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Rethinking Climate Solutions With Activist Vanessa Nakate

How separating climate fixes from capitalism can allow us to focus on the most impactful fix of all: Educating young women.

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In partnership with
Thomson Reuters Foundation

Since Vanessa Nakate was a young child in Uganda, she did whatever she could to learn as much as she could—even sneaking out of the house to attend nursery school before she was old enough to attend.

Since then, her passion for education has only grown, and she has since become a globally recognized climate justice activist and public speaker, one who centers her approach around the seemingly simple, quietly powerful action of educating girls. In her 2021 book, A Bigger Picture: My Fight to Bring a New African Voice to the Climate Crisis, she explains:

“It’s because I’ve benefited from education that I’m so passionate about it. But it also happens that girls’ education is a crucial way to address the climate crisis and ensure a more just world. We can’t wait for geoengineering innovations, such as capturing CO2 and other greenhouse gases from the atmosphere—even if we had anything more than an inkling of how viable they are. We need practical and affordable solutions right now. So, why aren’t we talking about educating girls and acting on this policy more?”

To attempt to answer the question, we looked to the resources she shares in A Bigger Picture, creating an internet-based reading list on how to better understand the crisis we face and how to meaningfully contribute to solutions.

Pocket was a proud sponsor of the 2022 Thomson Reuters Foundation's Trust Conference, where Vanessa Nakate was the keynote speaker.

Cleopatra Okumu

Vanessa Nakate

Vanessa Nakate is the founder of the Rise Up climate movement and the Vash Green Schools Project, which aims to install solar panels on all of Uganda’s 24,000 schools. She has spearheaded the Save Congo Rainforest campaign. The United Nations named her a Young Leader for the Sustainable Development Goals in 2020, and Time magazine named her to its Time100 Next list in 2021. Nakate and her work have been featured in The New York Times, the Guardian, Vogue, Yes!, Vox, the Huffington Post, the International Women’s Forum, and the Global Landscapes Forum and on globalcitizen.org, greenpeace.org, CNN, the BBC, PBS, and United Nations media. She lives in Kampala, Uganda.