Active Solidarity and Intersectional Organising

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18 – 25 April 2026

strengthening and connecting transformative social movements.

Our movements often suffer from fragmentation that undermines our strategic effectiveness and is damaging to groups and individuals. The need to make social movements more diverse, inclusive, and empowering is ever present. Yet, there are deep challenges involved in overcoming racism, patriarchy, classism, ableism and all the forms and faces of oppression which can be reproduced within our movements. This training aims to help us explore these challenges and to develop practices and strategies to build diverse movements, capable of embodying active solidarity and mutual empowerment. 

This course is aimed at those who already have a basic knowledge and experience of working with power and privilege themes at a group level and who want to build on that to bring their practice up to the inter-organisational and movement level.  

 

Perspectives on power and the privilege we bear are things often brought into and explored in our groups and organisational dynamics. We also need to think about them at a movement level, in building alliances and wider forms of collaboration. This training will offer a reflective space for exploring the challenges involved in this and beginning to design and develop approaches for responding to them.

There are no ready-made recipes for practising solidarity and intersectional organising effectively. The training is designed to create space for deep reflection, identifying challenges and unhelpful organising patterns and supporting participants to develop capacities for responding to each situation as it arises. This means being able to respond to the specifics of diverse movement building cultures in the ways that feel most empowering in the local context and with the communities and individuals involved. We aim to collectively create a courageous space, enabling us to step out of our comfort zones and what we already know, and enable critical reflection on movement practices and cultures, starting on a personal level and through to movement level.

We will explore how organising rooted in active and intentional solidarity can make our movements stronger and more resilient (rather than fragmented and conflict-riddled) and how we can practise intersectionality from a place of values alignment and vision for justice and joy, rather than a fear of making mistakes, shame and blame.

The training assumes a basic literacy with power and privilege themes. 

 

Key topics will include:

  • Deepening our understanding of how the reproduction of harmful patterns takes place in our movements
  • Applying a ‘skill sets’ framework to movement building, diagnosing and analysing problems
  • Going beyond ‘intersectionality’ as a buzzword and exploring how we make it a real basis for organising
  • Creating a basis for developing strategic approaches that push past surface-level inclusion toward deeper structural change
  • Problematising the notion of allyship and solidarity
  • Working on case studies to help us identify and analyse root causes of fragmentation and reproduction of oppression within social movements
  • Strengthening the ability to act and strategise in ways that are most aligned with values rooted in solidarity.

 

Main methods and approaches:

  • Participatory and popular education
  • Working on case studies
  • Movement mapping and context analysis
  • Spaces for reflection and asking deeper questions
  • Peer-to-peer support and learning
  • Exploring, problematising and adapting models and existing methodologies.

 

Who is it aimed at?

Anyone involved in socially engaged action addressing ecological, political and social justice issues. We embrace a broad definition of activism, including: 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.

You will need a basic literacy with power and privilege themes to be able to participate in this course, as well as experience in social movement participation. This course might not be suitable for those just starting their engagement with social movements.

The main spoken language on the course will be English.

For accessibility and venue information see <here>.

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Suggested Contribution
€400/€700/€1000

(See details of our approach to radical economics here)

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Equipo

Equipo

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:

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

Location:

Alex Swain

Location:

Nina Scott

Location:

Próximos cursos

Nuestro nombre

Ulex: del latín, (tojo en castellano, argelaga en catalán) nombre.

1. Arbusto espinoso de hoja perenne y floración, con gran capacidad de regeneración y resistencia. Sus púas se abren al entrar en contacto con el fuego y vuelve a brotar de los tocones carbonizados. Planta sucesional que crece bien en condiciones difíciles. Mejora la fertilidad del suelo mediante la fijación de nitrógeno, preparando el terreno para una renovada biodiversidad.

2. Una opción tradicional para encender fuegos. Arde con intensidad y brillo.

3. Un proyecto en red que aporta nutrición y fertilidad a los movimientos sociales europeos a través de la formación