Registration for the UCL Global Citizenship summer school (31 May to 10 June) opens Friday 19th February. Go to the Global Citizenship page to register from 19 February.
Every year, UCL runs the Global Citizenship programme – a voluntary summer school programme for its students – which aims to stimulate ideas on what it means to be a global citizen through inter-disciplinary research and practice-based learning.
IGP will deliver a strand of the Global Citizenship programme on the theme of wellbeing in urban contexts, focusing on access to and use of natural space. The strand – (Un)Urban: Investigating green spaces in East London – invites students to address this challenge over a fortnight by engaging with East London actors, whose organisations or individual practices address local people’s wellbeing through diverse means.
Panels will explore the theories of wellbeing, diversity, and green urbanism, and afternoon skills training sessions will equip participants with human-centred design, rapid prototyping and qualitative research tools. We will map different local and national actors, and explore the how to work within and between different scales. In the second week, we will immerse ourselves in East London locations and gather data, with the assistance of local actors.
We will deliver design concepts that truly enhance the wellbeing of residents living in super-diverse areas, and draw upon green space as a resource. Participants will be asked to contribute to a poster, and a published e-book.
You can find out more about the strand on the UCL Global Citizenship website.
While the (Un)Urban strand is only available to 1st and 2nd year undergraduates, final year undergraduates and postgraduate students can apply for the Pathways strands.
Image credit: Ana Bleahu
Apply now for the MSc Global Prosperity
![]() | Professor Henrietta L. Moore |
In the media
'Populism's hatred of diversity will kill prosperity', warns Professor Moore
In an article for the Huffington Post, Professor Henrietta Moore has argued that the 'whitelash' against immigration and diversity will kill prosperity in America.
However, the anger that Trump's voters report feeling should not go unaddressed, or dismissed as racism. Professor Moore argues for a need to look to the evidence around prosperity ad diversity, instead of choosing superficially attractive, but counter-productive policies.
Read the full article on the Huffington Post.
Can agroecology feed the world and save the planet?
In the wake of massive economic losses and unfair trade deals resulting from cash crop exports, Henrietta Moore points to agroecology as a radical alternative.
In an article for the Guardian, Professor Moore explores the potential of agroecology - a natural ecosystems approach that uses local knowledge to plant a diversity of crops – to mitigate the effects of climate change, unpredictable weather patterns and a growing population in Africa.
Read the full article on the Guardian website.
Cities are pointing the way to a post-GDP world
In an article for the Huffington Post, Professor Henrietta Moore indicates how cities are showing an inclination towards sustainable prosperity, over economic growth.
Professor Moore looks at a variety of innovative approaches to sustainable business, which focus on the power of local people to make change.
Read the full article on the Huffington Post website.
Brexit's Biggest Threat is to the Poorest
In an article for the Huffington Post, Professor Henrietta Moore argues the UK vote to leave the EU threatens the prosperity of those who can least afford to lose out.
Read the full article on the Huffington Post website.
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