As space ventures have become more numerous leading scientists and theorists have offered ways
of building a living habitat in a hostile environment taking an 'ecosystems' view of space
colonization. The contributors to this volume take a radical multi-disciplinary view of the
challenge of human space colonization through the ongoing project Persephone. This book
fundamentally challenges prevalent ideas about sustainability and proposes a new approach to
resource austerity and conservation and providing truly sustainable approaches that are
life-promoting. Readers will learn the details of the plans for Persephone - a real project
that is part of the company Icarus Interstellar's plans for the design and engineering of a
living interior on a worldship to be constructed in Earth's orbit within 100 years. Although
the timeframe itself is only an estimate since it is contingent on many significant
developments including funding and technological advances the industry consensus is that
within 100 years we will see manned space exploration beyond our solar system. This notion is
shared by organizations such as the Initiative for Interstellar Studies and the DARPA-funded
100-year starship project. This book specifically develops the principles for the construction
of a living habitat within a worldship - a multi-generational starship that contains its own
world that supports colonists as it travels across great distances between stars at a speed
much slower than light. Far from being a sterile industrial setup such as the ISS or even
being a bucolic suburbia as proposed by Gerard O'Neill in the 1970s this worldship will
provide the pre-conditions for sustaining life beyond Earth's environment which may also lead
to the evolution of non-terrestrial ecologies. Drawing on the principles of ecopoiesis and
insights offered by the Biosphere 2 experiment that demonstrated what we have to learn about
ecosystem construction this book proposes first designing the soils of such a space. It should
then be possible to set up the conditions that a first generation of colonists may experience
in leaving our solar system to find new worlds to settle - perhaps in spreading life throughout
the universe. Although the book takes a unique view of ecology and sustainability within the
setting of a traveling starship it is equally concerned with the human experience on artificial
worlds. Chapters come from a range of multi disciplinary thinkers who shed light on the brave
new future ahead from different angles.