by Kate Mothes | Mar 6, 2024
With a body made from a motorcycle fender, wings from bike chain guards, and legs from tapestry staples and spectacle case parts, a beady-eyed owl comes to life from discarded metal.
French artist Edouard Martinet (previously) has a knack for revitalizing materials like motor components, medical implements, bicycle parts, and other accessories into meticulously detailed animals. While one fish takes shape from fan blades, cake molds, spatulas, and oil lamp badges, another’s teeth and bones are composed of upholstery staples and tablespoons. More
Do stories and artists like this matter to you? Become a Colossal Member today and support independent arts publishing for as little as $5 per month. The article From Recycled Motors and Discarded Metals, Edouard Martinet Imagines Meticulously Detailed Wildlife appeared first on Colossal.
by Komoneed | Mar 6, 2024
The Unjust Climate: Bridging the Gap for Women in Agriculture
jschoshinski
Tue, 03/05/2024 – 19:34
The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)’s new report – The unjust climate. Measuring the impact of climate change on the poor, women, and youth – demonstrates how climate stressors widen the income gap among rural people along the lines of class, gender, and age. By combining socioeconomic data from over 950 million rural people across 24 countries with over 70 years of climate data, this report reveals how climate change has adversely impacted female-headed households’ livelihoods to a greater degree than male-headed households. Despite the pronounced and disproportionate impacts of climate change on women, these issues remain barely visible in national climate policies and associated climate financing. There is an urgent need to increase awareness of these disparate climate impacts and to direct additional resources towards women’s empowerment and women farmers’ resilience.
Please join the CSIS Global Food and Water Security Program on Friday, March 8 at 11:00AM EST to discuss the unequal impacts of climate change on rural women in agriculture and the critical investments needed to address these disparities. CSIS is honored to welcome Deputy Director Lauren Phillips and Senior Economist Nicholas Sitko from FAO’s Rural Transformation and Gender Equality for opening remarks, followed by keynote remarks from USDA’s Xochitl Torres Small, a panel discussion between USAID’s Ann Vaughan, U.S. Department of State’s Christina Chan, and Lauren Phillips, and concluding remarks from FAO’s Chief Economist Máximo Torero.
Following the event there will be an in-person reception with light refreshments.
Video URL
Teaser Text
Join the CSIS Global Food and Water Security Program to discuss the unequal impacts of climate change on rural women in agriculture and the critical investments needed to address these disparities.
Event Date
Friday, March 8, 2024, 11:00 am
– 12:00 pm EST
(4:00 – 5:00 pm UTC)
Advanced registration required
Off
External Link
Register Here
Event Format
Virtual
In-Person
Event Type
Webinar/Presentation
Topic
Agriculture
Climate-Resilient Agriculture
Climate Change
Climate Finance
Climate Finance and Economic Growth
Food Security
Gender and Social Inclusion
Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities
Resilience
Strategic Objective
Adaptation
Integration
Mitigation
Sectors
Agriculture and Food Systems
Gender and Social Inclusion
Region
Global
Add to calendar
Add to Calendar
2024-03-08 16:00:00
2024-03-08 17:00:00
The Unjust Climate: Bridging the Gap for Women in Agriculture
The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)’s new report – The unjust climate. Measuring the impact of climate change on the poor, women, and youth – demonstrates how climate stressors widen the income gap among rural people along the lines of class, gender, and age. By combining socioeconomic data from over 950 million rural people across 24 countries with over 70 years of climate data, this report reveals how climate change has adversely impacted female-headed households’ livelihoods to a greater degree than male-headed households. Despite the pronounced and disproportionate impacts of climate change on women, these issues remain barely visible in national climate policies and associated climate financing. There is an urgent need to increase awareness of these disparate climate impacts and to direct additional resources towards women’s empowerment and women farmers’ resilience.
Please join the CSIS Global Food and Water Security Program on Friday, March 8 at 11:00AM EST to discuss the unequal impacts of climate change on rural women in agriculture and the critical investments needed to address these disparities. CSIS is honored to welcome Deputy Director Lauren Phillips and Senior Economist Nicholas Sitko from FAO’s Rural Transformation and Gender Equality for opening remarks, followed by keynote remarks from USDA’s Xochitl Torres Small, a panel discussion between USAID’s Ann Vaughan, U.S. Department of State’s Christina Chan, and Lauren Phillips, and concluding remarks from FAO’s Chief Economist Máximo Torero.
Following the event there will be an in-person reception with light refreshments.
Video URL
Global Climate Change
team@climatelinks.org
UTC
public
by Komoneed | Mar 6, 2024
Pricing will be key, but for now the plug-in hybrid Volkswagen Passat is an impressive all-round car
by Komoneed | Mar 6, 2024
This post was originally published on We Build ValueL’articolo Great Infrastructure and Archaeology: Italy Looking to the Future Also Rediscovers Its Past proviene da We Build...
by Komoneed | Mar 6, 2024
There are now several notable initiatives that specifically go to festivals to collect broken or abandoned tents in order to create new products from them. Their motivation is to set an example with regard to the mountains of waste on site, to draw attention to the abuses and to contribute to waste avoidance.
The post Upcycling festival waste – a new life for tents and sleeping bags appeared first on GOOD – The search engine for a better world.