In this episode of the Change Agent, Eric sits down with the CEO of The Superhumans Center in Ukraine. Her and her team help all those affected by the war in Ukraine by providing health care, life saving operations, and provides patients to see possibility again after trauma.

It is likely this is one of the more powerful stories you’ve heard in leadership. Jo Tarnawsky has worked in the highest levels of government, only to find that leadership at that level was missing many human components and she paid a price for addressing it.

Understanding our limits and capacity for stress is highly important if we want to prepare ourselves for challenging environments.
JD Tremblay is an expert in this very idea. He’s prepared for, and successfully completed, the EpicDeca race and is only one of 3 people globally to have completed it. Be strong…Be ready.

Learning to lead can be tricky. Sometimes, your best tools are adaptability and de-escalation. In this video interview, Alex Mann shows us the power of improvisation and how to use natural talents to tone down a situation and make us more effective leaders!

Executive careers are not stalling because leaders lack capability. They are stalling because the rules have changed.
In this episode of The Change Agent, I sit down with Zoe Price, CEO of Resume Pilots, to explore what is really happening in today’s leadership market. This is not a tactical conversation about CV formatting.

In this episode The Change Agent Podcast, Eric and Dennis examine how professionals differentiate themselves in crowded, price-driven markets and why authority, trust, and precision positioning matter more than raw visibility.

In this episode of The Change Agent, Warrant Officer Simon Kardynal (Royal Canadian Air Force) discusses modern military leadership, generational shifts, empathy in structured systems, and what real accountability looks like at the senior NCO level.

In this special episode of The Change Agent Podcast, Eric sits with Nobel Laureate Oleksandra Matviichuk of Ukraine’s Center for Civil Liberties. We discuss the work of her organization to bring justice to all those affected by Russian aggression and how Ukraine will respond to crimes against humanity and war crimes.

Leading through uncertainty requires a dedication to the responsibility of doing so. We talk to Thomas Jepson-Lay about this and his experience to learn how to Navigate What We Cannot Control.

The Courageous Self: Leadership, Burnout, and Realignment — with Myrna King

When Luck Isn't Enough in Leadership - Implementing Science for Success with Dr. Valentina Schneider

Leadership isn’t hard if you can see through the chaos and lead yourself well.

In this interview, I sit down with Mike Jones of LBI Consulting to talk leadership, strategy, and navigating different challenges in team composition.

In this episode of the Change Agent, Eric sits down with the CEO of The Superhumans Center in Ukraine. Her and her team help all those affected by the war in Ukraine by providing health care, life saving operations, and provides patients to see possibility again after trauma.

Learn what it takes to lead in the face of challenges!

Being able to lead through a crisis may often mean the life or death of a project or organization. Sophia takes us through everything it takes to manage your way through a crisis.

Dr. Mays takes us through the importance of leading yourself first.
In this special episode of The Change Agent Podcast, Eric sits with Nobel Laureate Oleksandra Matviichuk of Ukraine’s Center for Civil Liberties. We discuss the work of her organization to bring justice to all those affected by Russian aggression and how Ukraine will respond to crimes against humanity and war crimes.
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Oleksandra Matviichuk, Chairwoman of Ukraine’s Center for Civil Liberties (CCL), joins Eric with The Change Agent Podcast to examine the future of international justice, accountability, and civilian protection amid Russia’s ongoing aggression against Ukraine. Ukraine is now a full State Party to the International Criminal Court (ICC). Arrest warrants have been issued for Vladimir Putin and other senior Russian officials. Yet enforcement depends on state cooperation, and the crimes against Ukrainian civilians continue. What does international justice actually achieve in wartime? Do arrest warrants matter without an international police force? And how can accountability gaps—particularly the crime of aggression—be addressed?
In this in-depth conversation, Matviichuk discusses:
• ICC enforcement challenges and jurisdictional limits
• The crime of aggression and calls for a Special Tribunal
• Systemic civilian detention under Russian occupation
• Torture, deportation, and the documentation of crimes against humanity
• Frozen Russian assets and reparations mechanisms
• The psychological toll of documenting atrocities
• Justice as a parallel track to peace negotiations
• Leadership, hope, and long-term responsibility
This episode explores Ukraine, international law, war crimes accountability, human rights advocacy, and the global consequences of impunity. It is a conversation about truth, power, and the difficult path toward justice.