This was the first of two online launch events for Socioecological Transformations (Routledge, 2025), presenting the book as a collective exploration of socioecological change across ontological, structural, and care-based dimensions.
Structured as a 90-minute session, the event moved through a sequence of short “one-minute seeds” — brief interventions designed to open multiple entry points into transformation, spanning themes such as self and wisdom, land, education, and care. These openings flowed into three thematic clusters, each bringing together 2–3 chapters from the volume. After each cluster, participants engaged in a 15-minute shared reflection and Q&A, creating space to connect perspectives across different ways of knowing and being.
At 56:40, I present my chapter on Indigenous Spiritualities and Ancestral Knowledge, reflecting on how ancestral ways of knowing and Indigenous relational ontologies can reshape contemporary debates on transformation, ethics, and socioecological futures.
















