My name is Davide Brocchi. I am an independent social scientist researching processes of societal transformation in both theory and practice, with a particular focus on social and cultural sustainability. My work explores how systemic resilience can be strengthened in times of polycrisis. It also examines how a good life can become possible without coming at the expense of others, including future generations and nature.
Analysis, practical experience and public communication are closely intertwined in my activities. Alongside my work as a researcher, author and lecturer, I co-design and facilitate transformation processes as individual and collective learning processes in social and cultural institutions, initiatives and organisations, as well as in cities and regions.
I was born in 1969 in Rimini, Italy, and grew up in a rural community between the Adriatic coast and the Apennine Mountains. My socialisation during my youth was shaped by Italy’s socio-cultural network (ARCI), the environmental and peace movements, and student collectives. In 1992, I moved to Germany, and since 2007 I have been living in Cologne. After studying philosophy (including under Umberto Eco), sociology and psychology at the Universities of Bologna and Düsseldorf, I completed a doctorate at the Institute for Cultural Policy at the University of Hildesheim. In recent years, I have also completed professional trainings in Systemic Supervision at the INeKO Institute of the University of Cologne and in Change Management at the ibo Akademie in Wettenberg.
My biography brings together questions of the (re-)rooting of ways of life and places with the intellectual mobility of the migrant. For me, sustainability also means preservation. It is not only about innovation but also about exnovation. Anyone seeking a solution must first be able to detach themselves from the problem.
In the spirit of sustainable transformation emerging from the local level, I have for many years initiated, developed and supported participatory living labs and spaces for experimentation with alternatives in neighbourhoods, municipalities and regions. These initiatives are made possible by diverse alliances and innovative partnerships, including citizen–public partnerships between citizens and institutions.
Even on the streets, it is possible to learn how peaceful coexistence in diversity can succeed on a finite planet. The annual »Day of the Good Life« (Tag des guten Lebens) in Cologne, in Berlin and in Wuppertal has demonstrated this. In recognition of this idea, I received the »Dialog Kölner Klimawandel« Award in 2011. In 2017, the Cologne initiative received the Fisrt »German Neighbourhood Prize« (Deutscher Nachbarschaftspreis) awarded by the nebenan.de Foundation.
How can a finite creature such as the human being cope with complexity without reducing it to monocultures? How can the culture in which we ourselves were socialised be changed? Questions such as these lie at the heart of my research on societal transformation. I advocate a systemic and critical approach, focusing on spatial development and ownership relations, power and inequality, democracy and participation, as well as education, media and cultural diversity. Such issues are reflected, for example, in my book »By Disaster or by Co-Design? Sustainability Transformation as Social and Cultural Challenge« (2026).
Practice offers some of the most valuable opportunities for learning how sustainable transformation can succeed. Through the scientific monitoring and evaluation of processes and projects, I seek to document, reflect upon and share new experiences, insights and lessons. This work has informed publications such as »Urban Transformation« (2017) and »Great Transformation within the Neighbourhood« (2019). Selected books, studies, articles and essays can be consulted and downloaded via this website.