Invisible Experts

Andres Morales

Unseen Impact shines a light on the unsung heroes of sustainability—academics, practitioners, entrepreneurs, and key actors driving social and environmental change. Hosted by Dr Andrés Morales, each episode delves into the stories and insights of these 'invisible' leaders who work behind the scenes, making a profound impact without seeking the spotlight. Join us as we explore the untold narratives of those quietly revolutionising the world for a sustainable future.

  1. Invisible Experts | Episode #30 | Olav Muurlink: From Rural Roots to Global Change through Education

    27/06/2025

    Invisible Experts | Episode #30 | Olav Muurlink: From Rural Roots to Global Change through Education

    In the powerful closing episode of Season 2, Dr. Andrés Morales is joined by Olav Muurlink—Australian academic, journalist, and social innovator—for a deep and personal conversation about the intersections of rural resilience, anti-corruption work, and education for transformation.   Olav shares his remarkable journey: growing up isolated in rural Australia, receiving an entire education via correspondence and radio, and eventually founding and leading a network of 40+ schools in rural Bangladesh. With honesty and depth, he reflects on how self-directed learning, breakfast-table activism, and a drive for social justice led him to global impact work in one of the most challenging regions in the world. This episode explores:   What growing up off-the-grid teaches us about resilience and learningHow corruption obstructs genuine social progress—and what we can do about itWhy education is the key to unlocking systemic change in poverty-stricken communitiesThe quiet power of modelling values instead of preaching themJournalism and science as the last frontiers in defending truth  From starting a radio station in China to rebuilding communities in Bangladesh, Olav’s story is an inspiration for changemakers everywhere. This is more than a podcast—it’s a lesson in humility, perseverance, and purpose.   Guest: Olav Muurlink: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/olav-muurlink-721a8233/   Host:  Andrés Morales: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/drandresmoralespachon Minca Ventures: https://mincaventures.com   🎧 Tune in for the final episode of Season 2 and leave inspired to lead from wherever you are. 🧠 Key Topics Covered: Rural childhood and self-directed educationSocial innovation through lived experienceBuilding schools and hope in BangladeshAnti-corruption in global developmentPsychological roots of activismThe power of journalism and scienceEthical leadership and modelling behaviourReflections on legacy and slow impact

    1hr 19min
  2. Invisible Experts | Ep #29 | Liliek Setiawan: Powering Indonesia’s Future with Solar & Community Action

    13/06/2025

    Invisible Experts | Ep #29 | Liliek Setiawan: Powering Indonesia’s Future with Solar & Community Action

    What does it really take to transition a country of over 17,000 islands toward clean energy? In this compelling episode of The Invisible Experts Podcast, we speak with Liliek Setiawan, a trailblazer in Indonesia’s renewable energy sector and founder of a solar energy social enterprise dedicated to advancing energy equity, environmental sustainability, and community empowerment.   Liliek shares his journey from the early days of Indonesia’s solar movement to launching bold energy solutions that serve industrial clients, urban residents, and marginalised communities alike—including in remote areas like Papua, where state electricity is nearly absent.   We dive deep into the paradoxes of the energy transition: Why is the electric vehicle (EV) movement booming while Indonesia’s grid remains powered by coal? How can solar adoption scale when regulations and financing mechanisms still favour fossil fuel infrastructure? What happens when “green” technology creates new environmental problems—like battery waste?   But this is more than a conversation about solar panels—it’s about values, leadership, and systems change. Liliek reflects on how Indonesia’s foundational philosophy of Pancasila has shaped his work, and how local cooperation and entrepreneurship can outperform centralised policy when it comes to real-world implementation.   With a sharp eye on the triple bottom line—people, planet, and profit—Liliek offers an honest look at the failures and potential of public-private collaboration, the pressures of international funding, and the critical need for a homegrown energy ecosystem that works for Indonesia’s unique geography and social fabric.   Whether you’re in the energy sector, climate finance, social entrepreneurship, or simply curious about how sustainability unfolds in the Global South, this episode offers practical insight and grounded optimism. 🔑 Key Topics Covered ✅ The current state of solar energy in Indonesia ✅ Why rural electrification must be community-driven ✅ Addressing the “near-poor” and energy vulnerability ✅ How Liliek’s enterprise bridges commercial and social energy markets ✅ Cultural values, national philosophy, and energy justice (Pancasila) ✅ Why battery pollution is the “blind spot” in green energy ✅ How UN and public sector partnerships shape on-the-ground realities ✅ Funding challenges: dependency on European green capital ✅ Youth entrepreneurship in Indonesia’s green industry ✅ Can decentralised energy models truly challenge state monopolies? 📌 How do you define meaningful impact? Can business, education, and spirituality truly align to serve justice? Join the discussion in the comments.   Guest: Lliliek Setiawan: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/liliek-setiawan-88253414/   Host:  Andrés Morales: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/drandresmoralespachon Minca Ventures: https://mincaventures.com 🔔 Subscribe to The Invisible Experts Podcast for more powerful stories on impact, justice, and values-driven change.

