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Occupy Climate Change (OCC!)

Occupy Climate Change (OCC!) was a Formas funded project that focused on the issue of loss and damage and the impact of climate change on cities, with a focus on grassroots organizations. The project lives on in the global database The Atlas of the other worlds (linked below) documenting cases of grassroots initiatives that tackle climate change.

Atlas of the Other Worlds

The Project

OCC! researched two themes which are understudied in the literature on Climate Change (CC): the issue of Loss and Damage (L&D) and the impact of climate change on cities. In particular, OCC! addressed those themes focusing on the practices and experiments of grassroots organizations across different cases in order to identify how their diverse, dynamic, self-organized responses to loss try to undo or embrace the damage.

The OCC! team delved into the practices of self-organization and solidarity experimented by grassroots groups, researching which kind of knowledge is being produced and whether these practices can be scaled-up beyond “militant particularism” (Harvey & Williams 1995) and the specificities of the single case. The project produced a global database (The Map of the other worlds) documenting cases of grassroots initiatives that tackle climate change and an in-depth case study analysis on urban experiments from Europe (Stockholm, Naples, Istanbul), the US (New York City),and Latin America (Rio De Janeiro). '

OCC!’s key objective is to test which grassroots responses to loss and damage have been successful, why,and on what scale. This comparison includes a focus on rethinking the role of expertise, knowledge production,and progressive experiments of localactors. Methodologically, OCC!’s team is grounded in the two overarching interdisciplinary fields of environmental humanities and politicalecology.

Funding agency: Formas

Duration: 2018-2021

Northwest Washington, Washington, United States Shot on Pennsylvania Ave near the Capitol. Source: https://unsplash.com/photos/cpAKc-G6lPg
Page responsible:ehlab@abe.kth.se
Belongs to: KTH Environmental Humanities Laboratory
Last changed: May 31, 2023