the core insight that “the gap between science and policymaking can only be bridged by engaging local communities and their knowledge”.

For the federation this means: the two cultures form not one wall but two. Government versus community, and within that, government versus research, and community versus research. The federation navigates all three fault lines at once.

II.2 Boundary Organisations

In 2001, David Guston published the classical definition of boundary organisations. Organisations that work explicitly at the interface between two worlds, and draw their productivity precisely from that position. The pattern: organisations that employ both scientists and non-scientists, “professionals who are located between science and politics and whose task is to communicate and mediate between the two spheres”. Their work involves “knowledge translation, facilitation, legitimacy building, and collaborative knowledge production”.

Guston’s case studies were technology transfer, but the concept has since become standard in the science-policy literature. A study in Science and Public Policy (2024) describes a working boundary professional who says: “I sit between research, policy, and practice. I don’t have deep expertise in any of these areas, but I spend time in the spaces between them. You can act as translator and intermediary and see the needs, context of all three, and build bridges between the two.”

Crucially: the literature recognises that boundary organisations “create boundary objects that allow for meaningful interaction between scientific and policy communities in a coordinated manner”. A boundary object is something, a document, a database, a vocabulary, a working method, that is intelligible in both worlds without losing its meaning in either.

For the federation this is a highly relevant framework. What the federation functionally does, measured against this theory, is: a boundary organisation between regenerative communities and public authority. The Charter, the Practice, and SYFERS are boundary objects. The Charter is intelligible within a community (five principles to live by) and within a ministry (a document with signature and version control). The Practice is recognisable to a regenerative actor (eight disciplines from experience) and to a researcher (a published framework that can be cited). SYFERS is an operational instrument for members and a reportable instrument for regulators.

This is no chance interpretation after the fact. The federation was designed with this function, even if the term boundary organisation was not previously included in its vocabulary.

II.3 Transformative Social Innovation

The third framework comes from transition studies, specifically the EU-funded TRANSIT project (Pel et al., 2017). This empirical research studied twenty socially innovative initiatives in twenty-eight countries, including ecovillages through the Global Ecovillage Network. Their central concept is Critical Turning Points, moments at which initiatives “may experience tensions within the initiatives or with dominant institutions” (thresholds in the federation’s lens). The study explicitly investigated “the strategies that initiatives deploy to deal with tensions and other challenges”.

A follow-up publication in Sustainability (Wittmayer et al., 2024) describes how ecovillage scale-up in Norway collided with dominant institutions and how initiatives developed three responses. Withdrawing into an ever-narrower niche. Institutionalising by adapting their own form to the dominant rules. Or hybridising: keeping their own identity and acquiring institutional legibility.

The authors concluded that the third route, hybridising, “requires substantial negotiation between sustainability visions and context” and “the renegotiation of relations with the broader social and economic systems in which one is entangled”.

This is exactly what the federation chooses. Not withdrawing as classical ecovillages often do. Not institutionalising as corporate regenerative programmes do, where according to the literature “institutional design undermines ecological and social transformation”. But hybridising: cooperative legal form, registered activity, EU-legible governance, while the syntropic substance, the consent practice, and the regenerative roots remain intact.

The TRANSIT literature is specifically helpful here because it is not idealistic. Pel et al. acknowledge that hybridising carries risks. It makes initiatives more legible to government, which enables institutional support but also institutional control. It makes them legible to funding, which provides foundation but also performance auditing. The position not petition, not protest, but implementation is precisely what the TRANSIT research names as the third way between exilic and assimilation.

A forgotten but apt historical precedent: the German Green Party in the 1980s. When the party arose from the extra-parliamentary movements of the 1970s, an internal split developed between the Fundamentalists (Fundis) and the Realists (Realos). The Fundis held that “the Greens should not enter the established old structures or participate in power, but should do everything to break them down and control them. Their role remains that of fundamental opposition, dependent on the success of grassroots movements in the streets.” The Realos answered with der Zweck heiligt die Mittel: “acting pragmatically within the current economic and political structures, and reforming the system from within”.

The pattern is recognisable. The Fundis hold the exilic position. The Realos hold the institutionalising position. Both were right about parts, both were trapped in an unproductive opposition. The party could only function effectively after a third position emerged. Not exactly what the federation does now, but in the same spirit of working at both sides without betraying either.

For the federation’s vocabulary, this historical precedent is valuable because it shows that the pattern is not unique to regenerative communities facing modern government. It is a recurring pattern in the history of movements that want to change society. The federation can learn from it without losing itself in it.

