It was great kick off the ENJUST ‚Regulars‘ Table‘ last week! Thanks again to the presenters for taking the time to share their fascinating activities. Below are some notes and links for follow up. The next Regulars‘ Table will be in September and anyone in the network is warmly invited to attend as a participant or contributor. There will once again be four 5 minute presentation slots up for grabs. Please approach Katriona McGlade (katriona.mcglade@ecologic.eu) if you would like to share your work in the autumn.
News
- The next EnJust Conference is set to take place in Kiel, Germany, from 29 September to 1 October 2027. The current working title is „Environmental Justice and the Public“, inviting reflections on how environmental justice is communicated, practiced, and engaged with across research, education, arts, activism, policy, and civil society. The planning process is just beginning, and the team in Kiel will be reaching out soon to the network members to shape the conference programme and themes together.
- Regarding other conferences, the Political Ecology Network (POLLEN) conference is running this week (29 June – 3 July 2026) in Barcelona. If you are at POLLEN or another EJ-related conference in the future, feel free to share in this pad:
bit.ly/ENJUSTIES_at_Conferences
Presentations
- Tobias Müller
Tobias Müller is currently working on a book project entitled Planetary Uprising: Extinction Rebellion and the Political Thought of the Climate Crisis. The book provides a systematic, critical and global account of one of the most radical parts of the climate movements, Extinction Rebellion (XR), exploring how their thinking is opening up new horizons of politics in the planetary age. Thebook shows how taking such movements seriously as sites of political thinking offers new perspectives on the predicaments of the climate crisis, and questions of race, colonialism and capitalism. Through an ethnographic analysis of activist struggles in Mexico, South Africa, the UK and the US, the book investigates the contested flow of ideas on anti-extractivism, movement strategy and intersectional justice, exploring how the emerging planetary politics from below reveals pathways towards far-reaching democratic transformation. Some of the arguments developed in the book have been explored in articles on the tension between emergency and decolonial time (British Journal of Politics and International Relations), on resistance to gendered extractivism (Environmental Research Letters) and on how we need to transform sociology and other social sciences in the face of climate breakdown (Sociology). He has also co-authored a manifesto for a Regenerative Anthropology (Social Anthropology/Anthropologie Sociale).
- Judith Bopp
Judith Bopp is a human geographer with a particular interest in organic farming practices and the interrelations of food, health, and ecology.
- Short film of her workshop in India: https://youtu.be/N-kVnSysvJI?si=pZDM3Sh2pAS-mYSI or https://opencast.lmu.de/!v/J6RTtaBcfsD
- Blog post about the encroaching of durian plantations in Thailand: https://seeingthewoods.org/2025/03/13/durian-the-villain/
- Laura Curry
Laura Curry is an artist, educator, and researcher focusing on environmental and social justice through a feminist, queer perspective.

A call for Participation

About the project and brief history.
- Ivan Ramíre
Ivan Ramírez is a geographer whose research focuses on the intersections of climate-health, social vulnerability, disaster risk reduction, and climate justice, with regional interests in Latin America and underserved communities in the U.S. His slides about the Civic Engagement & Climate Justice ThinkLab are attached.


