Projects
The lab’s deeply transcultural and transdisciplinary approaches are reflected in the global reach of its projects, initiatives and collaborations. Completed, current and forthcoming projects span the Americas, Asia, Africa, Oceania and Europe.

​This lab-incubated book explores the intellectual and methodological foundations of the lab. It urgently calls for a paradigm-shift away from the delusion of human exceptionalism, addressing interconnected global crises of climate change, species extinction and increased cultural conflict.



Ecocultures of the Scala dei
Turchi
November 2024 - December 2025​
Created in collaboration with Dr. Teresa Fiore for the Agrigento 2025 Italian Capital of Culture.
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The project harnesses key concepts described by Dr. Nathan in his forthcoming book, as well as lab-developed techniques such as multispecies thick-mapping to create a public-facing digital resource.
Each "layer" of this map focuses on one aspect or story of the site that guides viewers to the naturalcultural, transhistorical and multispecies entanglements of the now-iconic "Turkish Steps" in the Province of Agrigento.
Multispecies Bruinsmap
Fall 2025-Present​
This exciting initiative is the start of what will hopefully become a multi-year sustainable multispecies thick-mapping project of the UCLA campus (the university mascot is the “Bruin” bear).

This project explores the (re)creation, (re)inscription, and dissemination of Somali nationhood vis-à-vis diverse culinary foodways utilized by its global diasporic communities.
Our Buffalo Cousins
Humanimal Restoration at the Wind River Tribal Reservation, Wyoming
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January 2026 - Present
This ongoing project seeks to demonstrate via a public-facing resource the incredible yet challenging healing possibilities of embodied multispecies restoration at the Wind River Tribal Reservation in Wyoming, USA.

This umbrella theme seeks to comparatively explore local and global locations of "Mediterreanean-ness" both in terms of an imagined cultural landscape and a material ecocultural and ecological system.
Europe's temperatures are increasing approximately twice as fast the global average due to anthropogenic climate change, making it the fastest-warming continent on the planet.​
This completed project illustrates the Cybercene era’s mechanisms of commodification, othering and wasting by starting with an ecocultural analysis of the life and death of a migrant agricultural worker in Italy in June 2024, Mr. Satnam Singh.