    1hr 20min
  3. Invisible Experts | Episode #28 | Tina Facca-Miess: Faith, Justice & Refugee Education for Lasting Impact

    21/05/2025

    Invisible Experts | Episode #28 | Tina Facca-Miess: Faith, Justice & Refugee Education for Lasting Impact

    What happens when data, dignity, and faith come together to serve people living on the margins? In this deeply moving episode of The Invisible Experts Podcast, we sit down with Dr. Tina Facca-Miess—a business professor, marketing expert, and social justice advocate—whose work bridges the worlds of academia, spirituality, and global impact. Tina left a successful corporate marketing career to pursue a calling grounded in Catholic Social Teaching, ethics, and a desire to create regenerative ecosystems for displaced communities. As a leading voice in the Refugee and Migrant Education Network and faculty contributor to Jesuit Worldwide Learning, she supports learners in refugee camps and underserved regions across Uganda, Chad, Pakistan, and Central America.   Through her Integrative Justice Model (IJM), Tina brings a unique lens to measuring social impact—not just in terms of numbers served, but in the depth of transformation, trust, and restored dignity. Her work redefines how education, economics, and accompaniment can intersect to empower long-term resilience and agency among refugees and migrants.   We explore how global education systems can be radically more inclusive, ethical, and spiritually grounded—and why we must reject charity mindsets in favour of mutual respect and co-creation. Tina also reflects on what she’s learned from her students, colleagues, and faith journey—from refugee camps to classrooms in Cleveland.   This episode is essential for anyone working in impact measurement, ethical leadership, education, or cross-cultural partnerships, and a powerful reminder that transformation begins with shared values, not just strategy. Key Topics Covered: ✅ From marketing executive to values-driven educator✅ The Integrative Justice Model (IJM) and how it measures ethical impact✅ Refugee education beyond charity—toward justice and regeneration✅ Catholic Social Teaching in action: dignity, solidarity, and accompaniment✅ What we misunderstand about migrants and refugees✅ Building regenerative ecosystems in refugee communities✅ Transformative metrics vs. transactional outputs✅ Training the next generation of purpose-driven leaders✅ Faith, humility, and co-creating hope through education 📌 How do you define meaningful impact? Can business, education, and spirituality truly align to serve justice? Join the discussion in the comments.   Guest: Tina Facca-Miess: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tina-facca-miess-phd-8785998/ Jhon Carroll University:  https://www.jcu.edu/profile/tina-facca-miess   Host: Andrés Morales: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/drandresmoralespachon Minca Ventures: https://mincaventures.com 🔔 Subscribe to The Invisible Experts Podcast for more powerful stories on impact, justice, and values-driven change.

    1hr 39min
  4. Invisible Experts | Episode #27 | Kelsi Kriitmaa: Coaching Through Crisis, Cuts & Rebuilding the Social Impact Sector

    13/05/2025

    Invisible Experts | Episode #27 | Kelsi Kriitmaa: Coaching Through Crisis, Cuts & Rebuilding the Social Impact Sector

