In this episode of Cultivate Talk, Emily sits down with Dr. Sara Potter to explore the intersections of communication, care, and crisis. Drawing from fieldwork in Puerto Rico following Hurricane Maria, Dr. Potter’s research examines culture-centered humanitarian aid, feminist organizing, and the often invisible labor women take on in the wake of disaster.
Together, they discuss what it means to rebuild not just infrastructure, but systems of care — particularly maternal and infant healthcare — in communities navigating both environmental catastrophe and institutional loss. Dr. Potter explains Dutta’s Culture-Centered Healthcare Model, unpacks the concept of “motherwork,” and reflects on how women’s labor sustains families and communities long after media attention fades.
The conversation also turns to her current community-engaged research responding to women’s healthcare deserts in the United States, highlighting how communication shapes partnerships, advocacy, and resilience.
This episode invites listeners to rethink recovery, to center community voices, and to consider how culture, gender, and communication shape the possibilities for healing in an era of climate crisis.