Grassroots initiatives represent bottom-up, frequently informal forms of engagement.
Typically driven by citizens, youth networks, and local communities, their activities may include ecological restoration, community mobilisation, creative activism, and alternative land-use practices.
One example is RE-PEAT, a youth-led initiative connecting peatland restoration with cultural renewal and societal reflection.
“We see that without this deeper work to change hearts and minds, high-level policies and non-governmental interventions for peatland restoration and protection will neither be effective, nor fair, nor truly healing. Because we see that the life of a peatland depends on the liveliness of a peatland culture and vice versa.”
Grassroots initiatives illustrate how soil protection can emerge through civic imagination, identity, and collective engagement.