    What happens when a whole sector built on care, solidarity, and global aid faces its biggest funding crisis in decades? In this deeply timely episode of The Invisible Experts Podcast, we speak with Kelsi Kriitmaa, global health expert, coach, and founder of a coaching practice tailored to social impact professionals.   Kelsi brings over 20 years of experience in humanitarian aid, UN agencies, philanthropy, and social impact consulting. Now, as a certified coach, she helps changemakers and organisations navigate burnout, transitions, and systems collapse—with clarity, courage, and strategy.   This episode is a survival map and a call to action. We dive into what the massive USAID and donor funding cuts mean for NGOs, foundations, and frontline workers. We talk about mental health, identity loss, and burnout in the social sector. And we explore how coaching can be a lifeline—offering space to reflect, refocus, and reinvent purpose during times of collapse.   From organisational strategy to individual resilience, from motherhood to Mogadishu, Kelsi shares lessons from across the globe on trust, innovation, leadership, and what truly matters when everything is on the line. Key Topics Covered ✅ Burnout & Identity in the Social Sector – Why tying your worth to your job can be dangerous✅ USAID Cuts & Systemic Shock – What the funding collapse means for individuals and institutions✅ Coaching as a Crisis Tool – Creating space for clarity, purpose, and courageous pivots✅ Rebuilding Trust & Psychological Safety – A new model for leadership through uncertainty✅ Career Reset Framework – A 10-step tool for job seekers and purpose seekers in transition✅ Participatory Funding Models – How to redistribute power and funding back to communities✅ Women, Parenthood & Leadership – Rejecting the myth that you can “have it all”✅ What the Global South Needs Now – Moving from dependency to empowerment✅ Philanthropy & the Future of Funding – Trust-based models and the limits of donor narratives Kelsi’s voice is one of empathy, clarity, and pragmatism. Whether you're facing organisational uncertainty or personal exhaustion, this episode will help you breathe, reset, and reimagine. 📌 Have you or your organisation been affected by recent funding cuts? What changes are you seeing in the sector? Let us know in the comments.   Guest: Kelsi Kriitmaa: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kriitmaa/?originalSubdomain=ch Coaching and Consultancy: https://www.kriitmaa.com   Host: Andrés Morales: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/drandresmoralespachon Minca Ventures: https://mincaventures.com 🔔 Subscribe to The Invisible Experts Podcast for more deep conversations on resilience, equity, and reimagining impact.

    1hr 29min
  5. Invisible Experts | Episode #26 | Hannah Simmons: Afrocentric EdTech & Language Equity in Early Education

    05/05/2025

    Invisible Experts | Episode #26 | Hannah Simmons: Afrocentric EdTech & Language Equity in Early Education

    How do language, technology, and cultural identity shape learning? In this thoughtful and globally relevant episode of The Invisible Experts Podcast, we speak with Hannah Simmons, an education specialist working at the intersection of early childhood development, language equity, and educational technology in East Africa.   Hannah shares her powerful personal journey—from studying African languages and cultures in the UK to immersing herself in Tanzanian communities and joining Ubongo, the continent’s leading Afrocentric edutainment platform. With reach across 23 countries and over 35 million children, Ubongo is changing the way African children learn through stories, songs, cartoons, and mobile-first learning tools that reflect their real lives.   Drawing on both academic and practical experience, Hannah opens up about the importance of mother tongue learning, the role of culturally responsive pedagogy in building confidence, and why education systems must prioritise empathy, play, and relevance. We also explore the tension between public and private education, digital inclusion, and how to bridge early learning gaps through media and storytelling.   This episode is essential listening for educators, EdTech designers, early childhood advocates, and anyone passionate about equitable, localised, and joyful learning experiences. Key Topics Covered: ✅ The Power of Language in Learning – How Swahili and mother tongue instruction impact literacy and confidence ✅ Afrocentric Educational Content – Designing learning materials that reflect African values, stories, and contexts ✅ Child-Centred EdTech – Using multimedia to support cognitive development and social-emotional learning ✅ Barriers to Learning in Tanzania – The reality of public vs. private systems, infrastructure gaps, and inequality ✅ Early Childhood Development – Why learning environments before age 5 are make-or-break for long-term success ✅ Ubongo’s Impact Across Africa – Reaching children in 23+ countries through radio, TV, apps, and offline kits ✅ Inclusive Design for Diverse Learners – Prioritising accessibility, neurodivergence, and local cultural norms ✅ What Global Education Can Learn from Africa – Decolonising education through empathy and community-grounded solutions   Hannah also shares what she’s learned about unlearning Western-centric assumptions in education, the importance of humility in cross-cultural work, and her vision for a more equitable, joyful, and inclusive global learning future. 📌 How does language shape learning in your context? What does equity in early education look like where you live? Join the conversation in the comments.     Guest: Hannah Simmons: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/hannah-simmons92/ EdTech Hub: http://edtechhub.org/   Host: Andrés Morales: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/drandresmoralespachon Minca Ventures: https://mincaventures.com   🔔 Subscribe to The Invisible Experts Podcast for more powerful conversations on education, equity, and systems change.

