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Why This Paper Matters:
The current sustainability discourse is failing — not because it lacks ambition, but because it is structurally incapable of prioritizing life. Dominated by extractive economics, technocratic governance, and colonial epistemologies, the sustainability industry has become a mechanism of continuity for the very systems it claims to transform.
What This Paper Offers:
This paper introduces Life-Value Onto-Axiology (LVOA) as a unifying ethical and evaluative framework to assess and guide the coherence of systems based on one universal principle:
That is good which enables life capacity; that is bad which disables it.
Key Findings:
- The sustainability industry reproduces colonial dynamics under new moral vocabularies (e.g., carbon offsets, ESG metrics, net-zero).
- Efforts to reform the industry deepen its contradictions rather than resolve them.
- Five domains of life-incoherence — ecological, economic, cultural, technocratic, political — must be exposed, dismantled, and re-rooted.
- Regenerative, relational, and bioregionally grounded practices are already emerging and must be resourced and recognized.
- Hospicing unsustainable institutions is a necessary rite of passage for collective healing and transition.
- A new logic of net-life, reciprocity, and life-coherence must guide all future governance, economics, and education systems.
What Comes Next: The paper offers appendices with a Life-Value Diagnostic Rubric, institutional transition tools, and a life-coherence covenant for practitioners and policymakers.
Intended Audience:
- Sustainability professionals
- Policy architects and institutional leaders
- Community organizers and land stewards
- Regenerative educators and healers
- All those committed to co-creating a life-grounded future
Final Call:
We are not here to manage decline. We are here to midwife coherence.
The age of abstract sustainability is ending. The era of sacred regeneration has begun.










