Queer Evolution
The Queer Evolution Podcast is a space where bold conversations spark real change. Host Justin Hilton, founder of SafePlace International, brings together global change-makers—visionaries committed to co-creating a more just and inclusive world. These conversations dive deep into the inner and outer work of transformation, inviting leaders from activism, education, entertainment, politics, art, and technology to critically examine the colonial conditioning that fuels separation and the targeting of a manufactured "other."
With courage and urgency, they explore how this moment in history presents an unparalleled opportunity to redefine human relationships—on both a personal and global scale. Each episode is designed to educate, evoke, provoke, and inspire you to envision and participate in a new paradigm of connection, belonging, and possibility.
Queer Evolution
What Representation Really Looks Like
Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.
What does meaningful representation of marginalised communities actually look like and how does it change the world we live in?
In this episode, we unpack representation beyond symbolism or visibility and ground it in lived reality. The conversation explores how safety for queer communities is deeply tied to economic inequality, geography, and access to resources particularly in informal settlements and the poorest areas across African cities.
We discuss how representation at the community level can be life-saving: from consistent food support and advocacy to creating environments where queer people can move, live, and exist with greater safety. The episode highlights how visibility at the grassroots level creates long-term social change, shaping future generations and reducing violence through proximity, care, and trust.
The conversation also moves into institutional power from local organising to global platforms like the UN and why decision-making tables must include those most affected by climate change, displacement, and human rights violations. Through examples from Athens Pride, refugee leadership, and frontline climate realities, this episode challenges top-down philanthropy and calls for solutions led by communities themselves.
True representation, we learn, is not about speaking for marginalised people it’s about listening, resourcing what already works, and allowing communities to drive their own solutions.