In this episode of HOPEUNK in June 2026, initiator and Podcast host Mayte Schomburg invited AGORA’s Verena Ringler on the show.
Verena makes three points.
Verena Ringler describes the EU as the only world power that has already invested in a full-scale, full-range infrastructure network of resilience. The task is now to link this seemingly “soft” ecosystem with the conversation on EU security.
According to Verena, the notion of “preventive EU security policy” is key. It incorporates, harnesses, and activates existing, dormant, and overlooked infrastructures of EU resilience, she says. To her, EU resilience is not only about crisis response or formal security policy. It actually rests on the unique relational infrastructure built through Erasmus+, Horizon Europe, Interreg, and similar programmes since the Maastricht Treaty. These lines of contact and ecosystems of cooperation are not soft add-ons. Rather, they are the very foundation of Europe’s security architecture, because they exhibit diversity, flexibility, and redundance – three features a resilient system must have. They have created and they can deliver trust, cooperation, and civic capability across regions, sectors, and generations. I therefore call for an inter-institutional EU inventory of these investments and for a stronger recognition of their value in developing Europe’s long-term resilience. In three decades of observing societies in transition, I learned that pioneers in place-based transformation – from architecture to business, from youth to health, from climate adaptation to biodiversity – are not only good in their specific theme. Rather, in the moment a crisis hits, these are the people who can and do rise to overall leadership.
Therefore, these seemingly soft infrastructures of the EU need to become part of the security and resilience conversations in Brussels and in our capitals.
in this Podcast episode, Verena Ringler describes “hope as a competence, a compass, and a condition of resistance.
Hope is a competence because it has to be practiced and trained. It is a compass because it gives orientation in the life-long navigation between extractionist versus regenerative people and projects. And hope is a condition of resistance because it helps people and institutions stay focused on solutions, common goods, and democratic agency in the face of short-termism and modern-day oligarchy.
Verena Ringler elaborates on the Flamingo Revolution and Albania’s belated 1989 moment.
A connoisseur of the Western Balkans, she describes this civic movement as an example of long-term professional civic work enabling transformative moments in the history of a region or a country.
What looks like a sudden breakthrough is usually the result of years, even decades, of patient and persevering organizing, coalition-building, and public engagement. The revolution brings a hidden power to the surface that is worth recognizing and investing into in good times and bad. Non-state actors (civil society, innovative local businesses, science organisations) – are a democracy’s most reliable co-creators and problem solvers.
She concludes that Europe’s resilience rests on its unique relational infrastructure, hope must be cultivated as a democracy’s key civic resource, and democratic change is a positive result of patient, long-term processes underneath the radar of attention.

