Weirding Sustainability Symposium

Weirding Sustainability Symposium

Overview

A programme of inspiring talks, discussions and hands-on activities on weirding sustainability in research and practice.

We live in a time of global weirding, with massive destabilisation of social-ecological worlds, yet much policy and research on “sustainability” offers a green(washed) version of business-as-usual.

This half-day event offers cross-disciplinary talks, discussions and hands-on activities to explore the questions: What does global weirding mean for us as researchers/creative practitioners/citizens? How might weirding of our own imaginations and practices spark more radical and meaningful change?

Speakers include:

  • Justin Hopper: a writer interested in landscape, psychogeography, hauntology, memory and myth, as well as the literary and artistic occult.
  • Becky Lyon: an artist and researcher exploring the politics of ecology, and the role of sensory and bodily knowledges in reclaiming our relationship to place.
  • Patricia MacCormack: a philosopher working on queer death studies, posthumanism, ecology, animal rights, extinction and monstrosity among other themes.
  • Camila Alday: an archeologist working within the Wetlân Research Lab, which aims to break the Nature-Culture divide by proposing wetlands as a collaborator/co-creator.
  • Ben Platt: a geographer whose research examines how understandings of Nature are produced and contested within the operational ‘hinterlands’ of the so-called Anthropocene.

With facilitation by Sarah Royston, Tim Jarvis, Annouchka Bayley, Emma Linford and James Norton.

The event is part of the Weirding Sustainability Festival 2026, which is co-ordinated by Anglia Ruskin University and the University of Cambridge. For more info see LEAP Lab: Living Experiments in Arts-Science Practice to Re-imagine Sustainability - CRASSH and for enquiries contact Sarah Royston: sarah.royston@aru.ac.uk


Accessbility notes:

This event is on the ground floor of the Alison Richard Building (ARB) which is on the University of Cambridge’s Sidgwick Site. The ARB has step-free access. Accessible toilets are available on all floors. Disabled parking is available outside the Alison Richard Building.

A programme of inspiring talks, discussions and hands-on activities on weirding sustainability in research and practice.

We live in a time of global weirding, with massive destabilisation of social-ecological worlds, yet much policy and research on “sustainability” offers a green(washed) version of business-as-usual.

This half-day event offers cross-disciplinary talks, discussions and hands-on activities to explore the questions: What does global weirding mean for us as researchers/creative practitioners/citizens? How might weirding of our own imaginations and practices spark more radical and meaningful change?

Speakers include:

  • Justin Hopper: a writer interested in landscape, psychogeography, hauntology, memory and myth, as well as the literary and artistic occult.
  • Becky Lyon: an artist and researcher exploring the politics of ecology, and the role of sensory and bodily knowledges in reclaiming our relationship to place.
  • Patricia MacCormack: a philosopher working on queer death studies, posthumanism, ecology, animal rights, extinction and monstrosity among other themes.
  • Camila Alday: an archeologist working within the Wetlân Research Lab, which aims to break the Nature-Culture divide by proposing wetlands as a collaborator/co-creator.
  • Ben Platt: a geographer whose research examines how understandings of Nature are produced and contested within the operational ‘hinterlands’ of the so-called Anthropocene.

With facilitation by Sarah Royston, Tim Jarvis, Annouchka Bayley, Emma Linford and James Norton.

The event is part of the Weirding Sustainability Festival 2026, which is co-ordinated by Anglia Ruskin University and the University of Cambridge. For more info see LEAP Lab: Living Experiments in Arts-Science Practice to Re-imagine Sustainability - CRASSH and for enquiries contact Sarah Royston: sarah.royston@aru.ac.uk


Accessbility notes:

This event is on the ground floor of the Alison Richard Building (ARB) which is on the University of Cambridge’s Sidgwick Site. The ARB has step-free access. Accessible toilets are available on all floors. Disabled parking is available outside the Alison Richard Building.

Good to know

Highlights

  • 4 hours 15 minutes
  • In person

Location

Centre for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities (CRASSH)

7 West Road

Cambridge CB3 9DP

How do you want to get there?

Map
Organized by
Report this event

More events from LEAP Lab and ARU

Discover more events from LEAP Lab and ARU, from Science & Tech to other experiences you might love.

Still looking for the right event?

Explore all events in Cambridge and filter by date, category, and more to find the perfect fit.