PROGRAM
FRIDAY, June 24
# Wie sieht
eine bessere Zukunft aus?
Mealtimes:
1 pm to 3 pm // Lunch
6 pm to 7:30 pm // Dinner
...check out the options offered by the canteens and cafeterias of the Studentenwerk
9 am to10 am
Yoga with Jule
It is best to bring your own yoga mat (or another surface on which you can do yoga well).
Unfortunately, we cannot provide you with one.
9:00 bis 10:00 Uhr // Markus Egermann - Leibniz Institute of Ecological Urban and Regional Development (IOER)
Transform research! For a new mode of knowledge generation
The lecture takes a critical look at the role of knowledge and science for a transformation to climate-neutral lifestyles and economies, and in this context highlights the overestimated role of technologies, efficiency approaches and the dominant innovation research and promotion. It then shows how transformative research can better understand and at the same time initiate processes of social change.
11:30 bis 13:00 Uhr // Moritz Ingwersen - Jun.-Prof. of North American Literature with a focus on Future Studies and Susann Wagenknecht - Jun.-Prof. for Micro-Sociology and Techno-Social Interaction, TUD
Building Ecotopia
[Workshop will be held in German - for translation please write us an E-Mail]
In this workshop we will design, test and discuss what it means to build an ecological utopia. In doing so, we want to get concrete: What does it mean to get your hands "dirty" and design futures? The workshop lasts 90 minutes, includes group work and joint reflection - and is looking for participants.
15:00 Uhr OPEN SPACES
Beim Klimacamp wird es ein Programm-Board geben. Hier könnt ihr einfach spontan am Tag einen Workshop eintragen. Bspw. könnt ihr einfach andere Personen einladen mit euch über ein bestimmtes Thema zu reden. Dieser "Open Space" wird bei uns in drei Sessions organisiert mit jeweils drei Workshops, die parallel stattfinden. Welche Workshops schon feststehen seht ihr hier.
3 pm to 6 pm // Henriette
Gender Equality NOW
One might think that at least the climate is gender-neutral. But why is it that many more women* than men* die in natural disasters? Why are there usually many more men* at the negotiating table when climate policy is discussed - even though many studies show that women* are more concerned about the climate and more willing to make changes? How do notions of "real men" fuel the climate crisis? And where do all these differences even come from? Aren't there more than two genders? We will address these and other questions on a personal and social level to get to the bottom of what social gender and role models are doing to us and the climate.
16:00 bis 17:00 Uhr // Jens Hausner
Pödelwitz - from a village that stayed.
Jens Hausner is a farmer. Since his apprenticeship, he has tilled the land on and around the Schleenhain open-cast mine. In the course of his life he saw various villages die: Droßdorf, Breunsdorf and finally Heuersdorf; dredged away because of the coal stored underneath. He married into Pödelwitz and now the consequences of coal mining affected him directly. In 2009, the local mining company held out the prospect of Pödelwitz being dredged. His commitment to preserving his village began. At the climate camp, we want to ask him about his many years of commitment, why it pays to have staying power and how he manages to motivate himself again and again.
7:30 pm to 8 pm // Feedback Session
7:30 pm to 8 pm // Feedback Session
Other Events at the Campus:
4:40 pm to 6:10 pm // TU it now - Join projects from different sustainability initiatives at the campus
here you can find more infos
from 9 pm: Umweltfilmabend der TUUWI (Movie Night)
"Gundermann" will be shown on the meadow behind HSZ [in German with English subtitles]
here you can find more infos