Posts by Green 2.0 Team
Protecting Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Justice in 2024 Social Media Toolkit
In 2023, conservative activists seeking to reverse progress that makes our society more equitable, launched an attack on diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice (DEIJ). As we enter 2024, organizations and DEIJ leaders are working diligently to protect this critical work and evaluate how to continue to defend equity and justice for all. Join Green 2.0 for a conversation with leaders working on equity to discuss expectations for 2024 and how we can strengthen our commitment to equity and justice in the face of these challenges.
Read MoreSisterhood Gardens: Where Environmental Justice and Intergenerational Communities Grow TogetherÂ
Dr. Chan, garden educator and food justice advocate, talks about the development of a community-based food security project called Sisterhood Gardens, in San Francisco, CA. What started out as a partnership with the city of San Francisco to offer garden plots led to a space for transformational change in our local community and a model for future mixed-use community garden spaces.
Read More2023 Partnership Spotlight Review
As 2023 comes to an end, we look back at this year’s spotlight partnerships and the vital work our partners do to advance diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice both internally within their own organization and externally in their communities.
Read MoreGreen Space for Teens: Thrive DC’s Vision for Local Underserved YouthÂ
Working with the National Park Service, Friends of Anacostia Park (FoAP) turns the challenge of revitalization into an opportunity for community uplift. We connect residents with meaningful, green employment and activate Anacostia Park as a vibrant convening point for all visitors. In this blog, FoAP highlights the history of the park and Thrive DC, an after-school program providing local teens the opportunity to connect with nature and build community.
Read More2023 NGO & Foundation Transparency Report Card Social Media Toolkit
The seventh annual Green 2.0 NGO & Foundation Transparency Report Card is here! This report serves as a key mechanism to hold organizations, and the environmental movement at large, accountable for commitments made to diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice.Â
Read More2023 NGO & Foundation Transparency Report Card Release Social Media Toolkit
On December 14th, Green 2.0 will release its latest NGO & Foundation Transparency Report Card. The report will include updated data about the racial and ethnic diversity of environmental organizations’ key decision-makers and staff, and contains new indicators of diversity and inclusion including gender identity, gender identity for staff of color, and disability status.
Read MoreThe Need for Nuance and Systemic Change in Plant-Based Diet Culture
Green 2.0’s Fall Fellow Michelle Gin dissects White-dominated plant-based diet culture and proposes flexitarianism as a more nuanced diet alternative and ideological framework to affect change at both an individual and systemic level.
Read MoreIn Canada, Indigenous Leaders Take Mantle of Longtime Boreal Forest Stewardship Effort
Tom Dillon is a senior vice president at The Pew Charitable Trusts, leading the organization’s work on conservation and environment initiatives in the United States and around the world. Valérie Courtois is the executive director for the Indigenous Leadership Initiative, which supports Indigenous Nations in honouring the responsibility to care for lands and waters. She is a member of the Innu community of Mashteuiatsch, located on the shore of Peikuakami, or Lac-St-Jean and lives in Happy Valley-Goose Bay, Labrador.
Read MoreConservation Nation
Imagine a future where the force of people in the fight to save wildlife and their habitats matches the size of the challenge so we can save the life-giving web of biodiversity for generations to come. It’s a future where everyone feels a sense of belonging in nature, and where new solutions, perspectives, and lived…
Read MoreIndigenous Women Leaders Shaping Environmental Justice Social Media Toolkit
From leading conservation projects that protect their ancestral land to advocating for sustainable practices and environmental justice, Indigenous women have long been at the forefront of shaping the environmental movement. However, recognition of their leadership and their representation in decision-making roles within environmental organizations is lacking.Â
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