Making Movements: Voices from a World of Change
Kollapscamp may well turn out to be a significant moment in movement history, with the climate scene evolving into new forms to meet the new realities of ‘long emergency’. At the same time – and very much relatedly – the camp was a physical and social space with real people bringing varied and sometimes rivalrous motivations, identities and needs. As the camp packed up, I caught up with Scully to discuss both parts of that work. Internal tension is pretty much a certainty in any gathering of this scale and ambition, but it’s rare to find such a lucid example of those tensions being raised and processed – and even rarer to debrief it all with one of the core organisers! If you want an understanding of what holding a serious movement space looks like in 2025, and/or a snapshot of the complicated collapse-politics constituency, stay tuned. Editor’s note: we talk a bit about Tadzio Mueller, one of the Camp’s foremost organisers alongside Scully, and a pre-eminent voice communicator on collapse politics. He’s been a significant social movement presence in Germany since the early noughties, involved in alter-globalisation activism, LGBT struggles, and the climate movement – notably helping to set up Ende Gelande. To get a direct sense of his inimitable style , check out his collapse pitch here https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XODlnqPvpv8 [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XODlnqPvpv8] How we’re feeling at the end of camp What the camp’s aims were and if it met them Minor tensions in the camp The critique session The contested place of Tadzio Mueller Accessibility questions How racial diversity can come down to money How racial diversity can have deeper roots Comparing Just Collapse to Deep Adaptation The wider marketplace of collapse politics projects The importance of cultures of care in collapse Some further reflections on the camp from its organising team: https://steady.page/en/friedlichesabotage/posts/7323dbfe-5ce4-421f-b9f1-3a7922201ef7 [https://steady.page/en/friedlichesabotage/posts/7323dbfe-5ce4-421f-b9f1-3a7922201ef7] End music: people at Les Résistantes singing Le Pieu, a Basque song of collective resistance https://www.lesglottesrebelles.com/le-pieu/ Follow me on Bluesky @douglasrogers.bsky.social or Twitter at @writingDouglas if you're into that kind of thing
20 episodes
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