Partner movements & collaborations
Nyéléni Process (Food Sovereignty Movement)
We participate in the Nyéléni process as part of our commitment to food sovereignty as a feminist, anti-colonial, and political struggle. Our engagement with Nyéléni connects local work in Lebanon to transnational movements resisting land dispossession, extractivism, corporate control over food systems, and the erasure of women’s and peasants’ knowledge.
Through this participation, we situate ecofeminism within broader struggles over land, seeds, labor, care, and collective survival, and contribute feminist analysis grounded in lived experience from the region.
Cooperaccio (Catalonia–Lebanon Collaboration)
We are working with Cooperaccio on a cross-regional feminist and decolonial publishing project focused on land justice, ecological futures, and anti-extractivist politics. The collaboration centers the translation and activation of a forthcoming book across languages and regions, alongside creative political education tools such as zines and workshops.
The project brings together translators, artists, facilitators, and cooperatives in Lebanon and Catalonia to build shared feminist knowledge across contexts, while resisting the extractive circulation of ideas. It is grounded in mutual learning, cultural exchange, and long-term solidarity rather than one-directional dissemination.
Maldusa & FAC (Feminist Autonomous Center for Research): Transfeminist No Borders Summer School - Italy 2025
We participated in the Transfeminist No Borders Summer School as part of our commitment to transnational feminist, anti-border, and anti-colonial political education. Our engagement in the school reflects our interest in spaces that bring together feminists, organizers, artists, and thinkers across geographies to collectively grapple with borders, militarization, displacement, ecology, and forms of resistance.
our collective took part in the school as a codesigner and panelist, contributing feminist analysis rooted in ecofeminism, food sovereignty, war, and everyday survival in Lebanon and the region. These exchanges allow us to situate local struggles within broader transnational conversations, while remaining attentive to power, uneven mobility, and the material realities that shape who can move, speak, and be heard.
Our participation in the school is part of how we keep our work porous, relational, and in dialogue with feminist movements beyond national boundaries.
