Community Organising with ECON

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3 to 10 Oct 2026

Applying Transformative Organising approaches for more effective movement building.

How do we move from organising in silos to building lasting alignments? From fighting short-term campaigns to advancing a long-term agenda for structural change? From a narrow view of power to an expansive one — and from protesting on the outside to building governing power? Designed and delivered by the European Community Organising Network (ECON), this training will help you tackle these questions by developing your practice through the lens of Transformative Organising methodology.

This training focuses on Transformative Organising — an emerging tradition that builds on decades of movement focused practice. Developed by US-based organiser Steve Williams, most fully articulated in his essay Demand Everything, and being actively shaped for the European context by ECON and others, it offers more expansive understandings of power and longer strategic time horizons than many conventional organising models. 

Transformative Organising asks us to think beyond the single campaign or issue — to see organising not just as a tool for winning concessions, but as a practice of building the kind of deep, durable power that can achieve structural change. It takes seriously the question of who is at the centre of that power-building: prioritising communities “closest to the pain” of unjust systems, and working from the ground up toward genuine transformation.

Echoes of this approach can be found in ECON’s publication The Power of Organising: Stories from Community Organising Campaigns Across Europe, which brings together experiences from across the continent to explore what a more expansive, longer-term organising practice can look like in diverse European contexts.

This training will be both rooted in the theory of Transformative Organising, and hands-on in its approach — exploring how these kinds of organising skills can be applied directly in the field. You don’t need previous formal training in organising to get a great deal out of this course. And if you are already a trained organiser, this training is designed to stretch your thinking and deepen your practice. 

 

We will explore ideas and practices related to:

  • Transformative organising as a tradition and framework
  • The role and responsibilities of the organiser
  • Concepts of power and tools for power analysis
  • Developing a long-term agenda for structural change
  • Combining organising and mobilising in movement-building processes
  • Relational methods for organising through dialogue
  • Power mapping and collective strategy development.

 

The aims of the training are to help us:

  • Understand Transformative Organising and its core practices
  • Analyse and build power through organising
  • Explore the roles, tools and approaches available to organisers
  • Think and act more strategically in organising processes.

 

Through a blend of participatory education and immersive learning we will:

  • Practice building relationships through specific approaches to dialogue
  • Develop a long-term agenda for your group, organisation or campaign
  • Map power and develop a strategy for building it in your context
  • Leave with a clearer sense of how to use Transformative Organising strategically in your work.

 

Who is it aimed at?

Anyone with experience in socially engaged action addressing ecological, political and social justice issues. We embrace a broad definition of activism that includes any form of contribution to change and social and ecological justice. That might include: Resistance – action preventing further damage to ecosystems and social justice; Renewal – action focused on developing and creating alternatives for healthier societies and communities; and Building Resilience – action supporting increased resilience in communities to weather the uncertain times ahead.

The main spoken language on the course will be English.

This course is designed and delivered by ECON trainers and follows ECON training methodology.

For accessibility and venue information see <here>.

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Team

Team

An

Location:

An Maeyens (she/her) is a facilitator and trainer with over two decades of experience in grassroots movements. She specialises in creative, inclusive agenda design and brings deep expertise on group culture, power dynamics, and transformative learning. Starting of in the anti-globalisation movement she has trained thousands in civil disobedience, supported international coalitions, and developed multilingual training programmes and toolkits. Her work spans movements, cultures, and countries, guided by a commitment to care, accessibility, and leaderful organising.

Ari Kajtezović

Location:

Ari’s activism began in 2002, at age 16, as a Bosnian refugee in Canada, where they founded and coordinated a group for LGBTIQ high school students and allies. They were a co-founder and leader at kolekTIRV in Croatia and Trans Network Balkan, involved in community organizing, advocacy, program management, team coordination, capacity building, education, media work, campaigns, events, fundraising, etc. In 2024, they joined the Supervisory Board of the Croatian Trade Union Collective of United Precarious Workers and Activists (SKUPA).

