Let’s Build Something Transformational.

For 15 years, I’ve been a part of collectives demanding equity in access to our most basic of needs, and alongside communities challenging extractive industries to secure and protect land and life.

My journey in mobilising communities to stand up for land and life started with a clear understanding:

Communities most affected by systemic oppression are most often those with the least access to platforms, tools, and resources to make change.

They each have the best lens to identify the best solutions… They have leaders; mobilisers; organisers; and knowledge holders. What they don’t have is access.

With access front of mind, I’ve led community-centred initiatives on local and international scales, particularly focused in my own region of Asia-Pacific, where Indigenous rights and environmental degradation collide head-on with colonial systems and extractive industries.

I’m particularly passionate about sociopolitical equity in designing for social justice movements, and about being a catalyst for communities to mobilise for a future they envision.

I am a program designer and community organiser by trade,
but as someone working in the intersections, I’m open to collaborating in more ways than one.

All inspiring collaborations start with a question: Get in touch!

“If you have come here to help me,
you are wasting your time.
But if you have come because your liberation
is bound up with mine,
then let us work together.”

— Dr. Lilla Watson

collaboration

by location

We have been taught to think of professional experience as official training and certificates,
but it is through connecting across spaces, cultures, borders, and contexts
that we
cultivate expertise.

For me, this included developing intuitive communication skills,
and learning what it is to build community
through living with, exploring with, and being in community.


This is a snapshot of the places and people that my collaborations have connected with over the years:

Australia - New Zealand - Papua New Guinea - Indonesia - Ecuador - Egypt - Mexico - Brazil - Honduras - Suriname - Uganda - Tanzania - Portugal - Netherlands - England - Peru - Nepal - India