CAN YOU HELP US GROW CONTENT, HAVE CONVERSATIONS AND REACH MORE PEOPLE? IN RETURN YOU WILL FIND A WEALTH OF RESOURCES TO HELP YOU EXPLORE THE PLANETARY EMERGENCY AND HOW TO ENGAGE PEOPLE WITH IT. So, it looks like we’re going to be in Covid-19 lockdown for a while, and we don’t know when we’ll
This is another in our series of guest posts about experiences of extreme weather – sharing voices of people in the UK living with the impacts of climate change. This post is by Thiziri Boussaid @thizbous a young person living in Worcestershire. It was written in February, the wettest February in the UK since records
About this post It’s more than a post! It’s an experiment in contemporary collecting, responding to the emerging Covid-19 pandemic. Although published in March it was regularly updated until August 2020, and some additions are still being made. As a team and wider community, we are sharing our findings and questions as we consider: what
The World Health Organisation has now characterised the Covid-19 outbreak as a global pandemic. Events are being cancelled, people are encouraged to work at home and anyone symptomatic or in contact with symptomatic people is required to ‘self-isolate’. While this might make some people more busy, for example if you have to look after children
There is increasing understanding of strategies people use to cope with the Emergency. This often draws from psychological work into how people cope with conflict trauma or serious illness, applying this to experiences of climate disasters or more broadly to the planetary Emergency. Of course, psychological studies and therapies are more prevalent in the