Episodios

  • In this special episode, which concludes Season 2 of the podcast, Kumi speaks with Indian activist Harsh Mander.

    This episode was recorded in August 2022 at a time when Harsh was under intense scrutiny for his activities by the Indian government. At the time of recording, he was on the point of returning home to India despite great risks to his personal liberty and pressure from family and friends not to do so. Still, he returned, committed to standing with those in need and fighting hate, Islamophobia, homelessness and violence.

    Learn more about Power, People & Planet on the website:
    https://powerpeopleplanet.org

    To watch full episodes of the podcast follow Kumi's YouTube channel

    Follow Kumi on social media:

    LinkedInInstagramTwitterFacebook

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    Power, People and Planet is produced in association with the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy:
    https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Additional support for the podcast was provided by the Robert Bosch Stiftung:
    https://www.bosch-stiftung.de/en

  • Kate Raworth is a renegade economist focused on making economics fit for 21st century realities. She is the creator of the Doughnut of social and planetary boundaries, and co-founder of Doughnut Economics Action Lab.

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    Learn more about Power, People & Planet on the website:
    https://powerpeopleplanet.org

    To watch full episodes of the podcast follow Kumi's YouTube channel

    Follow Kumi on social media:

    LinkedInInstagramTwitterFacebook

    -----------------------

    Power, People and Planet is produced in association with the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy:
    https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Additional support for the podcast was provided by the Robert Bosch Stiftung:
    https://www.bosch-stiftung.de/en

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  • In a wide-ranging discussion on South Africa with veteran activist Vishwas Satgar, Kumi explores the country's political past, present and future.

    With crucial elections taking place in 2024, what impact will they have for a country in crisis? What are the systemic issues that perpetuate these problems? And what can be learned from the historical victories and failures of South African political resistance?

    Our Guest:

    Vishwas Satgar is an associate professor of International Relations at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. He is the editor of the Democratic Marxism series, and is the principal investigator for the Emancipatory Futures Studies in the Anthropocene project and a democratic eco-socialist.

    Follow Vishwas's work:
    Emancipatory Futures website: https://emancipatoryfutures.co.za/
    On X: https://x.com/VishwasSatgar

    Learn more about Power, People & Planet on the website:
    https://powerpeopleplanet.org

    To watch full episodes of the podcast follow Kumi's YouTube channel

    Follow Kumi on social media:

    LinkedInInstagramTwitterFacebook

    -----------------------

    Power, People and Planet is produced in association with the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy:
    https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Additional support for the podcast was provided by the Robert Bosch Stiftung:
    https://www.bosch-stiftung.de/en

  • In the early 1980s there was a slogan: think globally, act locally. Behind the slogan was the idea that, irrespective of the issue we were trying to address at the local or national level, we needed to better understand how global discourse, global processes and global power had the ability to impact what you could or could not achieve at the local or national level.

    In the 1990s, a feminist organisation from the global South called Development Alternatives for Women in a New Era (DAWN) said that perhaps what we need to be doing is thinking locally and acting globally: to think in terms of what is needed at the local level and then advocate at the global level if that’s where real power resides. In reality, it’s not a question of choosing one or the other but about getting the right balance.

    In this episode Kumi explores the different avenues of global engagement to understand the pitfalls and opportunities of such engagements.

    Our Guests:

    MarĂ­a Fernanda Espinosa is an Ecuadorian diplomat, politician, poet, linguist and academic with more than 30 years of experience in international organisations, the Ecuadorian government, NGOs and academia.

    She served as President of the 73rd Session of the United Nations General Assembly (2018-2019). She has held no less than three different senior ministerial positions in Ecuador’s government. She has also served as ambassador and permanent representative of Ecuador to the United Nations in New York (2008-2009) and Geneva (2014-2017). As of January 2023, she sits on the board of trustees of the International Crisis Group.

    Follow María’s work:

    Twitter: @mfespinosaEC LinkedIn


    Meena Raman is the President of Sahabat Alam Malaysia (Friends of the Earth Malaysia), an environmental NGO based in Penang, Malaysia. She is the Legal Advisor to the Consumers’ Association of Penang (CAP), a Malaysian NGO that has been advancing the rights and well-being of consumers. Since 2007 she has also been head of programmes of Third World Network

    An expert on climate change, especially on the global negotiations including the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the Kyoto Protocol, the Paris Agreement and the Green Climate Fund (GCF), she monitors and reports on the negotiations and provides analysis and support both to developing country governments as well as to civil society participants.

