Building psychological, systemic and cultural skills for a changing world
we work across professional disciplines to cultivate resilience in turbulent times
The Centre for Climate Psychology offers online learning and tools that bring psychological and systemic wisdom to how we think, act and lead.
Together, we make sense of our shifting reality, and reclaim agency over the direction of our future.
Monthly Picks
Explore our featured events and trainings.
How do we meet the climate crisis not only with science and strategy, but with psychological skill? The panel will discuss how a psychological lens can help us move beyond the crude lens of “information deficits” to the deeper patterns that drive denial, paralysis, burnout, and conflict.
Monday, Nov 17 | 6.30 - 8 PM GMT
Together with our panel, we’ll explore how story and narrative shape our sense-making, not just as tools for understanding but as catalysts for imagination, extending our vision into possibilities that lie beyond the immediate and into the “more-than-human” world. This discussion will set the stage for the training, offering a taste of how complexity thinking can guide practical action and deepen our appreciation that, in a complex system, no agent is without importance.
December 16 | 6.30-8.30 PM GMT
Book Launch
December 05 | 7 - 9 PM GMT
An exclusive conversation with Francis Weller about his new book “In the Absence of the Ordinary: Soul Work for Times of Uncertainty”.
“Weller offers a collection of essays that works as precise medicine for this time.”
— adrienne maree brown
Upcoming events
In this 2 hour session, we will take turns speaking fragments of our night-time dream images, old and new, weaving a cohesive picture. It’s not about interpreting personal meaning, but about listening to how our dreams connect with one another and how our inner worlds reflect the world around us.
Nov 04 6-8 PM GMT
These monthly practice workshops, led by Lisa Ferguson, offer support for emotional processing of world events using the effective and empowering approach of IFS Parts Work. The next workshop will look at building Resilient Action in Troubling Times.
Wed, November 12 | 6-7.30 PM GMT
How do we meet the climate crisis not only with science and strategy, but with psychological skill? The panel will discuss how a psychological lens can help us move beyond the crude lens of “information deficits” to the deeper patterns that drive denial, paralysis, burnout, and conflict.
Monday, Nov 17 | 6.30 - 8 PM GMT
In this 2-part workshop, Dr. Wendy Greenspun outlines a psychological understanding of the various fractures and ruptures that are both embedded in and contributing to the unfolding climate crisis and it’s multiple layers of embedded harm and injustice.
Mondays 24 November and 1 December, 2025, 5:30-7 pm GMT
The Centre for Climate Psychology invites you to an intimate conversation with Francis Weller, psychotherapist, writer, and grief tender, exploring the themes of his latest book In the Absence of the Ordinary.
This webinar is an invitation to slow down, listen deeply, and enter a shared inquiry into how we might live soulfully when so much of the familiar is falling away.
December 05 | 7-9 PM GMT
Together with our panel, we’ll explore how story and narrative shape our sense-making, not just as tools for understanding but as catalysts for imagination, extending our vision into possibilities that lie beyond the immediate and into the “more-than-human” world. This discussion will set the stage for the training, offering a taste of how complexity thinking can guide practical action and deepen our appreciation that, in a complex system, no agent is without importance.
December 16 | 6.30-8.30 PM GMT
Internal Family Systems (IFS) offers invaluable tools for transformative work at both personal and collective levels, particularly in communities working on climate and sustainability issues. Developed by Dr. Richard Schwartz, IFS frames the mind as an ecosystem of “parts,” each representing unique motivations, emotions, and beliefs. Through the lens of IFS, we can explore how even those committed to climate action and social change carry parts shaped by the very systems they strive to transform.
Upcoming events
In this 2 hour session, we will take turns speaking fragments of our night-time dream images, old and new, weaving a cohesive picture. It’s not about interpreting personal meaning, but about listening to how our dreams connect with one another and how our inner worlds reflect the world around us.
Nov 04 6-8 PM GMT
These monthly practice workshops, led by Lisa Ferguson, offer support for emotional processing of world events using the effective and empowering approach of IFS Parts Work. The next workshop will look at building Resilient Action in Troubling Times.
Wed, November 12 | 6-7.30 PM GMT
How do we meet the climate crisis not only with science and strategy, but with psychological skill? The panel will discuss how a psychological lens can help us move beyond the crude lens of “information deficits” to the deeper patterns that drive denial, paralysis, burnout, and conflict.
Monday, Nov 17 | 6.30 - 8 PM GMT
In this 2-part workshop, Dr. Wendy Greenspun outlines a psychological understanding of the various fractures and ruptures that are both embedded in and contributing to the unfolding climate crisis and it’s multiple layers of embedded harm and injustice.
Mondays 24 November and 1 December, 2025, 5:30-7 pm GMT
The Centre for Climate Psychology invites you to an intimate conversation with Francis Weller, psychotherapist, writer, and grief tender, exploring the themes of his latest book In the Absence of the Ordinary.
This webinar is an invitation to slow down, listen deeply, and enter a shared inquiry into how we might live soulfully when so much of the familiar is falling away.
December 05 | 7-9 PM GMT
Together with our panel, we’ll explore how story and narrative shape our sense-making, not just as tools for understanding but as catalysts for imagination, extending our vision into possibilities that lie beyond the immediate and into the “more-than-human” world. This discussion will set the stage for the training, offering a taste of how complexity thinking can guide practical action and deepen our appreciation that, in a complex system, no agent is without importance.
December 16 | 6.30-8.30 PM GMT
Internal Family Systems (IFS) offers invaluable tools for transformative work at both personal and collective levels, particularly in communities working on climate and sustainability issues. Developed by Dr. Richard Schwartz, IFS frames the mind as an ecosystem of “parts,” each representing unique motivations, emotions, and beliefs. Through the lens of IFS, we can explore how even those committed to climate action and social change carry parts shaped by the very systems they strive to transform.
Monthly Picks
Explore our featured events.
How do we meet the climate crisis not only with science and strategy, but with psychological skill? The panel will discuss how a psychological lens can help us move beyond the crude lens of “information deficits” to the deeper patterns that drive denial, paralysis, burnout, and conflict.
Monday, Nov 17 | 6.30 - 8 PM GMT
Together with our panel, we’ll explore how story and narrative shape our sense-making, not just as tools for understanding but as catalysts for imagination, extending our vision into possibilities that lie beyond the immediate and into the “more-than-human” world. This discussion will set the stage for the training, offering a taste of how complexity thinking can guide practical action and deepen our appreciation that, in a complex system, no agent is without importance.
December 16 | 6.30-8.30 PM GMT
Contributors
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Kate Raworth
Advisor
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Bayo Akomolafe
Book Contributor
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Satish Kumar
Advisor
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Dyann Heward-Mills
Advisor
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Thomas Hübl
Book Contributor
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Francis Weller
Teacher
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Caroline Lucas
Advisor
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Nora Bateson
Panel Member
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Vanessa Andreotti
Book Contributor
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Rowan Williams
Panel Member
Online Lectures
Newly added. Now available for streaming.
The book
“This is more than a book. It is a treasure of radical ideas and profound insights. It is a book of wisdom!”
—Satish Kumar