5 “We can’t keep waiting:” Dr. Akilah Martin on Community Empowerment, Freedom, and Earth Connection episode artwork

EPISODE · Aug 29, 2020 · 54 MIN

5 “We can’t keep waiting:” Dr. Akilah Martin on Community Empowerment, Freedom, and Earth Connection

from Alight · host Helen Claire Harmon

Send us Fan MailAkilah Martin, Ph.D., is first and foremost in partnership with soil and water. Akilah earned her BS degree in Soil Science from Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical University and her Doctorate from Purdue University in Agricultural and Biological Engineering. Her professional interests include enhancing relationships of individuals and communities to natural resources. Her teaching and scholarly/research interests are centered in soil and water quality in urban communities. Current projects involve food sovereignty, Chicago Grows Food, Advocates for Urban Ag, life expectancy and health inequalities, installing rain gardens to create a "sponge town", and building container gardens for "growing your own groceries." Akilah is abundantly living life through two core values: Freedom and Joy. To that end, she is a certified coach specializing in building vibrant relationships. Her website is www.amrootbuilders.com Find her on Instagram at amrootbuilders. In our conversation Akilah discusses:How growing up with a science teacher mother and studying science in her youth, then plant science in college, took her to soil science, a PhD at Purdue, a successful academic career, and now a full-time focus on community development with an emphasis on soil and urban agriculture.How the concept of ‘freedom’ guides her life, her coaching, and her community development work.The overwhelm she can feel as someone trying to address suffering in her community, and the damage to people’s bodies that she witnesses in communities experiencing layers of environmental contamination. How empowering messages can build more momentum than suffering-based messages.Why being synergistic in her contributions keeps her from feeling pulled in too many directions, and what kind of self-care practices sustain her.How her urban agriculture advocacy is supporting urban water access, food access, nutrition, and Chicago Grows Food, which has been offering Grow Kits to residents as part of their Grow Your Groceries Campaign. Assessing and addressing contaminated soil from industrial urban uses.How people can break away from food insecurity and into food sovereignty. “People are getting more interested in that because they see how their food really impacts their health. And honestly it impacts your mental health at the top—what your brain is able to do.”To hear more from Akilah, find another interview on Humans & Nature at https://www.humansandnature.org/recovering-indigeneity-a-conversation-about-food-health-and-wellbeing  Kindly leave us a review so more people can discover the show, and SUBSCRIBE to receive quick access to new episodes.Follow The Alight Institute on Instagram at @alight.institute https://www.instagram.com/alight.institute/ We're happy to hear your thoughts at  [email protected] 

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5 “We can’t keep waiting:” Dr. Akilah Martin on Community Empowerment, Freedom, and Earth Connection

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D'ENT Studio Alight Songs from the in-between Tree Speech Dori Robinson, Jonathan Zautner, Alight Theater Guild Tree Speech is a captivating podcast exploring the deep-rooted connections between humans and trees. Through immersive storytelling, expert interviews, and historical insights, we uncover the ways trees shape our world—environmentally, culturally, and spiritually. Each episode delves into nature’s wisdom, folklore, and the vital role forests play in our lives, inspiring listeners to see trees as more than just part of the landscape.Join us as we journey through the intertwined stories of people and nature, fostering a deeper appreciation for the trees that sustain us. 🌿 St. Ed's MW Podcast St. Ed's Mansfield Woodhouse Tune in if you missed this week's Sermon or if you are just checking us out. We record the sermons from our informal service, "Alight". Aristopia: A Romance-History of the New World by Castello Newton Holford (1844 - 1905) LibriVox Aristopia (published 1895) is truly an alternative history. It is an imagination of how the continent of North America might have developed if one man with the vision, altruism and determination to build a state for the benefit of all its people had been in the happy position of having wealth enough to make his dream a reality.It is an interesting book which deserves its place in literary history largely for being the first novel-length example of its genre. It is written, not as a novel, but as unvarnished history. Only a few passages seem really to catch alight with the idealistic passion of the country's founder, Ralph Morton. Those that do, however, are powerful.Borrowing heavily from actual documents of the period such as Captain John Smith's Journal, and also from More's Utopia, Newton appears to use his book to show how the vast natural resources of the new continent could, with the vision and wealth of a man like Morton, have improved the lives

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Send us Fan MailAkilah Martin, Ph.D., is first and foremost in partnership with soil and water. Akilah earned her BS degree in Soil Science from Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical University and her Doctorate from Purdue University in Agricultural...

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