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What is colonisation, what are its harms?

How is colonisation ongoing?

Why do we need to decolonise to regenerate?

How to avoid traps and pitfalls, and opt out of recolonisation?

Explored in four workshops in two weeks, the first workshop is free for all. Workshops 1 to 4 are offered as a package for a fee of

We start by acknowledging that

of societal and planetary crises.

We are often told that colonisation is “in the past”.

Unfortunately, we are not properly taught about our own colonial histories. We don’t understand and guard against how colonial systems of violence and oppression brought us the wicked problems we encounter today, and continue to evolve and penetrate within our societies.

This course supports students and professionals in

in sustainability and regeneration.

It touches upon how white supremacy and other colonial harms propagate in fields that advertise themselves as “creating better futures”.

We provide you with perspectives and tools to identify and avoid coloniality within Sustainability, Inc. and Regeneration, Inc.

What is colonisation?

What makes it harmful?

How is colonisation ongoing?

What systems perpetuate it?

How is regeneration colonial?

What are common traps and pitfalls?

Presentations

Discussions & Reflections

Join like-minded folk in our live online workshops.

Come along prepared to meet, interact and collaborate with others.

Take this opportunity to reassess your own values, discuss candidly with peers, and come to your own conclusions on decolonising to regenerate.

1, 2, 8, 9 JULY 2025

Timing TBC

No live sessions will be recorded.

Workshop 1:
Free to attend

Workshops 2-4:
EUR 160

50% discount for students

free for Global South environmental, indigenous and peasant rights activists

click "discounts" below to get code

Samantha Suppiah, Anna Denardin and Luiza Oliveira of the PF Crew

FREE

"Extremely thought-provoking! This workshop series has urged me to recognise colonial patterns in the world around me as well as my own thoughts. Through some invigorating discussions with fellow participants, I got the opportunity to connect, share and learn with/from people around the world and most importantly from the Global Majority."

- Oishika Basak, Human Geographer

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Image credits

Sohbat Pur, Baluchistan, Pakistan, 29 August 2022 (AP Photo/Zahid Hussain)

Headline meme created by Anna Denardin, recreating Anton Gudim’s drowning high five illustration