    1hr 52min
  6. Invisible Experts | Episode #25 | Joseph Wijaya: From Plastic Waste to Purpose—A Kid’s Fight for a Cleaner Bali

    25/04/2025

    Invisible Experts | Episode #25 | Joseph Wijaya: From Plastic Waste to Purpose—A Kid’s Fight for a Cleaner Bali

    Can a 12-year-old really change how we think about waste, entrepreneurship, and community action? In this powerful episode of The Invisible Experts Podcast, we meet Joseph Wijaya—known locally as Joseph Recycling—a young environmental activist and entrepreneur from Bali who's turning plastic waste into products with purpose.   Joseph began his recycling journey during the COVID-19 pandemic, collecting trash with local friends to make pocket money. What started as a childhood game quickly evolved into a community clean-up movement—and eventually a business. Today, Joseph runs his own plastic sorting and upcycling workshop, creating products like sunglasses, carabiners, and coasters from discarded materials.   But Joseph’s mission goes far beyond products. In this heartfelt conversation, he talks about plastic pollution in Bali, the barriers young people face accessing education, how he sources materials from neighbours and schools, and how he even called out Nestlé at a global summit for their misleading environmental claims. From crowdfunding campaigns to Sunday market sales, Joseph shows us what’s possible when youth are trusted, supported, and given space to lead. Key Topics Covered: ✅ Starting a Recycling Business at 10 Years Old – How a community clean-up became a social enterprise ✅ Plastic Pollution in Bali – A young local's view of a global environmental crisis ✅ Upcycling for Impact – Turning shampoo bottles and plastic waste into useful products ✅ Access to Education & Inequality – Why birth certificates and poverty keep kids out of school ✅ Facing Global Corporations – Calling out greenwashing and standing up for the truth at Nestlé HQ ✅ Youth Leadership & Advocacy – Why Joseph wants to join government to push for real change ✅ Daily Life as a Kid-Entrepreneur – Homeschooling, managing a workshop, and mentoring others ✅ Advice for Young Changemakers – Start small, learn step-by-step, and never stop asking questions Joseph reminds us that age is not a limitation, and that real transformation starts with courage, curiosity, and care for others and the planet. 📌 Do you think kids can lead the way in solving environmental problems? Would you support youth-led businesses like Joseph’s? Share your thoughts in the comments!   Guests: Joseph Wijaya: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/joseph_recycling/?hl=en Gofundme: https://www.gofundme.com/f/Help-Joseph-stop-plastic-from-going-to-landfill?attribution_id=sl:496c5d32-5663-47bc-b012-b0b71793b89d&utm_campaign=p_cp+share-sheet&utm_medium=copy_link_all&utm_source=customer   Host:  Andrés Morales: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/drandresmoralespachon Minca Ventures: https://mincaventures.com   🔔 Subscribe to The Invisible Experts Podcast for more inspiring stories of social innovation, sustainability, and youth-led change.

    34 min
  7. Invisible Experts | Episode #24 | Andrew Karim: Ocean Energy, AI & Rethinking the Future of Sustainability

    22/04/2025

    Invisible Experts | Episode #24 | Andrew Karim: Ocean Energy, AI & Rethinking the Future of Sustainability

    What if the answer to our growing energy crisis has been all around us—literally—in the oceans? In this groundbreaking episode of The Invisible Experts Podcast, Andrew Karim, inventor and founder of Active Kinetic One, shares his powerful vision of a clean energy future rooted in ocean motion, magnetic science, and radical innovation.   With a background in tech giants like Microsoft and British Telecom, Andrew’s journey into clean energy started with a simple observation while working at Eurostar: if we’re measuring carbon footprints, there must be a problem worth solving. During the pandemic, Andrew used the time to reflect, research, and develop Active Kinetic One, a wave-powered, non-rotary clean energy technology designed to be durable, decentralised, and deployable at any scale—from oceanic installations to wearables. In this conversation, we explore why traditional renewable energy solutions (like solar and wind) may not be enough to meet the planet’s rising demand—especially with the rapid growth of artificial intelligence, smart technologies, and climate volatility. Andrew breaks down the energy gap in AI, how centralised grids leave us vulnerable, and why motion-powered energy systems could unlock a more resilient future for both humans and machines.   We also dive into the ethics of innovation: the ecological consequences of land use, the false promises of nuclear energy, the limits of battery storage, and the urgent need to design technologies with longevity, accessibility, and justice in mind. From educating the public through the Active Magnetic Cradle, to prototyping ocean-powered energy hubs in Spain, Andrew shows us what’s possible when we combine creativity, sustainability, and science grounded in purpose. Key Topics Covered: ✅ Why Traditional Renewables Aren’t Enough – Intermittency, battery waste, and limited scalability✅ Ocean Energy as a Game-Changer – Harnessing untapped kinetic energy to create decentralised clean power✅ Energy for AI Evolution – Why AI needs consistent power sources to function, adapt, and serve society✅ The Active Magnetic Cradle – A public education tool demonstrating clean kinetic energy using magnetism✅ Redefining Infrastructure – Modular, recyclable, and non-intrusive energy systems made from ocean plastic✅ Environmental & Social Justice – How fossil fuel dependency harms indigenous communities and ecosystems✅ Rethinking Nuclear Energy – The hidden environmental costs and impracticality of widespread nuclear expansion✅ A Vision for the Future – Tech that co-evolves with humans and AI while protecting the planet for generations 📌 Do we need to rethink everything we know about clean energy? Is it time to design power systems that evolve with both nature and machines? Let us know your thoughts in the comments!   Guests: Andrew Karim: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/seosearch/ Company: https://ak1.co   Host:  Andrés Morales: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/drandresmoralespachon Minca Ventures: https://mincaventures.com     🔔 Subscribe to The Invisible Experts Podcast for more deep-dive conversations on sustainability, systems innovation, and radical futures.

