Creative Climate Leadership Podcast

Hum Studio Interactive & Julie's Bicycle

This is a podcast about the leading role of the arts in this age of converging crises. It features remarkable stories of individuals navigating the climate crisis and leading transformative creative projects in music, performing arts, galleries, film, and independent organisations across the world. As demands and solutions evolve, what kind of leadership is needed? Who does that involve? And what is leadership in the creative sector context anyway? Over six episodes, Emmanuella Blake Morsi hosts a diverse array of alumni from the Creative Climate Leadership programme (CCL) – artists, activists, academics, and professionals from various disciplines, exploring crucial topics like climate justice, effective communication, emerging technology, policy, and artistic practices. Produced by Hum Studio Interactive and Julie's Bicycle. Cover art by Emmanuella Blake Morsi read less
ArtsArts

Episodes

Climate Arts
Apr 29 2024
Climate Arts
The sixth episode centres around the transformative power of the arts in addressing climate change and how the arts can open spaces for experimentation and innovation in imagining new realities and societal models that integrate ecological awareness and sustainability. The episode features Dr. Jen Rae and Sarah Suib. They discuss art and design highlighting the need to learn and respect indigenous knowledge systems for a societal shift from extractivism to relational and interconnected ways of living. Dr. Jen Rae, an artist, researcher, and advocate for rewilding practices, emphasizes the role of the arts in community resilience, particularly in adapting to and preparing for climate-related disasters. of indigenous and nature-informed wisdomDr Sarah Suib Sarah is a consultant and the founder of Hint Studio, Brussels. She is also a designer and mender with years of experience in sustainable design and product development projects, user experiences, cleaner productions, ESG research, and frugal innovations. Her expertise lies in design thinking, design for sustainability, user research, and the circular economy. She works with small and medium sized companies to integrate sustainability and circularity strategies in their products and practices. Sarah is an alumnus of CCL Benelux (2023).Dr Jen Rae Jen is an award-winning artist-researcher whose practice-led expertise is situated at the intersections of art, speculative futures and climate emergency disaster adaptation and resilience. Her work is predominantly articulated through transdisciplinary collaborative methodologies and multi-platform projects, community alliances and public pedagogies. Jen is Co-founder and Creative Research Lead at the Centre for Reworlding, a member of the Australian Task Force for Creative Recovery and a 2023 Creative Australia Fellow. Jen is an alumnus of CCL Australia (2023).Links and references:Centre for Reworlding - https://www.centreforreworlding.com/Hint Studio - https://hint-studio.com/Alfred Russel Wallace - https://www.nhm.ac.uk/discover/who-was-alfred-russel-wallace.htmlMaria Campbell - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maria_CampbellRefuge (2018) - https://www.doherty.edu.au/news-events/events/refuge-2018-pandemicThe Past is a Sustainable Country - https://www.creativeclimateleadership.com/alumni/sarah-suib/The Relationship is the Project - https://therelationshipistheproject.com/ ★ Support this podcast ★
Cultural Policy
Apr 29 2024
Cultural Policy
The fifth episode explores what cultural policy is, its significance, and how it can influence societal change and play a role in social change, especially concerning climate and sustainability goals. The episode features Solveig Korum, Senior Advisor for Culture and Sustainability, and Rie Alkemade, Project Officer at the Cultural Relations Platform who discuss importance of preserving cultural practices and rights, particularly those threatened by climate change, and the potential of the cultural sector in promoting innovative and creative thinking in policymaking. The episode addresses how cultural policy can facilitate deeper, more meaningful intercultural exchanges and collaborations. Solveig and Rie discuss the need for policy that supports artistic initiatives related to sustainability and fosters dialogue between different sectors of society.Rie AlkemadeRie is a project and relations manager and a cultural producer with a keen interest in the creative artistic and cultural fields, and is a Project Officer for the Cultural Relations Platform. Her focus and passion has been primarily on cultivating sustainable partnerships and networks at a people-to-people level through fostering intercultural dialogue and exchanges based on mutual co-collaboration. Rie is an alumnus of CCL Benelux (2023).Dr Solveig KorumSolveig is an academic who works as an advisor for culture and sustainability at the R&D department of Kulturtanken – Arts for Young Audiences Norway. She is the co-founder of NaCuHeal Senegal, an NGO that operates tree-planting programs in West Africa and teaches Kundalini yoga at University of Oslo. Solveig is an alumnus of CCL Scandinavia (2022).Song credit: Let The Light In by Marte Wulff (CCL Scandinavia 2022) and Chirkutt (Bangladesh).  Links and references:Kulturtanken - https://www.kulturtanken.no/en/Cultural Relations Platform - https://www.cultureinexternalrelations.eu/UNFCCC - https://unfccc.intConvention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage - https://ich.unesco.org/en/conventionFaro Convention - https://www.coe.int/en/web/culture-and-heritage/faro-convention2005 Convention on Diversity of Cultural Expressions - https://www.unesco.org/creativity/en/2005-conventionMONDIACULT 2022 - https://www.unesco.org/en/articles/mondiacult-2022-states-adopt-historic-declaration-cultureGlobal Cultural Relations Programme - https://www.cultureinexternalrelations.eu/global-cultural-relations-programmeCulture|2030 indicators - https://sdghub.com/project/culture2030-indicators Let the Light In - https://open.spotify.com/track/60YTkv3srf1EnbujqXbsXQ?si=e8146b3398eb489e ★ Support this podcast ★
Climate Communications
Apr 29 2024
Climate Communications
The effect of language, storytelling and rhetoric on attitudes towards sustainability is indisputable. Framing climate issues in a way that inspires meaningful action is important now more than ever. In this episode documentarian, campaigner and activist Syed Jazib Ali discusses what is needed to build authentic narratives and campaigns and projects that are both moving and high-impact. We also explore climate fatigue, relevance of legal action, the trend towards climate optimism and performative activism. Syed Jazib Ali Jazib is a documentarian, campaigner and activist hailing from the indigenous Pahari tribe of the lower Himalayan region of the politically and ecologically sensitive Jammu and Kashmir. His award-winning documentaries and advocacy work are globally recognised, amplifying the stories of the underrepresented. His creative projects have been part of COP26, COP27 and he has worked with international NGOs, Think Tanks and United Nations organisations. Jazib is an alumnus of CCL Benelux (2023).Links and references:Passage to Kashmir - https://filmfreeway.com/RaheMuztarAct Now Film - https://www.bath.ac.uk/campaigns/actnowfilm-youth-voices-on-climate/Theatre Green Book - https://juliesbicycle.com/news-opinion/read-the-theatre-green-book-volume-1-sustainable-productions/5 broken cameras - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5_Broken_CamerasThe Slow Factory's Media Justice for Collective Liberation Fund - https://slowfactory.earth/ ★ Support this podcast ★