Published
2 months agoon
By
Desert ManClimate change acts as a threat multiplier, finding existing injustices and amplifying them. Women and girls already grapple with gender inequality, but when extreme weather devastates a community, the UN found that inequalities worsen: Intimate partner violence spikes, girls are pulled from school, daughters are married early, and women and girls forced from their homes face a higher risk of sexual exploitation and trafficking.
“When we look at who’s affected worse, who’s on the frontlines of the climate crisis, it’s primarily women — women in poor and vulnerable countries,” Selwin Hart, UN Special Adviser to the Secretary-General on Climate Action and Just Transition, told CNN. “And unfortunately, our policies or strategies are really not geared to address this challenge.”
To explore the complex links between gender and climate change, CNN worked with seven women photojournalists who spent time with women and girls in seven countries across the Global South to document the challenges they face.
This visual project gives a snapshot of the myriad ways the human-induced climate crisis is upending their lives but also shows how they are fighting back. Every image shows both struggle and survival, the battle to live a decent life in a swiftly changing climate.
Agbodza Criticises Ghana’s Road Contracts for Lacking Value
Man Laments as Wealthy Girlfriend Hides Him From Friends
Prof. Lord Mensah Links AG’s Offer to Government’s Role in Bank Collapses
Ghana Drunkards Association Mourns Daddy Lumba, Urges Moderation
Shatta Wale Commends Asantehene, Criticises Accra’s Cultural Disconnect
BoG Tightens Sanctions on Remittance Violations by Banks and Payment Firms
Rev. Ntim Fordjour Urges Rethink of Security Spending in Mid-Year Budget Debate
Mahama Urges Urgent Action on African Reparations at AU Forum
Prof. Lord Mensah Slams uniBank Collapse: “Why Reject GH¢2 Billion Offer?”