Miguel Mendonca

Miguel Mendonça (born August 1973, Salisbury, Rhodesia) is an Anglo-Azorean writer based in Bristol, England.

Miguel Mendonça
Miguel Mendonça, 2015
BornAugust 1973
Salisbury, Rhodesia
OccupationWriter, researcher
CitizenshipGB
SubjectTruth, Relationships, Spirituality
Notable worksBeing with the Beings, We Are the Disclosure, Meet the Hybrids, Quick! Act Normal, Powering the Green Economy, Feed-in Tariffs, A Renewable World
Website
www.wearethedisclosure.com

Education

Miguel studied Forestry at Sparsholt College, Landscape Management at Hadlow College, Journalism and Radio Production at FAS, Geography and History at University College Cork, and Social Science and Environmental Ethics at the Open University.

Sustainability Work

Mendonça's sustainability career is most associated with his work on feed-in tariffs, a renewable energy policy. He did advocacy and education work on this topic on four continents, contributing to legislative changes in several countries. Much of this work was carried out while he served as a Research Manager for the World Future Council, which is an international NGO.[1] In addition, he subsequently worked with The Converging World, a renewable energy-focused charity based in Bristol, England.

For a short period of time, Mendonça also worked as a freelance sustainability researcher and writer in which he produced two key studies. The first reviewing the first year performance and outcomes of the UK feed-in tariff in 2011, and the second assessing The Green Economy in Bristol and the West of England, which was published in January 2012. The latter assessed the size and make-up of the environmental technologies sector in the region at that time. His works also surveyed the UK green policy environment, and summarized some of the other key aspects of a green economy, including sustainable design of goods and services, retail, food, and well-being. The report concluded with a call for 'Resilience Planning', an ongoing process of strategic collaboration between actors and stakeholders in the region, with the main purpose of meeting local needs sustainably through investment in local assets. The integration and optimization of food, energy and transport systems were central focuses, and he argued that the development of resilience should merge the agendas of sustainability, economic development, social capital development, participatory democracy and emergency planning.[2]

Miguel wrote and co-wrote several books, and numerous articles, book chapters and papers on sustainability and renewable energy policy.[3] He is the author of Feed-in Tariffs: accelerating the deployment of renewable energy, published by Earthscan in 2007.[4][5] He is also co-author of Powering the Green Economy: The Feed-In Tariff Handbook (Earthscan, 2009) and A Renewable World: Energy, Ecology, Equality (Green Books, 2009).[6]

During this period Miguel held research fellowships at the University of Bristol and at Birkbeck College, University of London. He served on the advisory boards of the Alliance for Renewable Energy, Global Urban Development, Our Future Planet and Raw Foundation.

Fiction Writing

His first work of fiction, a collection of 11 short stories and a novella, was published as Quick! Act Normal in February 2013 under the pen name of Michael Ford. These stories explore human experience, and in particular our relationships with ourselves, each other and the world in which we live.

Consciousness and Contact Writing

In late 2015, Miguel published Meet the Hybrids - The Lives and Missions of ET Ambassadors on Earth.[7] This non-fiction book explores the subject of ET-human hybrids from the inside, by interviewing eight individuals who understand that they are part-extraterrestrial and part-human. The book is co-authored with Barbara Lamb, a licensed marriage and family therapist, and regression therapist, who has for the last 25 years worked with over 1,700 clients with regard to extraterrestrial encounters.[8]

In the fall of 2016, Mendonça published a people's history of the extraterrestrial subject, titled We Are the Disclosure. Through interviews with 26 people who have been active in the field for a combined total of over 650 years, the books explore the scale and scope of the subject. It was inspired by the findings of Meet the Hybrids, and set out to reflect the more spiritual narrative emerging from that community.[9] The book covers the spectrum of interest in the field, running from the masculine-technological-historical-political aspects, to the feminine-wellbeing-metaphysical-spiritual aspects. Mendonça interviewed a wide variety of subjects, including scientists, journalists and therapists, many of whom claim ET contact in different forms. The book also examined the state of the field, looking at its development since 1947, and traced its connections deep into the human past. The varying opinions of top-down versus bottom-up 'Disclosure' of the ET presence on Earth were discussed. And it opened up a deeper dialogue on what this field tells us about the nature of being and the journey of the soul.

In March 2017, Mendonça published the final part of his trilogy on ET-human interaction, titled Being with the Beings - The How and the Why of ET Contact.[10] It is a study of contact experiences between humans and various kinds of beings, particularly extraterrestrials and interdimensionals. Nine long-term experiencers are interviewed, such as channelers, hybrids, artists and therapists. The key topics discussed are: how and why the contact takes place; how it has shaped their lives; and their ET-contact techniques and safety protocols. It is illustrated with diagrams, representations of the beings they are in contact with, and 'downloaded' images including 'light language' and geometric designs.

Glass Work

Following the conclusion of his trilogy on 'ET-human interaction', Mendonça learned stained glass and cast glass techniques. Under the banner of 'Lightworker Glass' he went on to produce a series of lamps, light shades in stained glass, and cast sculptural pieces.[11]

Books

  • Being with the Beings - The How and the Why of ET Contact, 2017
  • We Are the Disclosure - A People's History of the Extraterrestrial Field, 2016
  • Meet the Hybrids: The Lives and Missions of ET Ambassadors on Earth (with Barbara Lamb), 2015
  • Quick! Act Normal: 12 Short Stories (as Michael Ford), CreateSpace, 2011
  • A Renewable World: Energy, Ecology, Equality (with Herbert Girardet), Green Books, 2009
  • Powering the Green Economy: The Feed-In Tariff Handbook (with David Jacobs and Benjamin Sovacool), Earthscan, 2009
  • Feed-in Tariffs: Accelerating the Deployment of Renewable Energy, Earthscan, 2007

Selected Writings

  • Orange Deals: Solar Energy Policy Initiatives Worldwide. 2012, SEEM [chapter author]
  • The Green Economy in Bristol and the West of England. 2012, Bristol Green Capital
  • The UK Feed-in Tariff: A User Survey. 2011, Birkbeck College, University of London
  • 100%: 100% Renewable Energy in Practice. 2009, Earthscan [chapter co-author]
  • Wind Energy International 2009/2010. 2009, World Wind Energy Association [chapter co-author]
  • Stability, Participation and Transparency in Renewable Energy Policy: Lessons from Denmark and the United States. 2009, Policy and Society, Elsevier [lead author]
  • Green Breakthroughs. 2008, UNEP [contributing writer]
  • Renewable Energy Global Status Report 2008-2011. REN21 [topical researcher]
  • Feed-In Tariffs – Boosting Energy for our Future. 2006, World Future Council
  • Policies to Change the World. 2006, World Future Council
gollark: In hypothetical ideal world™, you could remove all spending on marketing and such, stick all the people working on products into well-incentivized teams as is optimal for development, spread the best innovations everywhere without patent/IP hurdles, etc.
gollark: Unfortunately, good luck constructing that!
gollark: Similarly to basically all distributed systems problems, if you have a trustworthy central authority running the entire economy you can eliminate a lot of waste.
gollark: So soap, socks, razors, whatever.
gollark: In things not seen by other people much!

References

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