    Follow Meena’s work:

    Sahabat Alam Malaysia website: https://foe-malaysia.org/


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    Learn more about Power, People & Planet on the website:
    https://powerpeopleplanet.org

    To watch full episodes of the podcast follow Kumi's YouTube channel

    Follow Kumi on social media:

    LinkedInInstagramTwitterFacebook

    -----------------------

    Power, People and Planet is produced in association with the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy:
    https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Additional support for the podcast was provided by the Robert Bosch Stiftung:
    https://www.bosch-stiftung.de/en

  • Unjust laws certainly should be broken. Mandela, Rosa Parks, and many other inspirational leaders had no hesitation in calling to break unjust laws. But laws that prevent the voices of ordinary people from being heard also need to be resisted, because right now, in more than 100 countries around the world, governments in the last decade have taken various actions to shrink the civic space by restricting freedom of association, freedom of assembly, and freedom of expression.

    At a time when there is so much hate, violence, and aggravation, activism must be imbued by love, compassion, caring, and a sense of justice, peace, and dignity. How can we embolden creative, peaceful, civil disobedience on a significant scale to wake up our leaders before it is too late and dig in deep to have the stamina and perseverance to keep going until those injustices are removed?


    Our guests:

    Clare Farrell is an active citizen, devoting her creativity, her energy, and occasionally her personal liberty to fight against climate collapse and the wider environmental crisis. She is also a fashion designer and lecturer. She has been arrested numerous times for her climate activism and as one of the founders of Extinction Rebellion she helps coordinate a mass movement of people using non-violent civil disobedience.

    Marta Benavides is a theologian, ordained minister, permaculturist, educator, and artist. A leader of an ecumenical revolution focused on bringing peace to her country El Salvador, she is an ordained pastor who chose “to live and not die for the revolution” and has been bringing people from all fields to defend human rights and develop a culture of peace. She worked closely with Archbishop Oscar Romero who was assassinated in 1980, which would see her go into exile in Mexico and the US, she returned to El Salvador in ‘92 following the peace accords.

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    Learn more about Power, People & Planet on the website:
    https://powerpeopleplanet.org

    To watch full episodes of the podcast follow Kumi's YouTube channel

    Follow Kumi on social media:

    LinkedInInstagramTwitterFacebook

    -----------------------

    Power, People and Planet is produced in association with the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy:
    https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Additional support for the podcast was provided by the Robert Bosch Stiftung:
    https://www.bosch-stiftung.de/en

  • The contribution of the legal community through innovative, strategic litigation and other legal efforts is going to be one of the most critical undertakings in the fight for climate justice. Currently, there are more than 1,400 climate lawsuits underway. These legal battles address the destruction of our ecosystems and the attempts of indigenous people to uphold their rights through a range of different struggles.

    Litigation and legal strategy has been a critical part of ensuring the strength of the activist community. Indeed, the legal community has a critical role in defending the shrinking democratic space in multiple countries throughout the world. However, the challenge remains in determining how legal strategies intersect with other mobilising strategies. Another challenge is determining the proportionality of effort that should be afforded to litigation battles, especially given that the wheels of justice turn very slowly in many countries: the climate crisis cannot wait for deliverance from protracted litigation in new areas of environmental law, corporate law and elsewhere.

    Our guests:

    Markus N. Beeko was appointed Secretary General of the German section of Amnesty International in 2016. He has been active in leadership positions for Amnesty in Germany and the International Secretariat in London since 2004. He is the Chair of Amnesty’s international steering group on "Human Rights in the Digital Age". He chairs the board of trustees of Stiftung Menschenrechte, and he is also Vice Chair of the board of the German Institute for Human Rights.

    Follow Markus’s work:

    Twitter: @mnbeeko LinkedIn


    Nani Jansen Reventlow is an internationally recognised human rights lawyer specialised in strategic litigation at the intersection of human rights, social justice, and technology. She is the Founder of Systemic Justice, the first Black-led, majority BPOC organisation in Europe working to radically transform how the law works for communities fighting for racial, social, and economic justice.


