The room where planetary limits became a political question.
OFFICIAL WEBSITEThe Club of Rome is a nonprofit organization founded in 1968 by Aurelio Peccei and Alexander King, bringing together scientists, economists, business leaders, and statespeople to address what it calls the predicament of mankind — the interconnected global challenges that no single institution or nation can address alone. Its 1972 report The Limits to Growth, produced with MIT researchers, was one of the first systematic analyses of the relationship between exponential economic growth and finite planetary resources, and remains one of the most widely read environmental publications in history.
The Club of Rome operates through a global network of national associations and convenes regularly to produce reports on topics ranging from climate and biodiversity to economic inequality, digital transformation, and the future of democracy. Its membership is deliberately small and selective, prioritizing depth of engagement over scale.
The Club of Rome's role in the transition is foundational. It introduced into mainstream institutional discourse the proposition that infinite growth on a finite planet is not a policy choice but a physical impossibility — a reframing that continues to structure the most serious conversations about economic transformation. For families thinking across generations, the Club of Rome's long-horizon perspective offers one of the clearest intellectual frameworks for understanding why stewardship is not optional but necessary.

The operating system for stewardship. Supporting clarity, coherence, and coordination across complex governance and long-term decision contexts.
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