This collection contains ELRC research that explicitly advances intra-agency between the human and more-than-human world with a commitment to immanent relationality. EcoPhenomenology addresses, critiques, and develops alternatives for the increasingly ethical implications of our relationship to nature and the environment. It also considers embodiment, and the intersectional sociomateriality embedded in role and effect of technology on our conception of the human, and the role and effect of colonial modernity, patriarchy, capitalism, and globalization on our conceptions of, and relations to the earth, and explores eco-phenomenological education processes and practices. It also includes a focus on ecological citizenship and ecofeminism and its contours.