2026 Invited Speaker: Apryl Alexander, PsyD
Presenting: No Easy Answers: Justice and Freedom in Today’s World
Experiences of injustice often provoke existential questioning, disrupting one’s sense of meaning, agency, and sense of belonging. Justice is not only a sociopolitical concern but an existential one: a reflection of our capacity to choose, to respond, and to relate ethically to others. Existential psychology offers a framework for understanding how individuals confront injustice as meaning-makers navigating ambiguity, responsibility, and choice. Dr. Alexander will explore justice through an existential lens, examining traditional models (distributive, procedural, interactional) alongside broader, social justice-oriented paradigms (restorative, transformative, transitional). Her keynote will explore how cultural, historical, and economic forces shape the conditions under which justice and freedom are experienced, and how existential therapists can support clients in confronting guilt, complicity, and moral distress without succumbing to despair or simplifying complexity. Attendees will explore justice as an ethical encounter or an invitation to respond authentically. The keynote will call on existential psychologists to engage with justice not as a fixed ideal centered on punishment, but as a relational and cultural imperative.


