Everyday Justice
Exploring Urban Sustainability through Food, Mobility, and Lifestyle

REXCEL RIDWAN AND VYUSTI KUMAAR IN CONVERSATION WITH ANON1
Anon is a thoughtful student originally from Germany, currently pursuing her second semester in Critical Urbanisms at the University Of Basel, Switzerland. Though she’s still early in her academic journey, Anon brings a grounded, lived perspective to our conversation on climate justice, one that is shaped by her studies, her experiences working in a vegan restaurant, and her daily observations in cities like Basel and Hamburg. We interviewed her to understand the challenges and opportunities that a well-meaning student faces when engaging with climate justice.
In our conversation with her, Anon was sensitive in her approach to climate justice. Anon spoke quite passionately about equity and justice, emphasizing that no one region or group of people should disproportionately suffer from pollution or resource extraction. In theory, for her, climate justice means more than reducing emissions: it was about rethinking the way we treat people, resources and the planet as a whole.
Exploring Urban Sustainability through Food, Mobility, and Lifestyle

REXCEL RIDWAN AND VYUSTI KUMAAR IN CONVERSATION WITH ANON1
Anon is a thoughtful student originally from Germany, currently pursuing her second semester in Critical Urbanisms at the University Of Basel, Switzerland. Though she’s still early in her academic journey, Anon brings a grounded, lived perspective to our conversation on climate justice, one that is shaped by her studies, her experiences working in a vegan restaurant, and her daily observations in cities like Basel and Hamburg. We interviewed her to understand the challenges and opportunities that a well-meaning student faces when engaging with climate justice.
In our conversation with her, Anon was sensitive in her approach to climate justice. Anon spoke quite passionately about equity and justice, emphasizing that no one region or group of people should disproportionately suffer from pollution or resource extraction. In theory, for her, climate justice means more than reducing emissions: it was about rethinking the way we treat people, resources and the planet as a whole.
Climate Justice: Basel in the World is a colloquium at the University of Basel, co-organized in the spring semester 2025 by students from the AG Nachhaltigkeit and Prof. Dr. Janina Grabs. It is supported through funding by Impuls.