CULTURECOP
ASSEMBLY
The 2023 Assembly will ask participants to discuss:
How can the power of arts, culture, heritage and creative practice be harnessed to centre climate justice and equity in the work of the UN Climate Summits
CultureCOP Assemblies were convened by a wide coalition of artists and organisations who were initially brought together as CultureCOP by Farhana Yamin, Climate Lawyer, Funder and Activist to create new and more inclusive ways to reshape our world.
Urgent systemic shifts are needed to defend nature and implement global agreements like the 2015 Paris Agreement and the SDGs to achieve global justice on the basis of agreed science leaving no-one behind. Their implementation has been too slow and incremental.
The intersecting climate, social and ecological crises we face call on us to use more creative and participatory tools for change, enabling us to reflect, imagine and co-create a more interconnected and just future for all. We need courage as well as new spaces to reimagine systems not based on extractivism, colonisation, consumerism and a single story of progress.
Throughout time arts and culture have been at the heart of our worlds, connecting us and giving expression and voice to our experiences. They have the power to transform, heal and activate us. They help us look at the past, acknowledge the present and use our imaginations to vision and rehearse the future.
2nd CultureCOP International Virtual Assembly, Date TBC
This International online Assembly will build on the CultureCOP 2022 Assemblies that took place online in October 2022 and in person at COP27, in Sharm-el Sheikh.
In preparation for COP 28 taking place in the United Arab Emirates from 30th November to 12th December, this second online CultureCOP Assembly will discuss:
How can the power of arts, culture, heritage and creative practice be harnessed to centre climate justice and equity in the work of the UN Climate Summits
The 2022 Assemblies asked participants to:
Imagine if there was a seismic shift in which arts and cultural practices across the whole world centred on climate and ecological justice, safety and joy
For a full write up of participants responses to the virtual and in person Assembly
CultureCOP Assembly, Museum of Antiquities Sharm El Sheikh, November 11th 2022
The Culture COP in person Assembly at COP27 was part of #ArtCultureHeritageCOP27 A day long public event hosted in partnership with the Climate Heritage Network and Julies’s Bicycle to which 300+ individuals registered.
Following a programme of panels, speakers and performers, Queen Quet Chieftess of the Gullah/Geechee Nation led 60+ participants out of the auditorium onto an adjacent courtyard to take part in the Assembly, handing the group over to facilitator Ruth Ben-Tovim. The whole day of inspiring presentations and conversations served as the inputs to the Assembly along with a reading from Letters to the Earth and outputs from the online Assembly. Fresh insights from COP were then brought to the 2022 CultureCOP Assembly question
Imagine if there was a seismic shift in which arts and cultural practices across the whole world centred on climate and ecological justice, safety and joy
Small groups deliberated on this question and then fed back their responses in a final plenary session.
CultureCOP International Virtual Assembly, October 31st 2022
The first CultureCOP Assembly was virtual and attracted 700+ global registrants with over 300 artists and cultural organisers attending the online session to discuss and reimagine the role of culture in meeting the climate and ecological emergency. Through a process of speaker inputs, small group deliberation and plenary feedback, the Assembly asked participants to:
Imagine if there was a seismic shift in which arts and cultural practices across the whole world centred on climate and ecological justice, safety and joy
- What would arts and culture be like?
- What could emerge if this shift was resourced by equitable relationships?
- How can we take into account the climate and ecological breakdown that is already underway?
- What harmful arts and cultural practices would have to die out? What expectations and privileges would have to be let go of and by whom?
- How could a global community of arts and culture make this shift happen and engage with international processes for a climate just world?
Speaker inputs were made by: Nadine Wahab (Egypt), a Human Rights Defender and director of Eco Dahab in Egypt, Mindahi Bastida (Mexico) Director of the Original Nations Program of the Fountain and an Otomi-Toltec Ritual Ceremony Officer in Mexico. Cecilia Vicuña (Chile), a poet, artist, filmmaker and activist. Wanja Emily (Kenya) who works with Doc Society as the global community manager in the Climate Story Unit and she also sits on the Climate Justice Resilience Fund Advisory Council. Frances Morris (UK) is the director of Tate Modern art gallery in London. Kumi Naidoo (South Africa) who is a Human rights and environmental activist based in Johannesburg South Africa. He is currently an advisor to the Community Arts Network.
The Assembly was facilitated by community artist, facilitator and activist Ruth Ben-Tovim with Farhana Yamin and Beadie Finzi.
Responses to the Assembly questions were iterated into a set of interactive cards that were taken to COP27 CultureCOP in person events.