Herbert Girardet
Herbert Girardet is a German-British writer, filmmaker, lecturer and international consultant.
Life and work
Herbert Girardet was born in 1943 in Essen, Germany, the son of a publishing executive. After reading history at Tübingen and Berlin universities, he moved to London in 1964 and embraced the nascent counterculture then taking hold there: the literary editor Diana Athill, who knew him during this time, described him in her memoir Make Believe as "the drop-out son of a rich German family... deep in the process of discovering his own loathing of capitalism, violence, and racism."In 1971, as a community worker in Notting Hill Gate, Girardet befriended the US Black Power activist Hakim Jamal, a published author. They decided to join forces to set up a commune and a publishing enterprise 'The First Caribbean Publishing Company' for producing educational materials on black history and emancipation in Georgetown, Guyana. But this project quickly foundered amid the chaos caused by Jamal's mental instability. Arriving back in London soon afterwards, Girardet returned to academia and received a bachelor’s degree in anthropology and economics from the London School of Economics in 1975.
Since then, Girardet has worked as a cultural and urban ecologist – as a writer, filmmaker, lecturer and international consultant – specialising in 'regenerative development'. He is the author and co-author of 14 books and reports, and 50 TV documentaries primarily concerned with the interaction between a global civilisation and the world’s environment. He is a recipient of a UN Global 500 award for outstanding environmental services. He has written in publications such as Resurgence, The Ecologist, Green Futures, Urban Futures, Habitat Debate, The Guardian, The Independent and The Observer.
He is co-founder and honorary member of the World Future Council, and a full member of the Club of Rome. He has been a consultant to UN Habitat and UNEP, and to cities such as London, Vienna, Riyadh and Bristol. As inaugural 'thinker in residence', he developed a green development strategy for Adelaide which has been fully implemented. He is an honorary fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects, and a visiting professor at the University of the West of England.
He is married with two grown-up sons and lives with his wife Barbara in Tintern, Monmouthshire.
Books
Creating Regenerative Cities: How we can develop a regenerative relationship between our cities and planet earth; Routledge, 2015.A Renewable World: Alternative energy systems and how they can help us create a viable and equitable future; Green Books, 2009.Cities, People, Planet: Learning from urban history to enhance the relationship between urban people and our home planet; Wiley, 2004 and 2008.Surviving The Century: 12 authors write about how we might evade the collision course between ourselves and our own future; Routledge, 2008.Creating The World Future Council: The booklet which launched a new international NGO – the World Future Council; Green Books, 2005.Creating A Sustainable Adelaide: Report on practical policies for creating a green new deal for Adelaide and South Australia, 2003.The Peoples’ Planet: Based on a six-part television series produced by NHK, Tokyo, and CNN; published only in Japanese by NHK, 2000.'Creating Sustainable Cities: Cities are wasteful superorganisms that need a better understanding of how to develop a circular metabolism; Green Books, 1999.Making Cities Work: Organisational challenges and practicalities of creating a sustainable world of cities; Earthscan 1996.The Gaia Atlas Of Cities: New directions for sustainable urban living, in theory and practice; Gaia Books, 1992 and 1996.Earthrise: How we are affecting the biosphere, and how we can try to get out of the mess we have been making; Paladin, 1992.Blueprint For A Green Planet: Practical day-today action to fight pollution and to live sustainably; Dorling Kindersley, 1987.Far From Paradise: A history of human impacts on the environment, based on a seven-part television series: BBC Publications, 1986.Land For The People: At a time of economic uncertainty, we need a new balance between urban and rural living; Crescent Books, 1976.Nine of these books have been published in various foreign-language editions.