
I’ve been thinking for a while about creating a tool for using in workshops that helps people think about the relationships between causes, impacts and solutions of the Earth crisis. It will be something hands-on, a working canvas to print out and cover with post-its. Last week I saw the graphic by Jan Koniezko about
Reposted from hubRen.org In early April, hubRen (CMUK Associate) took part in a beautiful grassroots gathering of local residents and activists for an afternoon of conversation, creativity and community. It was a feast of free food, a celebration of mutual aid, a weaving together of responses to inequality through music, food and connection. Just as
I’m responding to an open invitation from ‘Futures Now’ to share visions of a better tomorrow. It seems an appropriate thing to do at the start of a New Year. My approach to future thinking is Possitopian, which expands the cone of the possible future, and draws on geophysical realities and data. It applies maximum
This article provides a summary and reminder of why the Climate and Ecological Emergency is ‘the asteroid’ (as popularised in the film Don’t Look Up) – and also why ‘we are the asteroid’. Multiple connected emergencies Humanity faces the combined catastrophes of: climate change, a mass extinction of vital biodiversity and a degradation of ecosystems