From where I stand: “Gender equality is essential for us to be able to mitigate climate change.”
I first got engaged in conservation and the environment by setting up a high school wildlife club. I’d always wanted to be a vet because I liked animals and I grew up with lots of pets at home and I hated to see them suffering.
When I went to vet school in the United Kingdom, they allowed us to study an animal of your choice so I chose the chimpanzee … Then I worked with gorillas. Later, I got the opportunity to become the first vet for the Uganda Wildlife Authority – the government agency that manages the wildlife. At the time, there were no female rangers at all. But now, 25 years later, 20 per cent of the rangers are women. The wildlife vets in Africa and around the world were also almost all men, and most of the conservation NGOs were run by men.
We started our NGO in 2003 because people were making the gorillas sick and we realized we needed to improve human health, so we started engaging local leaders – half men, half women. We promoted community-based family planning in communities living around the park, to make sure they have manageable families so they don’t have to go into the forest to poach when their children are sick – they believe that bush meat is the only way to make their child better. When I looked at the women aged 15 and up, many were married off, so we decided to do couple peer-education, engaging women and men equally. We got the women more involved in conservation and natural resource management and the men more involved in health care and family planning.
Family planning was a solution because people were having more children than they wanted to. It was affecting women’s health, increasing poverty and preventing children from going to school. If they had 10 children, maybe half could go to school and they would prioritize the boys. And with more mouths to feed, they would go into the forest to collect firewood or to poach. … For women, [family planning] gave them more control over their lives, over their bodies. For men, it meant better balancing of the family budget. It became a win-win situation.
We also support women farmers by paying them better prices for their coffee, which the NGO sells to fund gorilla conservation. When we started, there were few women farmers, mostly widows. Having more female role models helps to break barriers, in whatever field it is. The only way that we can mitigate climate change is by engaging men and women and having just as many female as male leaders in conservation. If you don’t, you’re missing half of the puzzle and won’t be able to face things holistically and in a long-term way. Gender equality is essential for us to be able to mitigate climate change.
[As a female scientist], I’ve faced quite a number of challenges but some of the biggest were that people just don’t think that women and girls can do the same things as boys, like living in remote locations with few amenities or working with wild animals. People would express their concerns behind my back. I’m glad I didn’t know that earlier or it might have discouraged me. I just kept pushing on. … As a female leader, you need to take on leadership and be taken seriously. We need to work twice as hard as men. By the time we’re confident, it’s usually because we’re as good as or even better than men at something. Women have to be more confident in themselves.”
Topics
- Gender stereotypes
- Science and technology for development
- Innovation and technology