What Even Is Decolonization?
The word is more common than ever, this is your crash course
What does decolonization mean to you - and have you thought about what comes after?
Something I've been building for a while is finally ready.
You've heard about decolonization, but do you know what it actually means? Or, more importantly, what comes next?
As a Métis sociologist and systems thinker with over 22 years of experience in policy, leadership, and Indigenous worldview, I've spent years studying exactly these questions as a former dedicated civil servant turned entrepreneur and futurist.
The answer I keep coming back to: Indigenous Systems Design, grounded in a worldview where we are all wanted, and we work together to make our communities safe and abundant.
Not a buzzword, or a trend. Instead, a practical, sustainable alternative to colonial models that aren't working for most of us.
So what is this alternative? For the last 6 years, I've explored what might work and now I want to share that with you.
I'm opening a 5-week crash course introducing Indigenous Systems Thinking and Indigenous Worldview. Since this is a survey course on a topic new to a lot of people - no prior knowledge is necessary, and questions are very welcome. We will move fast and I will share a suggested readings list.
Because this is the first time I've offered this course, I'm offering it at 50% off the regular investment, for $210. Spaces are filling fast.
In this 5 week class, you will explore
* What even is decolonization? What happens when it’s done?
* How Indigenous and Western models understand human needs differently
* Living a good life in a good way
* The Five Pillars of Indigenous Systems Thinking
* The First Law of the Hunt and what it means for leadership today
This is a high-level, fast-moving introduction designed to give you practical frameworks you can apply immediately.
Interested? Email me to register or ask questions.



