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On Friday, October 31 from 12 to 1:30PM, Drs. Clara Juando-Prats, Ruth Rodney, Janet Parsons, and Denise Gastaldo presented CQ’s latest seminar. Title: N(ArT)URE as a Relational Approach to Research-Creation Abstract: N(ArT)URE is a politically aware and ethically responsible research-creation project co-created with community partners and health researchers. Rooted in anti-oppressive critical research practices and framed in post-human theory, N(ArT)URE fosters spaces of safety, play, exploration, connections with the land, and knowledge production as a methodology for inclusion and inquiry. N(ArT)URE is a response to the need to visualize ways of being, thinking, and doing research; it prioritizes the needs of people with experiences of socio-economic exclusion and centers the relations between humans and non-human beings through a non-extractivist non-exclusionary approach. N(ArT)URE as a methodology attends to the realities of individuals and communities who are not usually engaged in research through knowledge co-creation and creative expression that nurtures the body, the mind, and the relations between the natural world and humans. In this session, we invite you into a discussion about the key elements of N(ArT)URE, the theory and practice behind it, its design, implementation, and analysis, showcasing two research-creation projects as examples of the co-creative process. This discussion was co-presented at the University of Toronto and Lakehead University. Video mentioned during presentation: María la Curandera (Video Lyric)