    1hr 32min
  8. Invisible Experts | Episode #23 | Paola Raffaelli & Yash Ranga: SDGs, Cooperatives & Rethinking Business-as-Usual

    14/04/2025

    Invisible Experts | Episode #23 | Paola Raffaelli & Yash Ranga: SDGs, Cooperatives & Rethinking Business-as-Usual

    What do the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) mean beyond the UN reports and colourful icons? Are they truly transforming the world—or simply reinforcing old systems with new language? In this powerful episode of The Invisible Experts Podcast, Dr. Andrés Morales brings together two leading thinkers from different worlds to unpack this critical question: Paola Raffaelli, a scholar of cooperatives and sustainable economics, and Yash Ranga, an impact strategist and practitioner at Pixera Global with deep experience in inclusive business and global partnerships.   Together, they explore the tensions, contradictions, and possibilities of the SDGs—especially in a world facing rising inequality, ecological breakdown, and widespread disillusionment with top-down solutions. The conversation touches on the disconnect between global sustainability agendas and the lived realities of small enterprises, particularly in the Global South, and invites us to rethink how we measure progress, value growth, and define “development.”   Yash calls for reclaiming the power of business as an agent of transformation, but urges a shift toward human-centred models, solidarity, and cross-sector innovation. Paola reminds us that cooperatives have long embodied many of the values the SDGs now champion, and argues that the real challenge lies in changing the system itself—slowing down, localising economies, and prioritising dignity over GDP.   They also take on difficult topics—including misinformation, conspiracy theories about the SDGs, and the ideological framing of sustainability that divides businesses and social movements. The episode closes with a hopeful call to make cooperatives attractive to a new generation, reimagine partnerships, and invest in inner and systemic transformation. Key Topics Covered: ✅ Are the SDGs Enough? – Aspirational vision or operational roadmap?✅ Cooperatives as Pioneers – Why SDG-aligned principles have been lived by co-ops for centuries.✅ Growth vs. Sustainability – The tension between economic expansion and ecological limits.✅ Funding, Inequality & Local Survival – Why small cooperatives and SMEs are left behind.✅ Making Cooperatives Appealing to Youth – How to change narratives and career pathways.✅ Cross-Sector Collaboration & Social Procurement – Practical ways to accelerate SDG implementation.✅ Decolonising Development – Rethinking who defines success and how change is measured.✅ Misinformation & Ideology – How polarisation affects public perception of sustainability.✅ Transformation as Inner Work – Why system change starts with mindset and worldview. 📌 Are the SDGs still a relevant framework? Can business, cooperatives, and civil society collaborate for real change? Let us know what you think in the comments!   Guests: Paola Raffaelli:  LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paola-raffaelli-30797999/ Company: https://iqs.edu/es/iqs/equipo-humano/dra-paola-andrea-raffaelli/   Yash Ranga: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/yashranga/ Company: http://www.pyxeraglobal.org/   Host:  Andrés Morales: LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/drandresmoralespachon Minca Ventures: https://mincaventures.com   🔔 Subscribe to The Invisible Experts Podcast for more rich, critical, and hopeful conversations on sustainability, social transformation, and future economies.

    1hr 47min

About

Unseen Impact shines a light on the unsung heroes of sustainability—academics, practitioners, entrepreneurs, and key actors driving social and environmental change. Hosted by Dr Andrés Morales, each episode delves into the stories and insights of these 'invisible' leaders who work behind the scenes, making a profound impact without seeking the spotlight. Join us as we explore the untold narratives of those quietly revolutionising the world for a sustainable future.