Beyond the Balkan region, Ari served as a Board member at Transgender Europe (TGEU), where they held roles as Secretary, Treasurer, and later Co-chair. They have also been a trainer with the Center for Artistic Activism and served on the Advisory Committee and since 2022 as a Community Care Facilitator at FRIDA — The Young Feminist Fund. Since 2024 they are the Operations Manager at Global Philanthropy Project.

Sergio

Germany

Location:

Germany

Sergio (all pronouns) was born in Romania and migrated to Germany in the early 2010s. In the past, he was a social worker with homeless people and a social consultant for Eastern European migrants for various organisations. Trained as a filmmaker, he spent two years making a documentary about the ‘civic reawakening’ in Romania and the waves of protest it brought with it. In connection to this, Sergio is currently co-steering the development of an online open-source participative knowledge production platform on activism in Romania. Over the past nine years, Sergiu has offered his skills to various journalists, grassroots collectives and campaigns, mostly working within the labour rights, climate justice, international solidarity and anti-authoritarian movements in Germany and Romania. Nonetheless, his biggest focus since 2020 has been his work as an organiser with the anarcho-syndicalist Free Workers Union, where he focuses mostly on organising Romanian migrant workers on construction sites, in factories and in the agricultural field.

Linzy Na Nakorn

Location:

Linzy Na Nakorn is a movement director, politicised somatics practitioner, community organiser and facilitator. For the past decade she has been facilitating movement, body work and creating theatre, dance and participatory performance that advocates for and organises with communities in pursuit of housing, disability and racial justice. Her movement practice focuses on trauma-informed approaches to building resilience, capacity and joy via way of the body for personal, interpersonal and community sustainability. Linzy was a Co-Director of The Big Ride for Palestine in partnership with The Gaza Sunbirds, Native Woman Ride and Middle East Children’s Alliance; using cycling as a tool for mobilising active solidarity and in support of campaigning for the rights and self-determination of the Palestinian people. Linzy is part of a UK network of activists and artists advocating for Radical Care – supporting organisations, researchers and institutions to work towards system change in societal approaches to labour, leadership and access.

Jeroen

Location:

Jeroen (he/him pronouns) has been involved in grassroots social movements for more than two decades now, starting back when he was fifteen. Throughout the years the fights for “climate justice” and “migrant justice” have been consistently on top of the list of struggles that make his heart beat faster. A key transformative moment for Jeroen was reading Paulo Freire’s Pedagogy of the Oppressed. Freire’s revolutionary pedagogy gave him a language to support the creation of emancipatory learning environments, rooted in a desire for collective liberation. Jeroen has also been exploring in depth Boal’s Theatre of the Oppressed and Joanna Macy’s The Work That Reconnects among other methodologies to build his trainer’s toolkit. Inspired by the liberatory possibilities of these traditions, he started an organization with a friend, LABO vzw, based in Belgium, where he has worked as a trainer and campaigner between 2013 and 2023.

Ella

Catalunya

Location:

Catalunya

Ella brings more than 10 years’ external experience working with not for profit and community based organisations across diverse themes including: advocacy for migrant communities; local community engagement in national policy making; and structural relationships between poverty and disenfranchisement, and education and poverty. Immersed in critical theory in her early 20s she brings a holistic and questioning approach, and is passionate about systemic solutions that centre relationship and interconnection between ecology and society. A long standing member of the collective, Ella has been part of the core team since the inception of the Ulex Project. Her work bridges facilitation, developing project partnerships, governance, strategy, operations, and project and programme evaluation. She has developed and overseen more than 70 partnerships with a range of different actors across European social movements.

OUR NAME

Ulex: Latin (argelaga Catalan, gorse English) noun:

1. A thorny-evergreen flowering shrub, with a high capacity for regeneration and resilience. Its seedpods open in contact with fire and it reshoots from charred stumps. A successionary plant that grows well under challenging conditions. It improves soil fertility through nitrogen fixing, preparing the way for renewed biodiversity.

2. A traditional choice for igniting fires. Burns hot and bright.

3. A networked project adding nutrition and fertility to European social movements through training and capacity building. It kindles the realisation of social justice, ecological intelligence, and cognitive vitality.