The Story Is in Our Bones
How Worldviews and Climate Justice Can Remake a World in Crisis
Book •
In 'The Story Is in Our Bones,' Osprey Orielle Lake argues that the climate crisis is fundamentally a crisis of worldview and relationships rather than only technology or policy.
She blends myth, storytelling, and practical strategies to show how cultural narratives and ancestral knowledge can inform transformative climate solutions.
The book uplifts Indigenous perspectives, feminist leadership, and community-based practices as central to remaking economic and political systems.
Lake offers policy, programmatic, and grassroots pathways toward a just transition rooted in reciprocity with the Earth.
The work is both a philosophical reframing and a pragmatic guide for activists, policymakers, and communities seeking systemic change.
She blends myth, storytelling, and practical strategies to show how cultural narratives and ancestral knowledge can inform transformative climate solutions.
The book uplifts Indigenous perspectives, feminist leadership, and community-based practices as central to remaking economic and political systems.
Lake offers policy, programmatic, and grassroots pathways toward a just transition rooted in reciprocity with the Earth.
The work is both a philosophical reframing and a pragmatic guide for activists, policymakers, and communities seeking systemic change.
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as a worldview-shifting book blending stories and practical pathways for systems change.

Rae Abileah
Transforming Colonization, Extractivism & Socio-Ecological Injustice: Casey Camp-Horinek, Osprey Orielle Lake, Abby Reyes & Rae Abileah


