Programmes
What are our Programmes?
They are spaces that turn our research into community led programmes, where we have been able to directly apply rigours scientific methodology to health justice.
How do they Work?
All programmes are stewarded by people with direct lived experience of the topic. This is part of working in solidarity with communities rather than simply collaborating with them. Each programme steward designs their own programme and then delivers it alongside people they have built years of trust with.
It is a process of "walking with" in solidarity.
The mission of the project is to move towards the abolition of “Right to Pollute” policies and to facilitate healing pathways for communities impacted by air pollution. This project and study are meant to create a starting point for the abolition of the right to pollute policies, which are having a continual devastating effect on both planetary and human health.
A political education co-learning programme designed to develop health practitioners’ analysis and praxis of health justice. Key topics within the programme include, but are not limited to, Indigeneity, disability justice, colonialism, and environmental justice.
This work aims to throw away the rule book on the status quo and imagine what an HIA could look like if it embodied the WHO four interlinking pillars of democracy, equity, ethical use of evidence, and sustainable development from a community and lived experience framing.
This programme is TGNB led from the ground up to create time and space for various healing practices. It primarily looks at TGNB migrant and refugee health as well as healing justice circles.
This programme focuses on the various Imaginations and Knowledges Land-Kinned Peoples bring to environmental and health justice.
This work aims to demonstrate the harm of the dominant, individualised, narrative of obesity. We present an alternative understanding that views obesity through a neuro-epidemiological, environmental and sociopolitical lens. This serves as an avenue for people who are experiencing obesity to understand their disease and explore potential methods of self-care, self-advocacy and safeguarding.
Latest News
An update to our 2024 propositional paper from earlier this year. Resourcing radical knowledge infrastructure means to create the financial, cultural, and equitable pathways for people, groups and movements to create, surface, resurface, and amplify knowledges without restriction, in order to build community power.
Science Gallery London’s exhibition, Vital Signs: Another world is possible brings together artists, designers and researchers to explore these relationships and how the health of the natural world - from our waterways to our atmosphere and the ocean floor - is intimately connected to our own health and wellbeing.
Taking on an Ecological Justice approach to the NPPF requires a foundational shift to the role and motivations around planning and the relationship with land in the UK.
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