Where women lead on climate change
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| Santa Catarina Ixtahuacan, Guatemala
The site of devastating landslides, fierce winds, and volcanic peaks, the hills in Guatemala's Sierra Madre can be inhospitable. But the women are just the opposite.
Last summer, dozens of women from across the country gathered to share strategies about water and forest conservation and improving crop yields, and they got a crash course in social auditing, a way for them to understand their rights and get involved in decisionmaking.
鈥淲e welcome our companions with happiness whenever they visit,鈥 says Diega Rodriguez, one of the organizers of the Ut鈥檢 Che鈥 network of community forestry groups. 鈥淲e have to keep working and we have to keep fighting.鈥
Why We Wrote This
Sometimes the best people to solve a problem are the ones most affected by it. In Guatemala, women have become some of the country's most visible environmental activists.
The relationships forged on those wind-whipped hills have become a kind of scaffolding for an increasingly connected network of community leaders, activists, and groups throughout the country that are working to empower women to fight for their land and their environment.
Increasingly forced to bear the brunt of more extreme weather and environmental degradation, these women are gaining the tools and the support to act on it.
The same is happening globally, as environmental justice increasingly intersects with women鈥檚 rights.
Women are urging those in power to address problems they feel most acutely, such as drought and deforestation. They鈥檙e also finding their own solutions, drawing on traditional knowledge about seeds or conservation, and leading efforts to put this knowledge to use.
As women become more empowered, they鈥檙e better able to take on leadership roles and know they have the right to do so, say advocates who support these efforts.
At the meeting in Guatemala, where much of the population depends on subsistence farming, the women spoke different languages and came from different ethnic groups, but all could share stories of how the soil was less fertile, the seasons increasingly unpredictable, and the rainfall more erratic.
鈥淚n Santa Eulalia there used to be an order of time: a month for the frost, a month for rain, a knowledge of where to farm so the frost won鈥檛 ruin the crop. Now there isn鈥檛,鈥 says Eulia de Leon Juarez, who helped found a women鈥檚 rights advocacy group in her town in Guatemala鈥檚 western highlands.
As in many places, problems here often revolve around water scarcity and soil degradation, conditions that increase the workload for women responsible for providing water, food, and fuel for their homes. When those resources are scarce, they must travel farther, sometimes walking for hours to reach the nearest water source.
Because women鈥檚 work is often connected to the land, women have long fought to protect their natural environments, often from extractive industries and agribusinesses that compete for access to resources. Now, some are linking this activism to the impacts they feel from a changing climate.
Building bridges
鈥淲hat we鈥檙e seeing more and more now is the urgency to address these issues and really support these women so they can lead in these struggles,鈥 says Maite Smet, a program coordinator with Global Alliance for Green and Gender Action (GAGGA), a nonprofit that brings together women's rights and environmental justice movements.
The issue has also gained traction as the number of women-led households in rural areas has grown.
鈥淭his is due to migration 鈥 men are migrating to cities 鈥 but also to conflict,鈥 says Solange Bandiaky-Badji, Africa program director for Rights and Resources Initiative, where she focuses on land tenure rights and gender. Women 鈥渁re then assuming greater responsibilities for the management and governance of the resources in their communities.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 not that it鈥檚 new,鈥 she adds. 鈥淏ut these factors have helped people see that women are really working around managing their forests and resources.鈥
Pressures from climate change have worsened poverty, food insecurity, human trafficking, and child marriage, activists argue. For a long time, says Ms. Bandiaky-Badji, people have focused on rural and indigenous women 鈥渁s victims.鈥
鈥淏ut what we鈥檙e seeing actually,鈥 she says, 鈥渋s how these women are organizing themselves to really overcome those challenges.鈥
They鈥檙e doing so by challenging political and social barriers but also finding their own way forward, particularly in places like Guatemala, where political instability can often worsen environmental problems.
鈥淚n many cases, as women become involved in environmental activism, they get in touch with others and so it builds their capacity to engage with local governments and even then, to figure out how to make their stories visible on the international stage,鈥 says Eleanor Blomstrom, co-director of the Women鈥檚 Environment and Development Organization (WEDO), a women鈥檚 advocacy group.
WEDO works to get women鈥檚 rights and gender justice included in climate change negotiations at the national and international levels. In 2015, it helped launch a program to train female climate-justice advocates to share their stories with international policymakers during climate negotiations. The organization has also that tracks how often and in what way gender or women are mentioned in policies, research, and other action related to climate change.
鈥淲omen have always been leaders at all levels, it鈥檚 just not been recognized in the same way,鈥 Ms. Blomstrom says. Part of that is a broader recognition that the effects of climate change are so varied and widespread, as well as stronger efforts to recognize women as human rights defenders.
鈥淓ven without scientists saying it, women are feeling it, so there are a lot of young feminists and activists who may be more engaged than young people were in the past or more empowered but definitely more vocal.鈥
Among the groups supporting those efforts is聽international women鈥檚 rights organization MADRE, which helps create networks where different communities around the world can share strategies for addressing climate-related problems. In late April it brought indigenous women from countries such as Nepal and Nicaragua to Arizona to hear how indigenous communities along the US-Mexico border were impacted by Trump administration policies on migration and climate change.
Women still face discrimination and resistance for taking on leadership roles,聽particularly in more unequal societies. Another challenge is making sure goals and plans to recognize women are put into action.
No longer invisible
Since the meeting in Guatemala in August, several women have come together to audit state-supported forestry programs that help small landowners earn money from reforestation and natural forest management. Women often face challenges participating in such programs because they lack land titles.
The group hopes to create a database of projects in a northern part of the highlands, so they can show how land tenure is distributed by gender and talk with officials about strengthening the roles that women play in environmental projects.
鈥淲e are invisible to a lot of people,鈥 says Ms. Rodriguez.
But bringing women together to share their struggles helps improve their visibility. Since gatherings like the one last August started, topics have gone from building self-esteem to getting women more politically involved in their communities, says Dina Juc Suc, a former coordinator with Ut鈥檢 Che鈥, a network of dozens of community forestry organizations that helped organize the meeting.
Before the women talked about lack of education or violence they faced, says Ms. Juc Suc, who has been leading programs like these since 2010.
鈥淣owadays, women dare to talk about questioning a government official,鈥 and share tips on how to adapt crops to changing weather and improve their livelihoods. 鈥淣ow they are looking to create strategies,鈥 she adds.
Sara Schonhardt reported from Guatemala on a fellowship from the