Funders

Building Climate Justice at the Global Climate Action Summit

Starting September 8, thousands of businesses, officials, funders and activists from around the globe converged on San Francisco for an intensive week of activities focused on climate change. Hundreds of climate workshops, protests, films, exhibits, concerts and meetings took place across the city alongside the Global Climate Action Summit (GCAS), hosted by Governor Jerry Brown to push for strong implementation of the Paris Agreement. CJRF was there! Highlights from the week include:

CJRF convenes funders to discuss collaboration: Together with Mary Robinson Foundation-Climate Justice and Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, CJRF hosted two events on the margins of GCAS to explore climate justice as an emerging field of practice in philanthropy. Our September 11 dinner, “From Learning to Action: Philanthropy Building Momentum on Climate Justice,” gathered funders from 13 organizations to discuss funding for climate justice. The intersectionality of climate justice with other funding priorities, such as gender and land rights, emerged as a key theme. The partners also held “Pathways to Climate Justice: A Funders Roundtable” on September 12, which brought together funders, non-profits, academics, and others, representing 41 different organizations. Attendees discussed opportunities to collaborate in support of rights-based, community-driven activities to address climate change. Steps identified to support collaborative efforts include: clarifying the definition of “climate justice,” defining what success in climate justice looks like, mapping out assets and activities across the field, and building a set of shared stories or narratives.   

From Left to Right: Mary Robinson, Mary Robinson Foundation-Climate Justice; Heather McGray, CJRF; Anne Henshaw, Oak Foundation; and Constance Okollet, Osukuru United Women's Network

From Left to Right: Mary Robinson, Mary Robinson Foundation-Climate Justice; Heather McGray, CJRF; Anne Henshaw, Oak Foundation; and Constance Okollet, Osukuru United Women's Network

Activists’ climate justice summit highlights “people’s solutions”:  The Solidarity to Solutions  Week of Action was organized by the It Takes Roots alliance, comprised of Grassroots Global Justice Alliance, Climate Justice Alliance, Indigenous Environmental Network, and Right to the City. They led about 30,000 “Rise for Climate” marchers in San Francisco demanding climate justice on Sept. 8, and convened a week full of activities for activists, funders, and others. CJRF Director Heather McGray attended the “People’s Orientation” to the week led by It Takes Roots, the CHORUS Foundation, Surdna Foundation, Ceres Trust, EDGE Funders Alliance, Libra Foundation, and the Hewlett Foundation.

African and African-American women activists share climate stories and experiences: Along with the NAACP, CJRF hosted the “Pan-African and African Diaspora Gender Justice Dialogue on Climate Change” as part of the Building Resilience Today for a Sustainable Tomorrow event on September 11. The session explored the intersection of race, gender, and climate change in the US, Guyana, and Kenya, and highlighted opportunities for common ground and shared action on climate justice between African women and women of African descent. Panelists included Agnes Leina, Il’laramatak Community Concerns; Kari Fulton, Near Buzzard Point Resilience Action Center; Iris Crawford, NAACP; and Winnie Asiti, African Youth Initiative on Climate Change. Denise Fairchild, President of the Emerald Cities Collaborative, moderated the session.

From Left to Right: Denise Fairchild, Agnes Leina, Kari Fulton, Iris Crawford, Winnie Asiti, and Jacqui Patterson

From Left to Right: Denise Fairchild, Agnes Leina, Kari Fulton, Iris Crawford, Winnie Asiti, and Jacqui Patterson

CJRF grantee partners take the main stage: Various sessions in San Francisco highlighted the work of CJRF partners. Agnes Leina of Il’larmatak Community Concerns and Violet Shivutse from the Huairou Commission spoke at the Summit’s main resilience session, “Prepared for the Future We Create: Designing, Building, and Financing Resilient Communities.” They described the central role that women play in adaptation and resilience at the grassroots level. Agnes also served as a keynote speaker at the high-level roundtable entitled “Changing the Climate Conversation: Enabling Women’s Participation to Advance Climate Justice.” Co-convened by Mary Robinson Foundation, the State of California, and the UN Climate secretariat, the roundtable will feed into the “Talanoa Dialogue” climate talks under way within the United Nations. Meanwhile, Ole Kaunga Mali of IMPACT Kenya spoke at “Investing in Energy Access as a Critical Climate Solution” to urge clean energy investors to gather input and insight from community members before starting projects. The Center for International Environmental Law co-hosted several sessions on plastic pollution, litigation against big oil, and climate risks for investors. Clare Shakya of IIED spoke at a panel on “Building Energy System Climate Resilience,” and the Earth Journalism Network sponsored journalists from 21 countries to attend training seminars in San Francisco and cover GCAS-related events.  

Agnes Leina speaking at the Global Climate Action Summit. 14 September 2018

Agnes Leina speaking at the Global Climate Action Summit. 14 September 2018

Indigenous Peoples Build Momentum for Global Clean Energy Coalition: CJRF co-sponsored an information session on the new Right Energy Partnership With Indigenous Peoples. The partnership, led by the Indigenous Peoples’ Major Group on the SDGs, aims to ensure that clean energy projects respect the rights of indigenous peoples, and that indigenous peoples benefit from the renewable energy revolution. 

The GCAS was promoted as a launchpad for deeper worldwide commitments to put the world on track to prevent dangerous climate change and realize the historic Paris Agreement. It aimed to push national governments, from the ground up, to ratchet up the ambition of their climate action at climate talks in December. The GCAS program, webcast, and a links to affiliated events, can be found here.

Kendeda Fund Awards 3-year Grant to CJRF

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In November 2017, The Kendeda Fund awarded the Climate Justice Resilience Fund (CJRF) a 3-year, $900,000 USD grant. This makes Kendeda CJRF’s second ‘member foundation,’ joining the Oak Foundation, which launched the CJRF in 2016.