The three traditions (Two Cultures, Boundary Organisations, Transformative Social Innovation) and the Realos-Fundis precedent are different lenses on the same phenomenon. What they share is a deeper observation: the tension is not between two groups of people but between two paradigms of what counts as knowledge, authority, and action.

The modernist-rational paradigm, arisen in the Enlightenment and institutionalised in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, works with universal laws above local rootedness. With written regulation above oral agreement. With specialist knowledge above lived experience. With scalability and replicability above contextual wisdom. With impersonal procedures above relational arrangements. With control through measurement above trust through observation.

The relational-regenerative paradigm, found in indigenous traditions, in syntropic ecology, in commons thinking, in deep adaptation, works with local rootedness above universality. With oral agreement and consent above written regulation. With lived experience above specialist abstraction. With contextual wisdom above scalable formulas. With relational bond above impersonal procedure. With trust through observation above control through measurement.

Both paradigms are right about parts. The rational paradigm has brought modern medicine, human rights, and European peace. The regenerative paradigm has brought centuries of land care, community life, and cultural continuity. Neither is complete. The rational paradigm has also brought industrial destruction, atomisation, and burn-out. The regenerative paradigm has also brought insularity, leader-personality authoritarianism, and cultural stagnation.

The paradigm shift that the federation and many others describe is not a replacement of one by the other. It is an integration. A phase in which society learns to honour both paradigms simultaneously, to distinguish them without separating them, and to deploy the instruments of one in service of the values of the other.

That is exactly where the federation works. The cooperative legal form is an instrument of the rational paradigm. The syntropic substance is a value of the regenerative paradigm. The Charter is a written document. Consent governance is a relational practice. SYFERS is a reporting system. Openness is a value of trust. The federation does not reconcile the two paradigms by mixing them, but by respecting each at its own level and explicitly designing the passage between them.

Donella Meadows described this in her essay Leverage Points (1999) as the highest-leverage place where systems can change: “the mindset or paradigm out of which the system arises”. A paradigm shift is no surface adjustment. It is a change in what counts as true, valid, or valuable. According to Meadows, paradigms are “the source of systems”. All rules, structures, and behaviours flow from there.

What the federation attempts, measured against this theory, is to model a paradigm transition in reality. Not by speaking about the transition, but by setting up an organisational form in which both paradigms are simultaneously operational. That is, in Meadows’ terms, leverage point #1: transcend paradigms. To transcend paradigms not by choosing one, but by being able to see both.

Three observations follow from the above.

V.1 The federation does not stand alone in its diagnosis

The pattern named in the foreword is intensively documented. Studies in ScienceDirect, MDPI, PMC, Tandfonline, peer-reviewed literature cited in policy and research circles, confirm every element. When the federation names this on its site, it does so not as isolated complaint but as connection to an international field that has already been working at this for twenty years.

Practically that means: a reference to Snow (1959), Guston (2001), Pel et al. (2017), or Schifani et al. (2025) makes the federation’s text immediately credible to academic and EU readers. It is not a requirement, federation style keeps texts modest, but it is a gain for the pages visited by institutional readers.

V.2 The federation already has a functional theory

The three traditions (Two Cultures, Boundary Organisations, Transformative Social Innovation) offer the federation a vocabulary it can use without betraying what it is. Boundary organisation is a term from the science-policy literature that exactly describes what the federation functionally does. Hybrid position from TRANSIT research describes exactly what the federation strategically chooses. Boundary objects (Charter, Practice, SYFERS) is a term directly applicable to what the federation produces.

Inserting this vocabulary on a few pages, not all but where it fits, links the federation’s text to a tradition that the literature has already described. That makes the federation placeable in academic and policy discourse without having to promote itself.

V.3 The difference between what the text says and what the form does

The federation can write this essay because it knows the two cultures from its own practice. Sulitânia is not only a regenerative project on land. It is also a registered cooperative that files tax returns, reads EU instruments, and tries to remain in conversation with a Portuguese municipality. That double life, in two cultures simultaneously, is what made this essay possible. And it is what this essay itself wants to show: not by speaking about it but by existing in two registers.

Federation style requires honesty about what a text does not do, as much as about what it does. Four things this essay explicitly does not claim.

This essay does not claim that the federation is an academic institution. What stands here is no scientific article but a working document that connects a phenomenon to literature that has already described it. The value for the federation is that it does not act on intuition alone. The value is not that the federation should now adopt an academic register.

