If We Want Climate Policy That Works, Listen To Women
Women as life-givers understand intimately the relationship between body, environment, movement, and our place in the world.
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Women as life-givers understand intimately the relationship between body, environment, movement, and our place in the world.
Women became self-appointed rangers in the forest, monitoring their land and making sure the loggers knew they were doing so.
The argument for girls’ education is both simple and powerful. However, it isn’t as it appears. Here are 3 reasons why.
The Gender Climate Change and Agriculture Support Programme (GCCASP) was designed to enhance resilience of rural women.
A gendered approach to understand the impact of climate change is crucial to appropriate mitigation & response strategies.
Africa's female farmers are excluded determining agriculture policies, while discriminatory laws deprive them of their land.
Climate governance policy is unable to account for the gender and caste inequalities that are dominant today.
Le changement climatique favorise la violence faite aux femmes dans les communautés de la région séparatiste du Somaliland.
Rising sea levels, hotter temperatures and stronger currents along this coast are some of the changes divers are seeing.
Climate change is driving gender-based violence among rural communities in the breakaway region of Somaliland, Oxfam reports.
To get a sense of how recent changes have affected Lake Chad’s residents, Nagarajan interviewed more than 250 people.
Women Wetem Weta (Women’s Weather Watch) in Vanuatu helps keep rural and remote women and communities informed.
Journalists Neha Wadekar and Will Swanson travel to northern Kenya to explore this story in a multimedia project.
The importance of stronger women’s authority in climate action planning by governments, companies in prosperous urban settings.
Considering the inclusion and leadership of women and their game-changing role in water stewardship and river protection.
“We need gender equality to fight climate change, and we need women in powerful positions to make [the] change that we need.”
In Huila province in southern Angola, global warming is having a double impact on women and girls.
Women Climate Saathis (partners) advocate solutions for heat stress, floods, vector-bourne diseases, and water scarcity.
From loss of livelihoods to domestic abuse, women bear the brunt of natural disasters, endangering progress on gender equality.
Alors que sécheresse et intempéries poussent les époux à chercher du travail en ville, les villageoises vivent sous la menace.
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