Expressions of a way of seeing

Projects

These projects are not unrelated portfolio items. Each one is an expression of the same underlying way of seeing the world — an attempt to make visible what is often left out of view.

A story of now, about technology and power in a reality that is tilting. Is there room for a different way of seeing?

Kwetsbaar Evenwicht

Kwetsbaar Evenwicht

What happens when indigenous wisdom meets a world driven by technology and power?

Kwetsbaar Evenwicht follows Nuwara, a forensic psychologist rooted in Hopi tradition, as she navigates a web of crime, technological breakthroughs and ethical dilemmas. A thriller that asks the questions our time keeps avoiding: how do we stay human when systems grow stronger than people?

Co-authored with Natacia Metsen, published by House of Navoti'yta.

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A podcast series in search of the soul of the Netherlands. Why is it so difficult to be transparent? And what does that say about our identity?

De Kunst van Transparantie

De Kunst van Transparantie

A podcast about power, trust, and what we are — and are not — allowed to know.

In De Kunst van Transparantie we dive deep into the promise and the reality of an open government, searching for the soul of a country that claims to be transparent. How open is the Netherlands, really? Where does it chafe? What does that say about our democracy, our governance, our identity?

Each episode poses one central question touching on power, trust, history or technology — from the childcare benefits scandal to colonial archives, from Woo requests to administrative secrecy.

A co-creation with Publiek Denken.

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A reflective framework for today's government. How do we keep people visible in a world that grows ever more complex?

Coming soon

Het MensKompas

How does government continue to do justice to people — even as systems grow more complex and digitalisation accelerates?

The MensKompas is a reflective framework for policymakers and public servants that makes visible where policy clashes with human experience. Not as an extra layer of control, but as an invitation to pause and ask: what do our decisions actually do to people?

A mechanism for early signals — turning reflection into an instrument of effective governance.