This essay does not claim that all regenerative initiatives have the same position. The pattern is large enough to contain exceptions. Some ecovillages work very well with governments. Some governments are very receptive to regenerative initiatives. What is described here is the average tendency, not a law.

This essay does not claim that the federation has the solution to the two cultures. What the federation has is a working form in which both can take place. Whether that form holds for other contexts, other territories, other questions, must show in practice. Federation style avoids declarations of victory that later have to be retracted.

And this essay acknowledges that several dimensions are under-treated. Class and privilege within regenerative communities, colonial history of the land we work on, the gendered nature of care work, power asymmetry between the actors we describe, the failure modes of the hybrid strategy itself, and shadow within both worlds we describe. We name these dimensions explicitly on the page /limits, where the federation’s entire writing practice stands under the same discipline. What this essay does not develop, is acknowledged there.

§ Closing

Geen uitsluiting, geen polarisatie.

What the foreword named was not an isolated observation. It was a diagnosis recognised and developed by at least four theoretical traditions. Snow’s Two Cultures (1959), Guston’s Boundary Organisations (2001), Pel’s Transformative Social Innovation (2017), and the broader paradigm-shift literature since Meadows (1999). The empirical confirmation from thirty years of research on ecovillages, regenerative agriculture, and grassroots innovation is overwhelming.

What the federation functionally does is what this literature calls boundary work in a hybrid strategy. The Charter, the Practice, and SYFERS are boundary objects. The choice of cooperative legal form without betraying syntropic substance is hybrid. The position not petition, not protest, but implementation is a Realos strategy told in new terms, with the wisdom of forty years of Green-party history behind it.

All this does not mean the federation should change its text to sound more scientific. It means that, when it wishes, it can stand with more ground beneath. The academic literature is no substitute for what the federation knows from its daily work. But it is a confirmation that the daily work fits into a tradition that has been working on the same puzzle for decades.

No exclusion, no polarisation. Everyone needs everyone. Not as naive ideal but as operational truth that the literature confirms and that the federation tries to honour in its daily form. That is heavy work. And it is meaningful to know that others are also working at it.

This document is a living essay. The questions it raises cannot be answered by the federation alone. When a reader sees something not stated here, an experience from another context, a counterargument, a dimension we have not named, that contribution is welcome. The document will mature through contributions.

§ Sources

What this essay rests on.

Two Cultures tradition

Snow, C.P. (1959). The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution. Cambridge University Press.

Caplan, N. (1979). The two-communities theory and knowledge utilization. American Behavioral Scientist, 22(3).

Boundary Organisations tradition

Guston, D.H. (2001). Boundary organizations in environmental policy and science: An introduction. Science, Technology, & Human Values, 26(4).

Star, S.L., & Griesemer, J.R. (1989). Institutional ecology, ‘translations’ and boundary objects. Social Studies of Science, 19(3).

Wesselink, A., & Hoppe, R. (2024). Bridging knowledge between marine conservation actors. Environmental Science & Policy, 159.

Transformative Social Innovation tradition

Pel, B., et al. (2017). The Transformative Social Innovation theory. TRANSIT working paper.

Wittmayer, J., et al. (2024). Ecovillage scale-up and its well-being challenges: a case study from Norway. Sustainability: Science, Practice and Policy, 20(1).

Paradigm shift and systems thinking

Meadows, D. (1999). Leverage Points: Places to Intervene in a System. Sustainability Institute.

Edelman, M. (2001). Social movements: Changing paradigms and forms of politics. Annual Review of Anthropology, 30.

Empirical research on the federation context

Schifani, G., et al. (2025). Agroecological Adoption Pathways in Europe. Agriculture, 15(23).

Roysen, R., & Schwartz, T. (2022). Sustainability and social transformation: the role of ecovillages in confluence with the pluriverse of community-led alternatives. PMC.

Brombin, A., & Pera, M. (2019). Ecovillagers’ Assessment of Sustainability. Sustainability, 11(21).

§ Open for contribution

Add to this thinking.

This document is a living text. The questions it raises cannot be answered by the federation alone. If your experience, research, or thinking adds something (a missing reference, a counterargument, a case the federation has not seen), we want to hear it.

Contribute to this thinking

This document inherits the federation's general statement on its limits. Read it

§ Within the broader methodology

The two cultures gap is *one of five gaps* the federation names.

The boundary work between regenerative culture and academic culture is one specific application of the federation's broader methodology.

Read boundary work →