2026 Book Tour Underway
Regenerative Economics: Revolutionary Thinking for a World in Crisis
A new book by John Fullerton. Now available from your favorite bookseller, and in Europe January 8.
Regenerative Economics is based on the deceptively simple idea that an economic system should emulate the process and patterns that define all life. This science-based next evolution of economics explains the root cause of the polycrisis and promises a hopeful pathway forward, rooted in unseen potential and abundance.
2026 BOOK TOUR
A global series of conversations on regenerative economics
Explore upcoming events below and register where available.
Meet John Fullerton on the road.
The 2026 book tour brings the ideas of Regenerative Economics: Revolutionary Thinking for a World in Crisis into live dialogue with communities around the world.
Across each stop, John engages investors, economists, students, and changemakers in exploring how we can redesign our economic systems to align with the patterns of living systems, and create conditions for long-term systemic health.
UPCOMING EVENT:
Milan Longevity Summit | May 20-22, 9:00
The first stop of the second leg of John’s spring tour brings the conversation to Milan where John will lead a workshop and keynote session.
SPRING TOUR FIRST LEG HIGHLIGHTS
The first leg of the tour has already brought conversations on regenerative economics to communities across the United States
and Europe.
From San Francisco to London, Paris, and Geneva, these gatherings convened diverse audiences to explore how regenerative thinking can reshape finance, policy, and business for a thriving future.
What’s Next
The tour continues with a second leg:
Italy
Milan Longevity Summit — May 20–22, Milan (keynote + workshop)
→ Register here.
Netherlands
Sustainable Finance Lab — May 26, Amsterdam
→ Register here.
Katapult Future Fest — May 27, Amsterdam
→ Register here.
Sweden
Steps towards a Universal Ecological Civilization — May 28–30, Tällberg
Closed International forum; private registration.
Stockholm Resilience Centre — June 1, Stockholm
→ Register here.
Check back soon for additional tour dates.
What’s Next
This is economics for the new era. Join the conversation.
About The Book
A bold vision of an economy as an intelligent living organism, freed from the mindless finance algorithm, unlocking unseen potential
Regenerative Economics is based on the deceptively simple idea that an economic system should emulate the process and patterns that define all life, enabling it to adapt and evolve to higher levels of complexity. This science-based next evolution of economics explains the root cause of the polycrisis–the compounding impacts of climate change, ecosystem and biodiversity loss, planetary systems breakdown, and increasing social and economic inequity—and promises a hopeful pathway forward at this pivotable moment.
Rather than reacting to crisis after crisis, the purpose of a regenerative economy is to create the conditions that nurture and sustain health and all life.
This hard-hitting and scientifically rigorous yet ultimately hopeful book:
- Identifies the unseen fatal error of our current economic model
- Outlines a set of key regenerative design principles to navigate the polycrisis
- Prescribes transformative individual actions and policies which both embrace and move beyond current materialist ideas of sustainability, circularity, and degrowth, to redefine systemic health and true value within the context of a whole-living-systems approach
- Offers a fresh pathway through the polycrisis and toward a new economy—one that prioritizes human and planetary well-being, operates within ecological limits, and promotes a more just and sustainable future.
This seminal work is required reading for business, government, and community leaders; economic thinkers; academics; and anyone who questions the future of capitalism given the reality of finite planetary boundaries and growing social injustice.
About The Author
John Fullerton is an unconventional economist, impact investor, author, and some say philosopher. Following a two-decade successful career at JPMorgan, he walked away in 2001 with no plan but many questions. Now considered the architect of Regenerative Economics, he founded The Capital Institute in 2010 to explore the urgent need for economics and finance in service to life. John lives in Stonington, CT.