The world is on fire. In curating the third issue in summer 2023 I noticed that the five papers next in the queue for publication are all developed by and for women. I considered, not for the first time, how action research is anti-patriarchy work. And how that is relevant at our time of escalating global eco-social crisis.As determined by scientists such as Karsten Haustein at Leipzig University, July 2023 was the hottest in 120,000 years. Some of us had direct experience of smelling smoke. Most of us saw images from Greece in which wildfire forced tourists to evacuate. Still few political leaders adequately frame the current context as demanding new behavior of all citizens. A gap remains between what we know and what we organize to do together. Even knowing our issues is problematic as the term 'climate change' becomes politically divisive. If an analogy were made to COVID-19, it is as if information on the virus were ignored, and the costs and mounting death tolls explained away as 'seasonal aberrations.' Regardless, the robust scientific models will continue to insist that our entire civilization is imperiled. Climate catastrophe may be the more apt term. How, then, does action research as anti patriarchy work, bridge the looming gap between what we know and what we are willing to do?Action researchers work participatively to include stakeholders involved in an issue at hand in ways in which knowing and doing becomes integrated. Action research fosters spaces where stakeholders' understanding ripens alongside others and in that relational space of trust, longer term, creative action, is organized. This approach to social knowledge creation counters the fragmentation between knowing and doing that is ubiquitous in our Industrial era, patriarchal, institutions.I didn't consciously seek women's papers, nor do I believe that transformations work is best done by women. Still, when I do a back of the envelope calculation, I estimate that there's a 2:1 ratio of women to men who practice action research. From a mainstreaming point of view this is, likely, a liability. Our institutions, and notably academia, remain deeply patriarchal in structure. But seen from the vantage of transformative efforts, it is a positive. Those 'at the edge'of institutions, of academia -have something to tell the mainstream. I believe Kurt Lewin came to know this too as a result of working withand allowing himself be led intonon patriarchal structures.Kurt Lewin conceptualized social change as a shift through stages of unfreezing, changing and refreezing. For him the context, for example, a group settingrather than say the beliefs of people -largely helped or hindered that change. Of relevance to action researchers may be that Lewin stumbled into allowing participants in the groups to participate in knowledge creation. And it was precisely the participative nature of action