The wealth and industrial growth of colonial powers were built through the exploitation of people, land, and resources – processes that laid the foundations for today’s climate crisis. The global majority long subjected to colonialism now faces some of the gravest consequences of climate breakdown, despite contributing least to the crisis itself. While climate debate often focuses on mitigation and adaptation, demands for reparations remain at the margins.
How do colonial patterns continue to shape the climate crisis today? What political, economic, and social changes are needed to move beyond symbolic gestures? And what role can social movements play in bringing the case for reparations into climate justice debates?
Building on a presentation of the publication How Not to Apologize by Konzeptwerk Neue Ökonomie, this panel opens a space to reflect on colonial continuities, climate justice, and reparative futures.
Aaron Alexandre Cuyugan works with the Climate Justice Team at Konzeptwerk Neue Ökonomie. He is a certified policy analyst, aspiring photojournalist and outspoken environmental activist. His project work is currently focused on bringing climate reparations and climate justice for the Global South to the forefront of German civil society.
Majula Jaiteh is a doctoral researcher in international law based in Hamburg. Her work focuses on reparations and redress for German colonial crimes in Namibia and Tanzania. She is also a board member of Afro-Deutsche Jurist:innen e.V.
Leonie Baumgarten-Egemole is a legal trainee and activist working on anti-racism and climate justice. She is involved in various initiatives advocating for a more equitable and discrimination-free society.
Moderation: Canê Çağlar is a political educator, moderator, doctoral researcher, and scholar in educational studies. Her work focuses particularly on structural discrimination, decolonization, and educational justice.
Date: July 1, 2026
Time: 7pm – 9pm / 19:00 – 21:00 Uhr
Place: W3_ Saal, Nernstweg 32-34, 22765 Hamburg
Die Veranstaltung ist Teil der Projekte Koloniale Spuren – Dekoloniale Praktiken (W3_) und Decolonize Trade (Fair Trade Stadt Hamburg) und wird gefördert von Brot für die Welt, dem Katholischen Fonds, der Norddeutschen Stiftung für Umwelt und Entwicklung sowie dem Kirchlichen Entwicklungsdienst der Nordkirche.