The Kendeda Fund is a private grantmaking foundation that invests in transformative leaders and ideas, empowering communities across the U.S. and around the globe to enhance equity, vibrancy, resourcefulness, and resilience. Kendeda’s support to the CJRF represents their first grant in a new Girls’ Rights and Climate Change portfolio, which integrates two Kendeda programs: Girls’ Rights and People, Place, and Planet

Kendeda Executive Director Dena Kimball said, “The Kendeda Fund is excited to invest in CJRF as our first grant in a body of work that attempts to answer the question, ‘How can we support girls’ leadership in climate resilience as a means to build their overall rights, empowerment and options within their communities?’ We believe the values, orientation and approach of CJRF make them an ideal partner in this learning journey.”

Kendeda’s investment in the CJRF takes the form of a flexible grant that supports of the overall CJRF portfolio. Rather than earmarking the grant for specific girls’ rights projects or activities, Kendeda and CJRF have agreed to track a set of Fund-level benchmarks related to gender and girls’ rights. For example, CJRF has committed that 100% of its grants will recognize gender-based differences, and 15% will aim specifically to produce transformations in girls’ empowerment.

CJRF Director Heather McGray said, “We are grateful to Kendeda for their trust, and for their spirit of ‘learning-by-doing.’ Kendeda’s grant takes an innovative approach that I believe  will strengthen the whole CJRF.”

The Kendeda Fund helps underrepresented but trusted voices build social and community capital by supporting experienced, and emerging, leaders who have the vision to see problems differently and the courage to challenge conventional thinking. Kendeda’s current geographic priorities overlap with CJRF’s in Bangladesh and East Africa.  Learn more at www.kendedafund.org.

CJRF Co-hosts “Building Coalitions for Climate Justice: A Funders’ Roundtable”

Pictured from left to right: Hilary Heath, Heather McGray, Mary Robinson, Agnes Leina, Heather Grady, and Anne Henshaw

Pictured from left to right: Hilary Heath, Heather McGray, Mary Robinson, Agnes Leina, Heather Grady, and Anne Henshaw

Together with Mary Robinson Foundation Climate Justice, Oak Foundation, and Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors, the CJRF hosted a roundtable to bring together funders to explore climate justice as an emerging field of practice in philanthropy. The group met on September 20 on the margins of the United Nations General Assembly meetings in New York, hosted by Wellspring Advisors at their Manhattan office. Funders from over 20 different organizations attended the roundtable, representing a range of different interests and sectors, from water to energy, gender, indigenous rights, and more.

Heather McGray, Director of the CJRF, shared opening remarks that framed the issue of climate justice and set out objectives for the meeting. She also briefly shared the work the CJRF is doing to explore climate justice through grantmaking, and to strengthen its adaptation and resilience dimensions. Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland and former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, provided keynote remarks. She described her experience as a global advocate for climate justice and introduced the Principles of Climate Justice developed by her foundation and their partners.

As inspiration for the roundtable participants, three grassroots activists spoke about their experiences working “on the front lines” of climate change. Selina Neirok Leem, a college student from the Marshall Islands, described her activism as a young leader, and shared a poem that clearly expressed the frustration and sense of loss – but also determination to take action– that she and many islanders feel as they grapple with sea level rise. Austin Ahmasuk, the Marine Advocate for Kawerak, Alaska, shared his experience with the rapidly warming climate in Alaska, including the profound changes that warming presents for indigenous communities such as his own.  Lastly, Agnes Leina, from Illaramatak Community Concerns in Kenya, voiced the power of local grassroots activism and the importance of environmental justice and land rights for pastoralist communities. In listening to the voices of those on the frontlines, funders were able to gain a better understanding of the value of climate justice and the importance of a human-centered approach to climate change adaptation.

Funders assembled at the roundtable shared the work they were already doing which intersects – or could potentially intersect -- with climate justice. Human rights were a theme that cut across much of the conversation. Specific issues discussed included: indigenous rights, climate displacement and relocation, land and natural resources, capacity building for front-line NGOs, the role of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and promoting women’s leadership.

The CJRF roundtable was a unique opportunity to bring together the funding community and those on the frontlines of climate change. It created a starting point from which CJRF seeks to build an on-going dialogue among funders.  We are now working with our partners to identify specific topics for additional discussion, and plan to hold at least two additional funder events in the coming year. A report from the event is available for download here.

Oak Foundation Launches $20 Million Climate Change Fund

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The Geneva-based Oak Foundation has announced a six-year, $20 million grant to the New Venture Fund to establish a fund that will invest in communities on the frontlines of climate change.

The Climate Justice Resilience Fund will award grants to organizations working to help communities in East Africa, the Bay of Bengal region, and the Arctic identify and implement approaches to climate change adaptation and resilience, acquire advocacy skills, and access information they can use to influence policy at the local, national, and international levels. Read more from Philanthropy News Digest.


A Global Green Funder Tries its Hand at Community-Level Climate Justice

The growing Oak Foundation has been on the move this year, making big shifts within its environment program. The latest development sets aside $20 million for the underfunded cause of climate justice. Read more from Tate Williams at Inside Philanthropy.


Introducing the new Climate Justice Resilience Fund: investing in communities on the frontlines of climate change

© Anne Henshaw/Oak Foundation

Climate change has become one of the most contested terms in the English language today. The term inspires debate and fear. Why? Because a changing climate affects everyone in some manner – increased risks of storms, droughts, floods and other natural disasters, rising sea levels and changing temperature patterns are just some of the possible consequences. Without action, climate change could radically affect the world we know today, and could completely devastate some communities.  But together we can ensure people are protected from the greatest impacts of climate change. Read more.