Members of the Platform of Anti-War Initiatives, together with the School of Civic Education, are launching a series of webinars for people in emigration who want to maintain political agency, understand what works in other countries, and not feel alone.
Emigration does not cancel participation, but it makes it harder.
Fatigue, disconnection, lack of resources, and the feeling that efforts yield no results are familiar to many. How can one maintain political agency under these conditions? What forms of civic activity actually work far from home? And how can one avoid facing these questions alone?
Members of the Platform of Anti-War Initiatives, together with the School of Civic Education, are launching a series of webinars for people in emigration who want to maintain political agency, understand what works in other countries, and not feel alone.
Together with activists, researchers, and diaspora members, we will talk about how communities continue resistance to authoritarian regimes outside their countries, using examples from Iran, Georgia, Turkey, the Uyghur movement, the Baltic states, and other contexts.
February 12 | The Price of Hope: Iranian protest — despite isolation, despair, and brutal suppression
February 19 | How diasporas support resistance at home: Georgian, Turkish, and Uyghur experiences
February 26 | Historical experience of civic activity in exile
March 5 | Political imagination, solidarity, and structures amidst a lack of resources
March 12 | International advocacy: experience of successful campaigns and coalitions
March 19 | Final meeting: how to participate in the political life of our country moving forward
One registration for the entire series. Detailed program and registration form - https://bit.ly/shkola-vidimogo-protesta