A youth learning journey to foster climate resilience and regeneration through inspiring stories, powerful artworks, impactful tools and an online community. Interactive workshops targeted Europe-based youth but remained open to all students, activists and young professionals around the world. A short-video series with key messages of the learning journey is online!
Tag: community
Join the virtual launch of ‘Restorying Landscapes in a Changing Climate’, on Friday 29 July at 1pm CET, and discover our new creative project in collaboration with the Living Story Landscapes Project (Philippines), and the Hawkwood Centre for Future Thinking (United Kingdom).
Through collaborations with artists and a future literacy expert, we explored climate emotions, as well as caring and climate-resilient futures with 35 young climate advocates from aroung the world at the United Nations Climate Change secretariat.
Every Wednesday at 2pm ET/ 8pm CET, join a weekly space for youth to come together, share, learn from each other and grow together the courage, hope, resilience and community to build regenerative futures.
In collaboration with the Anchorage Museum, this open workshop wove together Futures Literacy with artworks and reflections on our emotions, so as to explore different visions of the future, at the intersection of healing and climate change.
This workshop open to all empowers you to better understand climate change impacts and choose your own future in our uncertain world. We will let you know when the next session led by Loes Damhof and Laureline Simon will be organized!
“My eyes are fixed to the distant point where the mire and the forest meet, I can see the blue silhouette of Oratunturi Fell arching behind them. Crooked birches stand on peat islets running through the mire, I feel the rich smell of the mire in my nose. The sky is wide, and the earth. And the mind.”- Kaija Kiuru
“Caribou ribs separating from the cage is the same sound as tundra cranberries separating from the vine. When you are open to the land, it speaks to you.” says Inuvialuk artist Maureen Gruben, from her hometown of Tuktoyatuk in the Western Arctic.







