Creative Climate Justice Hub
The Creative Climate Justice Hub is a dynamic library of climate justice resources curated for the arts and culture community.
The Creative Climate Justice Hub is for artists and cultural practitioners who want to understand the systemic causes of the climate crisis, how it intersects with issues of social, economic and environmental injustice and how arts and culture is responding creatively.
Curated Content
An Overview
Resources and educational tools explaining the fundamentals of climate justice
View MoreClimate Justice in Britain
Resources exploring how climate injustice manifests and is challenged in Britain and Ireland
View MoreImagining Futures
Art, artists, policymakers, and community groups reclaiming alternative knowledges, reshaping climate stories, and innovating systems
View MorePeople and Networks
People, campaigns, media and movements to follow, support and platform
View More
Explore resources by theme
Climate & Environmental Justice
Decolonisation

Regenerative systems

Health and wellbeing

land and nature

Natural Resources

Racial Justice

Thanks to our partners and supporters
The Creative Climate Justice Hub is a result of programmes we have delivered in partnership with Arts Council England, British Council, Paddington Development Trust, our own Creative Climate Leadership programme, and conversations with justice advocates and pioneers from all across the world.
We would also like to shout out to Baroness Lola Young, Farhana Yamin, Jonathan Badyal, Diana Liverman, Yingbi Lee, and Salome Wagaine who have helped shape this resource into what it is today.
Share your Suggestions
The Creative Climate Justice hub and project is a labour of love for JB, but we plan to continue our research and add to the hub when we can. Climate justice is a constantly evolving issue, and we intend for this hub, the narratives and themes to evolve too. We would love to include your suggestions in this project.
Submissions will not automatically be included in the hub but will be periodically reviewed. We’re especially interested in work led by and centering BIPOC, LGBTQ+ and disabled communities, Refugees and migrants, and people in the Global South, but welcome any feedback or suggestions you would like to share.
Suggestions for future Climate Justice Hub content
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