Loiterers Resistance Movement

'[8] Since its foundation, the LRM has met on the first Sunday of every month for 'a free communal wander, open to anyone curious about the potential of public space and unravelling stories hidden within our everyday landscape.

[11] Rose identifies it 'as a free floating community', stating, 'People don't tend to show up every month like clockwork, but it's also rare to only see a face once.

[14] In 2016 the LRM curated the Arts Council England funded exhibition Loitering with Intent at the People's History Museum in Manchester.

'[1] The exhibition featured 'material from The LRM archive, documenting [their] expeditions as well as posters, found objects and handcrafted items used to guide walks such as CCTV Bingo Cards, game pieces made from metal salvaged from car manufacturing and maps transformed into fortune tellers', as well as 'contributions from local, national and international artists inspired by psychogeography' in the form of 'film, drawing, painting, DIY maps, photographs' and a variety of other media.

[7] In their manifesto, they state,We can't agree on what psychogeography means but we all like plants growing out of the side of buildings, looking at things from new angles, radical history, drinking tea and getting lost; having fun and feeling like a tourist in your home town.

'[8] The Loiterers Resistance Movement are core contributors to contemporary psychogeographical practices in the United Kingdom,[3][4][5][6] and part of what Tina Richardson has identified as the 'new psychogeography'.