Discover new tools and resources from GAGGA, with practical insights from our global network. Explore case studies, reports, and strategies to strengthen climate action, and gender and environmental justice efforts.
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Amidst the diverse terrains of Guatemala, the Consejo de Mujeres Indígenas y Biodiversidad (CMIB), a platform of Indigenous women’s organizations focused on biodiversity and climate change, stands resilient. As a torchbearer for Indigenous women’s rights and voices, they’ve been weaving together the tapestries of grassroots experiences to echo in global forums like COP28. “OurContinue reading “From Local to Global: Indigenous Voices in Climate Dialogues”
Long Story Short: In Zambia’s Rufunsa district, the Mukonka village, rich in natural resources and biodiversity, faced severe environmental degradation due to illegal logging and charcoal production, leading to loss of streams, forests, and traditional food sources. The women of Mukonka, rooted in eco-feminist principles, turned this crisis around by reviving Indigenous seeds. Through advocacy,Continue reading “Seeds of Change: How The Women Of The Mukonka Village Are Reviving Its Ecology – One Seed At A Time”
In just one hundred years, industrialization, consumerism, individualism, depredation, looting, and violence have changed the climate like never before in the history of the planet. And even though the less industrialized countries do not contribute to greenhouse gas emissions as much as the more industrialized ones, structurally excluded peoples bear the brunt of the impactsContinue reading “Global warming is violence against women”
I grew up in the Niger Delta in Nigeria as a member of the indigenous farming and fishing community of Yaataah. For decades, our families lived in constant contact with the waterways. My grandmothers relied on them to collect our food and to make pottery to sustain our family. Unfortunately, things have changed. Since theContinue reading “Restoring mangrove forests to fight the consequences of fossil fuel extraction – Nigeria”
My name is Purna Kumari Magar and I’m part of the Magar Indigenous community in Nepal. As part of this community, my life depends on land and other natural resources, such as the Seti river. However, with the Tanahu hydropower project, our way of life is under threat. The project, financed by the Asian DevelopmentContinue reading “Indigenous knowledge to mitigate climate change impacts – Nepal”
We, women of the Qom Indigenous community of Santa Rosa, have long been trying to protect our lands against the rapid intrusion of extractivist projects which have caused high rates of deforestation and environmental destruction in our territory, the Paraguayan Chaco. The conflict we are dealing with now, involves a model of so-called “sustainable development”Continue reading “Qom women protecting their lands against degenerative eucalyptus monocultures – Paraguay”
A coal-fired power plant that threatens to endanger the survival of communities and specially fisherwomen in Bargny, Senegal, managed to unite two organizations in the fight for the environment and women’s rights. A coal-fired power plant that has been built in the small village of Sendou, in the city of Bargny, Senegal, is threatening theContinue reading “Sendou: where environmental justice and women’s rights come together”
The women from Marina Cué are an example of resistance. Through their advocacy efforts, they were able to push for the release of their comrades incarcerated for the Curuguaty massacre. They carried out the construction of a pluri-grade school and a road, and organized a community garden, among other productive activities in the Marina CuéContinue reading “The Women from Marina Cué: resistance and empowerment in Paraguay”
The environmental conflict in Bajo Aguán, Honduras, has been active for many years. Honduras is a country that has a vast reserve of natural resources, but the majority of these resources are in the hands of only three powerful landowners, leaving farmer families in poverty, without land, without work and without food. To the problemContinue reading “The Bajo Aguán Conflict”
For the people of Aroroy, in the Masbate province 350km southeast of Manila in the Philippines, “to be sitting in a pot of gold”, is not a blessing. The province’s mineral wealth has not translated into better conditions for the communities in the region, consistently among the poorest regions of the country. Filminera Resources CorporationContinue reading “The women of Aroroy fight to be heard”