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Wikipedia:WikiProject Women in Red/Climate

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WiR redlist index: Climate


Welcome to WikiProject Women in Red (WiR). Our objective is to turn red links into blue ones. Our scope is women's biographies, women's works, and women's issues, broadly construed.

This list of red links is intended to serve as a basis for creating new articles on the English Wikipedia. Please note however that the red links on this list may well not be suitable as the basis for an article. All new articles must satisfy Wikipedia's notability criteria with reliable independent sources.

Women in Red logo

This is a list under development of missing articles on women who are (or have been) notable as people to do with climate, environment and sustainability.

Activists

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From SHE letter to Boris Johnson:

SHE Steering Committee:

Present and future leaders:

ABC News:

UN Gender and women:

  • Verania Cahao [], Programme Specialist, Climate, Gender and Inclusion, UNDP
  • Angie Dazé [], Senior Policy Advisor and Gender Equality Lead, IISD
  • Ana Victoria Rojas [], Senior Gender and Climate Change Advisor, IUCN
  • Amy Reggers [], International Consultant, UN Women Office for Asia and the Pacific
  • Amel Hamza [], Manager, Gender and Women Empowerment Division, African Development Bank

COP26 Turning Point for Gender:

  • Samantha Hung [], Chief of Gender Equality Thematic Group at the Asian Development Bank
  • Sun-Ah Kim [], Deputy Regional Director at the UNICEF Regional Office for South Asia

Awards

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BBC 100 Women

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2021 Top 50 Women in Engineering: Engineering Heroes*

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*Might be more, I was just looking at job titles, not doing individual web-searches.

Environmental awards

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List of environmental awards

  • add name here
  • Giselle Hazzan [Wikidata], manager, Ein Afek nature reserve, Israel (2015)
  • Sansanee Choowaew [Wikidata] (Thailand), for her exceptional contributions to wetland management, education, training and capacity building, in Thailand and elsewhere in Asia (2008)
  • Reiko Nakamura (environmentalist) [Wikidata] (Japan), for promoting wetland conservation as an environmental journalist, and creating the Ramsar Centre Japan in 1990 (2005) [there is an Olympian with the same name]
  • Monique Coulet [Wikidata] (France), for her scientific research and commitment to making practical use of knowledge acquired in the field (2002)

Historical figures

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  • add name here

IPCC contributors

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Core writing team, AR6 Synthesis Report, 2022

"List of Contributors". 2019 Refinement to the 2006 IPCC Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas Inventories (PDF).

Oceanographers

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See "Women in Oceanography: A Decade Later" (PDF). Oceanography. 27 (4). 2014. and "Autobiographical Sketches of Women in Oceanography". Oceanography. 18 (1). 2005. Note, not all of these people will meet Wikipedia's notability guidelines. It's worth checking here: Wikipedia:Notability (academics) to see if the people on this list meet the criteria for notability.

References

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