CEP Division Webinar: Personal Narrative as Resistance: Autoethnography in Climate Justice Activism
About the Webinar:
This presentation explores autoethnography as a powerful tool for advancing climate justice work, particularly in amplifying the voices and lived experiences of black youth. Drawing on my personal reflections from participating in a Climate Justice Summit while still navigating my own voice within climate justice discourse, I examine how systemic barriers, limited representation, and intersecting structures of race, gender, and class continue to shape exclusion in both activism and scholarship. Through an autoethnographic lens, in this presentation, I highlight how personal narrative can illuminate the marginalisation of black youth in global climate justice spaces while also challenging dominant ways of knowing and participating. I argue that autoethnography is not only a method of reflection, but also a critical and political practice that can foster visibility, disrupt silence, and create more inclusive climate justice conversations.
In sharing my experiences of being sidelined and silenced in a global dialogue on the climate crisis, I wish to expose the disempowerment that young, black people face in advocating for climate justice in spaces where the view of Africa is still biased, narrow and skewed. By highlighting these challenges, I hope to underscore the urgent need for inclusive and equitable representation in climate justice movements, ensuring that the voices of Black youth are not only heard but also valued and empowered to drive meaningful change.
Date: 21 May 2026
Time: 12:30 – 13:30
Platform: Microsoft Teams
https://teams.microsoft.com/meet/375292879817805?p=1eMoZ2kDwdoTZgSqhW
About the Presenter:
I’m a Lecturer at the University of Johannesburg, trained as a Research Psychologist. My work calls for a reflective, inclusive and socially just psychology curriculum that shapes students who are responsive to societal ills. I’m passionate about social justice, gender development and mental health. My research interests draw from feminist and critical psychology theories, I am currently writing on the intersectionality of race, gender and class on identities in contemporary South Africa. I have also recently become interested in climate justice. Specifically, I am writing on black youth representation in climate justice discourse.
