Online course: Understanding collapse. Alternatives in times of polycrisis
TEACHING TEAM: Breno Bringel (Brazil)Maristella Svampa (Argentina)Enrique Leff (Mexico)Laura Pautassi (Argentina)Nora Goren (Argentina), Walter Pengue (Argentina)Pablo Iglesias (Spain)Geoffrey Pleyers (Belgium) and Diego Picotto (Argentina)
Home: 18 / 11 / 2025 | Registration: 26/09/2025 al 17/11/2025
Modality: On-line
Workload: 50 hours total
Duration: 1 month
The course is strategically positioned within the critical debates surrounding the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30), to be held in November 2025 in Belém do Pará, Brazil. Its purpose is to create a space for reflection and action capable of challenging dominant narratives, amplifying the voices of the Global South, and contributing transformative proposals in defense of life and the planet.
We are living through a time of historical rupture. The world, as we knew it, is rapidly disintegrating. We find ourselves immersed in what contemporary critical theory calls a civilizational polycrisis: an unprecedented convergence of ecological, economic, political, and social crises that reinforce each other, overwhelming our capacity for understanding and action.
This is not simply an era of change, but a paradigm shift that challenges the very foundations of Western modernity. The climate crisis is intertwined with social fracture; the technological revolution amplifies inequalities, and contempt for democracy is normalized as authoritarian projects advance globally. Faced with this complexity, progressive narratives prove inadequate, while the far right strategically exploits discontent and fear.
This course stems from a fundamental conviction: to navigate this civilizational turbulence, we need new critical cartographies that allow us to map the interconnections between the various crisis fronts. We propose to do so from a perspective situated in the Global South, recognizing that Latin America and the Caribbean constitute privileged laboratories for understanding both the mechanisms of collapse and the seeds of alternative futures.
Beyond the catastrophic diagnosis, our approach seeks to identify and strengthen counter-hegemonic projects that are already weaving alternatives amidst the collapse. From struggles for the commons to feminist care economies, from territorial defenses to cultural resistance, responses are emerging that prefigure post-capitalist horizons.
The course is strategically framed within COP30, to be held in Belém do Pará (Brazil) in November 2025, as a critical contribution from Latin America to challenge dominant narratives, make visible voices from the Global South and influence with transformative proposals in defense of life and the planet.
1. What is polycrisis? A conceptual introduction to the term and its uses in contemporary critical thought. Breno Bringel (Brazil)
2. Climate Crisis and Extractivism: A Global South Perspective, with an Emphasis on the Latin American and Caribbean Experience. Maristella Svampa (Argentina)
3. Energy Crisis: Energy Transition, Fossil Fuels, Renewables, and Disputes over the Meaning of “Transition.” Enrique Leff (Mexico)
4. The Care Crisis: Feminisms and Care Economies as Alternatives to Social Fragmentation. Laura Pautassi (Argentina)
5. Crisis of Labor: Digitalization, Precariousness, and Labor Resistance. Nora Goren (Argentina)
6. Food and Territorial Crisis: Food Sovereignty, Agribusiness, and Peasant Struggles. Walter Pengue (Argentina)
7. Cultural Crisis: Post-truth, neoliberal subjectivities, disputes over meaning, media and networks. Pablo Iglesias (Spain)
8. Resistance in Times of Crisis: Social Movements, Alternatives to Development, and Post-Capitalist Horizons. Geoffrey Pleyers (Belgium)
- Breno Bringel (Brazil)
- Maristella Svampa (Argentina)
- Enrique Leff (Mexico)
- Laura Pautassi (Argentina)
- Nora Goren (Argentina)
- Walter Pengue (Argentina)
- Pablo Iglesias (Spain)
- Geoffrey Pleyers (Belgium)
- Diego Picotto (Argentina)
The course will be delivered in a blended format, combining recorded video lectures and live sessions to make the experience more dynamic and engaging. Two video lectures will be available each week, accompanied by a required reading to delve deeper into the material. In addition, there will be an optional weekly synchronous session: a space designed for group discussion, exchanging perspectives, and actively enriching the learning experience.
The live meetings will take place on Tuesdays from 12:30 to 13:30 (Argentina-Uruguay time), 10:30 to 11:30 (Colombia-Peru-Ecuador time) and 9:30 to 10:30 (Central America-Mexico time).
At the end of the course, students will be required to complete a final evaluation questionnaire. Those who pass this stage will receive a digital certificate of completion, certified by CLACSO, which accredits 50 hours of training.
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Early registration (until 28/10) |
General registration (May 6th to May 10st) |
Registration without discount |
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Full or Associate Member Center |
$100 |
USD 150 |
$200 |
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No link |
$150 |
USD 225 |
$300 |
Queries: [email protected]