Action Coalition Leader Joanita Babirye on Feminist Action for Climate Justice at the Generation Equality Forum
Note: Today's newsletter is an excerpt from The InfluencHER Project’s newsletter. Click here to view their website.
Supporting and Amplifying Female Voices
This week we continue to highlight the work of the Generation Equality Action Coalition Leaders in advance of next week's Generation Equality Forum in Paris, June 30 – July 2. Your organization can join them by making a commitment to advancing gender equality.
Our biggest motivation for becoming an Action Coalition Leader was to make our first-hand experiences of climate change in Uganda heard beyond borders and explore solutions on a global level. Becoming a Leader and sitting at the same table as government representatives, civil society leaders, and philanthropists means that we are visible, and that people recognize how essential youth voices are to achieving change. I hope a main outcome of the Forum is that the intergenerational gap is bridged. We need to work together to achieve a just world by tapping into the expertise of the older generation and applying new experiences and solutions from the young.
Empowering young women and girls to become climate leaders is an essential part of provoking action. Women and girls should be able to demand climate justice, but this is only possible when they are equipped with the tools and knowledge to hold everyone accountable and to break the barriers that are hindering their access to resources. Therefore, the action defined by our Coalition that speaks to me the most focuses on the development of climate leadership and knowledge hubs. This action drives transformation by making women and girls fully aware of the issues surrounding climate change and to be leaders in building the solutions.
Commitments that enhance learning and capacity building for women and girls are catalytic, as they increase the ability of different individuals to take climate action and advocate for justice. They are based on the recognition that taking action is key, even if that action is small. For example, if you decide you are going to start walking to work every day that is a good contribution and will have positive effects for marginalized or rural communities in the long run.
Being involved in the Action Coalitions has opened up a diverse space where everyone is pushing for the same goal. This gives me the feeling that we are in the fight together, that we stand for the same cause, and that we believe in creating something that represents the voices of the highly marginalised. Together we are creating goals, commitments and actions that will work for our communities and meet the ambitious vision for change that we all share.
Read more about the Action Coalitions.
Joanita Babirye
Guest Editor
Joanita Babirye is the co-founder of the Girls for Climate Action, an organization that has stepped up as a Leader of the Generation Equality Action Coalition on Feminist Action for Climate Justice.
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