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German-British writer and filmmaker (born 1943) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Herbert Girardet (born 25 May 1943) is a German-British writer, filmmaker, lecturer and international consultant.
Herbert Girardet was born in 1943 in Essen, Germany,[1] 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."[2]
In 1971, as a community worker in Notting Hill Gate, Girardet befriended the US Black Power activist Hakim Jamal, a published author. The they decided to join forces to set up a commune and a publishing enterprise 'The First Caribbean Publishing Company'[3] 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.[4][5] 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.[6]
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.[citation needed]
He is co-founder and honorary member of the World Future Council,[7] and a full member of the Club of Rome.[8] He has been a consultant to UN Habitat and UNEP, and to cities such as London, Vienna, Riyadh and Bristol.[9] As inaugural 'thinker in residence', he developed a green development strategy for Adelaide which has been fully implemented.[8] He is an honorary fellow of the Royal Institute of British Architects,[10] and a visiting professor at the University of the West of England.[9]
He is married with two grown-up sons, and lives with his wife Barbara in Tintern, Monmouthshire.
Nine of these books have been published in various foreign-language editions.
Herbert Girardet has produced 50 television documentaries on sustainable development, including:
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