Start Producing the Future: Workshop 17th October

Wednesday, September 23, 2009 11:58

START PRODUCING THE FUTURE
Experiments against Enclosure - Tools to reclaim the Commons

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All round the world, there are thousands of projects and people working from the bottom up, creating and resisting the system that is causing climate change and building a more just and sustainable world, right here and now. As part of the 100 days run up to the Copenhagen Climate summit, The Trapese Collective invite YOU to three days of of practical workshops, trainings, discussions and inspiration on everything from crash technologies and local food to campaigning and building alternatives. Come to just one workshops or the whole three days. Check out our mid week film programme. Join the real green (grassroots) shoots.

When? Saturdays 17th October, 31st October, 14th November 2009, 10.30 - 6pm.

Where? Arnolfini, 16 Narrow Quay, Bristol BS1 4QA www.arnolfini.org.uk
How? Register via Arnolfini box office or phone, T: +44 (0)117 9172300 / 01 E: boxoffice@arnolfini.org.uk .

Please say which session(s) you plan to attend.Or simply turn up and register on the day. Some sessions are ‘closed’ once they start, others are drop in, (see programme)

How much? Participation is not dependent on paying but we suggest a donations from £5 to £15 per person, per day, depending on income. This will go to the workshop facilitators, who are offering these sessions for free, or to the projects of their choosing.
Food? Bring food to share or there are plenty of local eateries.

Who? Trapese are a popular education collective who among other projects edited the Do It Yourself -handbook for changing our world, in 2007. This project which draws on the themes from the book will be co-ordinated by Alice Cutler, Natasha Machin and Steve Stuffit, from Bristol with input from Paul Chatterton, and Kim Bryan and many
other Trapese friends. www.trapese.org

Short course at the Centre for Alternative Technology, Wales

Monday, September 14, 2009 11:49

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I am running a short course in November. We have a great line up of speakers. Spread the word.

EMERGENCY PLANET EARTH! Environmental crises, definitions and responses Tues 10 - Sun 15 Nov 2009

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NEW SHORT COURSE in November 2009 led by the University of Leeds @ the Centre for Alternative Technology, Wales – the UK’s leading ecocentre

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Want to learn more about the urgent environmental issues of our times?

Want to engage with practitioners who are at the forefront of developing solutions?

Want to tap into cutting edge, radical teaching and research with one of the UK’s most respected universities and the UK’s leading ecocentre?

Then this module is for you!

Teaching staff from the MA in ‘Activism and Social Change’ (www.activismsocialchange.org.uk) based in Geography at the University of Leeds are beginning an exciting new partnership with CAT to deliver this short course. CAT is one of Europe’s leading ecocentres, undertaking practical research and teaching into ecological issues. It is based in the town of Machynlleth on the edge of Snowdonia National Park. This collaboration is particularly timely as CAT is launching a major new educational initiative and resource this summer called WISE (the Wales Institute for Sustainable Education). WISE will provide a state-of-the-art environmental education centre, featuring 24 en suite study bedrooms, 200 seat rammed earth lecture theatre workshops, seminar rooms, laboratory, restaurant and bar.

++ Module Logistics and costs

This course will take place in mid November 2009 and will be taught over one week, from Tuesday evening to Sunday afternoon.

Registration for this course costs £300 unwaged, £475 waged and £650 company rate and includes full board accommodation, tuition and materials.

Accommodation will be on our main site, in small simply furnished rooms, which contain 2-5 bunk beds. We have a few single rooms available for an extra £10 per night. There are common rooms available for relaxation, with facilities for making drinks. Meals are served in our wholefood vegetarian restaurant.

++ Module Content

The module will be delivered by staff from the University of Leeds and CAT and will involve a mix of lectures, seminars, evening reading groups, debates and films, student led presentations, guest speakers and site tours and a social on Saturday evening.

++ Sessions include:

Issues

1. Introduction: understanding rapid change

2. Climate Change: emergency code red?

3. The Energy crisis and peak oil

4. Environmental Justice: living in a toxic society

5. Land matters: the industrialisation of food and agriculture

6. Mid point reflection and summary

Responses

7. Green capitalism and the corporate response

8. Government frameworks for change: from the local to the global

9. Grassroots civil society responses: localisation and transition towns

10. Social movements for change: radical ecological direct action

++ To register

Tel: 01654 705981 Email: course@cat.org.uk or www.cat.org.uk/courses for online booking.

To reserve a place, send a non-returnable deposit cheque to CAT Charity Ltd for £100 or ring or email with credit card details. Further details and invoices will be sent shortly before the course. The balance of the course fee is due before the start of the course. Residents of SY20 or SY23 should enquire about special non residential rates.

++ More information

For more information on the MA in Activism and Social Change see: www.activismsocialchange.org.uk or email the Programme Director: Dr Paul Chatterton p.chatterton@leeds.ac.uk

The Rocky Road to a Real Transition: reprinted with new preface

Monday, August 17, 2009 5:42

Alice Cutler and I, two members of the popular education collective Trapese, have just reprinted our booklet ‘THE ROCKY ROAD TO A REAL TRANSITION: THE TRANSITION TOWNS MOVEMENT AND WHAT IT MEANS FOR SOCIAL CHANGE.’ It is our contribution to the evolving ideas within the excellent transition towns movement. You can download the booklet via my publications page and the new preface we wrote for the reprint appears below. Get in touch if you want some hard copies. They cost £1 each to cover production costs.

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Cities for People, not for profit

Friday, July 24, 2009 8:54

figure-1-slaterI’m involved in a journal called City, and we have just published a really good series of conference papers from a conference in Berlin last November called ‘Right to the City’

It is part of a special double issue of our journal and you can view it here

This special issue of City (volume 13, issues 2-3) explores the theme ‘Cities for people, not profit’ through wide-ranging contributions by a diverse group of European and North American urban theorists, sociologists, planners and activists. The issue is guest edited by Neil Brenner, Peter Marcuse and Margit Mayer. If you don’t know their work you shuold check it out, especially Peter’s.

