Below is a curated selection of published work, including writing, research, and multimedia projects. The work reflects an interdisciplinary approach grounded in storytelling, relational insight, and a commitment to meaningful impact.
The Huya Aniwa Foundation’s 10-Year Impact Report
Tiffany Raether led the development and design of the Huya Aniwa Foundation’s 10-year impact report, working in close collaboration with Co-Founder Vivien Vilela to gather and shape a decade of stories, data, and community testimony. The report reflects the resilience of Huya Aniwa’s Indigenous partners and their communities, their enduring relationship to their homelands, and the lived expression of kinship and care within their cultures. It also honors Huya Aniwa’s sustained dedication to protecting sacred lands, reviving cultural heritage, and restoring ecosystems over the past decade. The launch of the Huya Aniwa Institute marks a significant step forward in supporting Indigenous-led education, cultural continuity, and long-term ecological stewardship.
The Ashaninka of the Amônia River, A Collective of Regeneration & Resistance Confronting Unprecedented Ecological Catastrophe
In partnership with Yorenka Tasorentsi, Tiffany Raether authored a long-form article on the Ashaninka of the Amônia River, exploring their leadership in ecological regeneration, cultural resilience, and resistance amid escalating environmental crises in the Brazilian Amazon. The piece weaves together field-based storytelling, historical context, and firsthand accounts of climate impacts—including drought, fires, and flooding—while highlighting Indigenous-led solutions rooted in relational ways of life. It centers the Ashaninka as a living example of regenerative ecosystem stewardship and cross-cultural collaboration in the face of ongoing extractive pressures. The article was published and promoted by Medium, expanding its reach to a global audience.
Our Inheritance, Confronting the Sadistic Absence-of-Love and the Path to Ecological Repair
In 2023, Tiffany Raether presented her original work at the International Forum for Psychoanalytic Education, where she was invited to speak at the organization’s annual interdisciplinary conference. Her paper, Our Inheritance: Confronting the Sadistic Absence-of-Love and the Path to Ecological Repair, bridges psychoanalytic theory with Indigenous wisdom, examining how colonial consciousness contributes to ecological and relational harm while pointing toward pathways of repair. The work was later published in IFPE’s Other/Wise: Selected Papers from the 2023 Conference, extending its reach within psychoanalytic and academic communities. This experience marked an important step in her path as a public speaker, reflecting her commitment to engaging broader audiences in conversations at the intersection of psychology, ecology, and cultural transformation.
Summer 2021 Fieldwork with Earth Charter International
This 10-minute video presents Tiffany Raether’s Summer 2021 graduate fieldwork in Costa Rica with Earth Charter International at the United Nations–mandated University for Peace. It offers an overview of interviews conducted with members of the Earth Charter community, along with reflections on Costa Rican environmental activism. The presentation also engages a critical inquiry into how the concept of development is understood and metabolized, and explores pathways for evolving beyond current models of “sustainability.”