About
The Zoönomic Institute tends to the roots of the Zoöp movement. It supports organisations in becoming Zoöps, providing tools, methods, guidance, and training as they work toward becoming regenerative organisations. The Institute facilitates the sharing of knowledge both among Zoöps and between Zoöps and the wider world, focusing on ecological regeneration and the development of a regenerative economy. It develops and disseminates methods, tools, and training covering all aspects of operating as a Zoöp. Organisations are certified as Zoöps by the Zoönomic Institute once they have installed a Speaker for the Living and committed to the Zoönomic Annual Cycle.
Klaas Kuitenbrouwer is the director of the Zoönomic Institute and a senior researcher in regenerative practices at Het Nieuwe Instituut in Rotterdam, where he initiated the development of Zoöp. He studied history but has always worked at the intersections of art, design, technology, and ecology. In his work, he is drawn to the friction between different kinds of knowledge practices. Where do technological, artistic, legal, organisational, scientific, and more-than-human knowledges complement each other, and where do they interfere? In recent years, he has researched and curated programs including: Garden of Machines, Gardening Mars, Bot Club, the Neuhaus Temporary Academy for more-than-human knowledge, which culminated in the initiation of the Zoöp project—Have We Met? Humans & Non-Humans on Common Ground, REBOOT, and more.
J D Swann is an ornithological investigator often working with communities in Bexley and Greenwich, London. J D organised walks and events with Estuary Festival, Stephen Turner’s Exbury Egg, Bow Arts, Three Rivers, InspiralLondon, Greenwich Peninsula Ecology Park and RSPB Rainham, Essex, with Kinetika. He has live-streamed with InspiralSE2 (Calum F Kerr & Miyuki Kasahara) in various locations in South-East London and the Isle of Portland, Dorset.
Friends of Tump 39 is a team of local volunteers who act on behalf of the communities that use and care for Tump 39. They are the natural starting point for cultural work where people and places meet and work closely with the Three Rivers team to develop a site-sensitive creative programme that recognises both human and more-than-human ‘beings’ in the co-creation process.