You can view the Editorial, Introduction and Tom Slater’s paper on ‘Missing Marcuse: On gentrification and displacement’ for FREE online here.

You can purchase the issue at a one-off rate from the journal homepage here.

Happy reading…

The image below is from the cover of the journal.


Climate change, class and coal

Monday, July 13, 2009 9:27

I have found myself commenting a fair bit recently on the links between climate change, class and coal. This is both a painful and essential task, made all the more personally challenging and confusing given that my grandad was a coal miner (at Hatfield main colliery in Yorkshire).

I talked at a conference last November in Newcastle at the Bridge Inn organised by the Newcastle Branch of the International Workers of the World (the wobblies). It was an amazing day (it was also my 36th birthday) and the panel of speakers included Arthur Scargill (who I assume needs no introduction), Dave Douglass  (ex miner and more recently trade union activist whom i deeply admire), Paul Morrozzo (from GreenPeace and Climate Camp),  and Ian Lavery (current President of the National Union of Mineworkers).

I made a brief 10 minute speech, the jist of which can be read here:

http://www.paulchatterton.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/05/pdf-anti-coal-article-cat.pdf

This is also on my publications page (The emerging anti-coal debate).

Mute magazine has just published a fairly comprehensive write up of the day which can be found at:

http://www.metamute.org/en/content/a_climatic_disorder_class_and_climate_change_in_newcastle

This is a crucial area of debate given that new and old coal fired power stations are still firmly on the agenda, and one which i imagine will be revisited at this year’s Camp for Climate Action.

More Drax trial media coverage

Tuesday, July 7, 2009 9:25

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Tues June 30th 2009. Yorkshire Evening Post

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Weds 1st July 2009. Guardian

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Thurs 2nd July 2009 Guardian

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Friday 3rd July 2009 Guardian

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Sat 4th July 2009 Guardian

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Sat 4th July 2009 Yorkshire Post

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Sat 4th July 2oo9 Yorkshire Post (Part II)

Guilty! But Drax continues ‘to kill 180 people a year’

Sunday, July 5, 2009 6:56

Sorry for the absence - I have been in court as one of the defendants in the Drax trial at Leeds crown court. I’ll write more details next week, but just to give you the bare facts - the trial lasted five days and last Friday, the last day of the trial, it took the jury around an hour to find us guilty.

We lost, but as one of the defendants said,

‘while the law has to apply to everyone, so too do the effects of climate change. The trial has ended, but the death and destruction caused by Drax and other powerstations like it will continue’

In a nutshell, what we outlined was that Drax burns 13 million tonnes of coal a year, and that this coal produces 22 million tonnes of carbon emissions a year. Our defence was that this makes Drax the single biggest point source of Carbon in the UK and using UN and other government statistics it can be calculated that it is responsible for around 180 deaths a year, £3M cost to society EVERY DAY, and a loss of around 1200 species over its lifetime. By enhancing climate chaos, the effects that these carbon emissions are having on the Yorkshire region, as well as throughout the globe, are life threatening and terrifying.

You can follow the coverage of the trial here:

Defendants arrive at court on Monday:

https://www.indymedia.org.uk/en/2009/06/433437.html

Prosecution evidence:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/jun/30/drax-train-trial-protest

Our evidence:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/jul/01/drax-climate-change-protest-court

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/west_yorkshire/8129468.stm

Final summing up:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/jul/02/drax-protester-trial-jury-retires

Final speech by defendant Jonathan Stevenson

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/jul/02/drax-protesters-defence-sum-up

The verdict:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/jul/03/drax-coal-train-trial-guilty

Welcome to my new website

Thursday, May 28, 2009 15:04

Welcome to my new website. There’s loads of resources and free downloads on it - so help yourself. The main thing I run is a Masters Programme called Activism and Social Change (see www.activismsocialchange.org.uk). We are recruiting for this September so take a look and let me know if you are interested. We have a new fieldtrip module to the Centre for Alternative Technology in Wales this year.

I live and work in Leeds and I’m based in the School of Geography at the University of Leeds. To give you a flavour of what I do here are a few of things I’ve been involved in lately.

I help edit one of the longest running radical journals in Geography - Antipode. We recently had a summer school in Manchester and about 25 people came from all over the world.  We run this every couple of years so keep it in mind if you know any budding Geography students! Antipode is 40 years old this year and we have loads of content that you can download for free.

As part of the MA in Activism we have a fair amount of links with NGOs. One of the most inspiring that we have links with is the World Development Movement. I spoke at their Campaigners Convention this year.  Their local groups are pretty active and they are one of the few groups who try and get to the heart of the matter and analyse the causes of issues. Their campaign on the new coal industry is a good example of this.

I’ve also just been on a great straw bale course with a local group of strawbale geniuses called Amazonails. I’m involved with a co-housing group called LILAC (Low Impact Living Affordable Community) which is planning to build 20 houses based on timber and strawbale insulation. I have to admit, strawbales are amazing. Here’s some facts I picked up from Amazonails:

  • 22% of energy produced globally is used to make and move new construction materials and around 7% of global Co2 emissions are generated from cement production!
  • 15% of all Co2 in the west is generated from heating and cooling homes and for this reason we are committed to good design to reduce the need for energy input.
  • In contrast to a conventionally built home which produces around 50 tonnes of Co2 during its construction, a home built using straw bale as insulation actually stores 12.25 tonnes of Co2!

eco-village

This is a picture which a friend of mine did of what our cohousing project might look like - right in the heart of Leeds!