RECENT WRITING

RECENT WRITING

“A research jiimaan: Adapting to protect manoomin

The International Association for Great Lakes Research’s (IAGLR) Lakes Letter Newsletter

The Rhizomatic Project

Queer Ecojustice Project

In today's political climate where politicians seek to call into question the existence of queer subjectivities, it is critical to reaffirm that we've always existed—our resistance simply has not been recognized. This is the subterranean nature of queer resistance.  While others may direct our attention solely at the surface, we assert the unhistoricized, the unseen, or subterranean efforts are just as important. 

“The Queer-Led Groups Modeling a New Form of Land Access”

YES! Magazine

Changing ownership and wealth distribution, even at a small scale, presents a model for how to ultimately address the climate crisis.

The wiigwaasi jiimaan—birch bark canoe—was once the predominant mode of transportation across the Great Lakes and today carries forward the culture and heritage of the Ojibwe. Traveling from their original homelands on the eastern shores of North America, the Ojibwe used the wiigwaasi jiiman to migrate to the Great Lakes region they now call home.