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NQTTCN In the News






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Healing Justice Lineages
Co-directed by Cara Page, co-architect of healing justice and NQTTCN’s Erica Woodland, the Healing Justice Lineages Project archives the rich legacy of healing justice in order to meet the moment of escalating political crises. Through archiving past and present strategies for collective care and safety, Healing Justice Lineages Project consisted of:
- The anthology, Healing Justice Lineages: Dreaming at the Crossroads of Liberation, Collective Care, and Safety (North Atlantic Books, 2023)
- National Listening + Cultural Memory Tour across 7 cities
- Healing Justice Lineages Digital Archive, featuring an archive of oral testimonies and political education tools
How We Get Free Series

How We Get Free is an NQTTCN-curated series that brings together trusted comrades and longtime practitioners to explore healing justice as a living, liberatory practice. In a time when the language of healing is often co-opted or depoliticized, these conversations are an offering—to deepen our collective understanding, build narrative power, and remember that healing justice is not just a set of services, but a strategy for disrupting the medical industrial complex and transforming our conditions. Special thank you to our comrades who activated our theory of liberation in both conversation and practice. Check out the archive:

Healing Justice is Abolitionist & Anti Capitalist with Cara Page
As a member and co-founder of Kindred Southern Healing Justice Collective, Cara Page is one the co-architects of Healing Justice, an abolitionist political – spiritual framework which came out of many years of movement building led by BIPOC organizers and healers in the South. Currently the Director of Cultural Organizing at Changing Frequencies and a member of Healing Histories Project, she recently co-edited the anthology Healing Justice Lineages with NQTTCN’s very own Erica Woodland.
In this conversation, Page & Woodland ground the series talking about all things healing justice, the ways we should fight co-optation, examples they admire, and more.

Disrupting the Mental Industrial Complex & Criminalization with Dr. Jennifer Mullan
Dr. Jennifer Mullan, also known as Decolonizing Therapy and the Rage Doctor, is a clinical psychologist and community healer whose work calls attention to the deep-rooted colonial violence within the mental health industrial complex. She is the author of Decolonizing Therapy: Oppression, Historical Trauma & Politicizing Your Practice and a leading voice in challenging practitioners to move beyond institutional allegiance and toward community accountability.
In this conversation, Mullan and NQTTCN’s Erica Woodland examine the colonial roots of the mental health field, the harms of carceral care, and the need to realign ethics toward community and liberation.


