
- Systems Analyst, Journalist, Writer, Teacher, Farmer
- Leading voice in the sustainability movement
- MacArthur Fellow
- Pew Scholar
- Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Honoree
Dr. Donella H. Meadows (Ph.D. in biophysics, Harvard University), the founder of the Sustainability Institute, was a professor at Dartmouth College, a long-time organic farmer, a journalist, and a systems analyst. She was honored both as a Pew Scholar in Conservation and Environment and as a MacArthur Fellow.
For 16 years Donella wrote a weekly column called “The Global Citizen,” commenting on world events from a systems point of view. It appeared in more than twenty newspapers, won second place in the 1985 Champion-Tuck national competition for outstanding journalism in the fields of business and economics, received the Walter C. Paine Science Education Award in 1990, and was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize in 1991.
Donella was the author or co-author of nine books, including:
- The Limits to Growth (1972)
- The Electronic Oracle: Computer Models and Social Decisions (1983)
- The Global Citizen (1991)
- Beyond the Limits (1992)
- The Limits to Growth – the 30 Year Update (2004)
