My name is Davide Brocchi, and I am an independent sociologist based in Cologne, Germany. My research – both theoretical and practice-oriented – focuses on processes of societal transformation, with a particular emphasis on social and cultural sustainability.
I was born in Rimini, Italy, in 1969 and grew up between the Adriatic Sea and the Apennines. I studied Philosophy, Sociology and Psychology at the Universities of Bologna and Düsseldorf, and earned my doctorate from the Institute for Cultural Policy at the University of Hildesheim.
Since migrating to Germany in 1992, I have worked across a wide range of contexts – from corporate headquarters to grassroots initiatives, and from academic and cultural institutions to local neighbourhoods. My main roles include author, lecturer, consultant and facilitator of transformation processes.
My work combines rootedness with intellectual curiosity, critical thinking and creativity. For me, sustainability is not only about innovation – it also involves preservation and exnovation, the deliberate phasing out of unsustainable practices. I understand and seek to facilitate social transformation as both an individual and a collective learning process. I have initiated, developed and supported the co-creation of playgrounds for alternatives, transformative rituals and living labs in various regions, cities and neighbourhoods – based on broad movements and new alliances, including citizen–public partnerships. My concept of an annual »Day of the Good Life« (Tag des guten Lebens) as a catalyst for participatory transformation in cities has been realised each year in Cologne (since 2013), Berlin (since 2020) and Wuppertal (since 2021). In 2017, the initiative was awarded the »Federal Award for Neighborhood Associations«.
How can we live together peacefully in all our diversity on a finite planet? This is one of the central questions of our century – and of my publications. Border walls and defence strategies will not protect us from growing environmental disorder, as its key drivers lie within our own societies.
Neither artificial intelligence nor electric vehicles will save the world. My publications propose an expanded understanding of sustainability – closely linked to resilience and a good life that does not come at the expense of others. Sustainability requires cooperation over competition, a plural economy instead of a neoliberal monoculture, and bridges rather than walls.
Every great transformation in human history has been preceded and accompanied by a cultural revolution. I show why the same holds true for the sustainability transformation – and why education, science, the arts and the media play a central role in it.