    Follow Nani’s work:

    Website: https://www.nanijansen.org/Twitter: @InterwebzNani

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    Learn more about Power, People & Planet on the website:
    https://powerpeopleplanet.org

    To watch full episodes of the podcast follow Kumi's YouTube channel

    Follow Kumi on social media:

    LinkedInInstagramTwitterFacebook

    -----------------------

    Power, People and Planet is produced in association with the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy:
    https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Additional support for the podcast was provided by the Robert Bosch Stiftung:
    https://www.bosch-stiftung.de/en

  • The challenge of activism today must include winning over those with whom we disagree, for example, those who have not yet embraced the agendas of climate and economic justice. In a country like the US where about 40% of people have been misled by the falsehoods of right-wing media, democracy is under great threat if activists for justice are not able to win over a significant number of those who support antidemocratic ideas. This episode explores the questions of why this is so difficult and what strategies we may employ to build much-needed bridges of dialogue, engagement, and possibly conversion. Can we build narratives and messages that help people break out of ideological silos? How do we win over people who occupy positions vastly different from those promoting economic, gender, and climate justice?

    Our guests:

    Sharan Burrow is the general secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC) and a former president of the Australian Council of Trade Unions. Sharan is a passionate advocate and campaigner for social justice, women’s rights, the environment, and labour law reforms, and has led union negotiations on major economic reforms and labour rights campaigns in her home country of Australia and globally.

    She has also served as a member of the Governing Body of the International Labour Organisation and is represented on a number of international commissions concerning climate action, industrial transition, and economic reform.

    Follow Sharan’s work:

    The International Trade Union Confederation website: https://www.ituc-csi.orgTwitter: @SharanBurrow


    Alnoor Ladha is a political strategist, writer, and activist. Alnoor’s work focuses on the intersection of political organising, storytelling, and technology. He was the co-founder and Executive Director of The Rules, a global network of activists, coders, researchers, writers, and others focused on changing the rules that create inequality, poverty, and climate change. The Rules started in 2012 as a time-bound project and an experiment in anarchist organisational design, exploring new ways of how to work, play, and make trouble together.

    He is a co-founder of Tierra Valiente, an alternative community and healing centre in the jungle of northern Costa Rica. He is a board member of Culture Hack Labs and The Emergence Network.

    Follow Alnoor’s work:

    Culture Hack Labs website: https://www.culturehack.ioTwitter: @alnoorladha

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    Learn more about Power, People & Planet on the website:
    https://powerpeopleplanet.org

    To watch full episodes of the podcast follow Kumi's YouTube channel

    Follow Kumi on social media:

    LinkedInInstagramTwitterFacebook

    -----------------------

    Power, People and Planet is produced in association with the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy:
    https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Additional support for the podcast was provided by the Robert Bosch Stiftung:
    https://www.bosch-stiftung.de/en

  • With the crises in front of us so complex, are their solutions to be found at the global or local level? Will our technologies emerge fast enough to avert the greatest threats and, if not, how do we prepare for that unknown future? And how can even the boldest of activist movements hope to have an impact against overwhelming economic and cultural power? In this episode Kumi discusses ways to reimagine and reinvent the ways we live with one of Britain’s leading figures in the fight for a better world.

    Our guest:

    George Monbiot is a trained zoologist and scientist but is most commonly noted for his journalism, writing and his political and environmental activism, in which he has been engaged for over 30 years. He is a columnist for the Guardian and was awarded the 2022 Orwell Prize for Journalism. His latest book Regenesis: Feeding the World Without Devouring the Planet explores a new future for food production, one of the most climate-devastating industries humanity currently engages in.

    Follow George's work:

    George’s website: https://www.monbiot.com/Twitter: @GeorgeMonbiot

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    Click here to watch a full video version of this episode.

    Learn more about Power, People & Planet on the website:
    https://powerpeopleplanet.org

    To watch full episodes of the podcast follow Kumi's YouTube channel

    Follow Kumi on social media:

    LinkedInInstagramTwitterFacebook

    -----------------------

    Power, People and Planet is produced in association with the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy:
    https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Additional support for the podcast was provided by the Robert Bosch Stiftung:
    https://www.bosch-stiftung.de/en

  • The right to participation is one of the most powerful and basic rights, and far too often people who are living in the frontlines of various struggles at the grassroots levels are spectators where they should be central players. In the climate movement we have seen how activists from the global south and the lives of everyday people are consistently sidelined in the climate summit negotiations.

    These spaces often purport to be an opportunity for activists to engage with power but in reality these engagements and spaces only reify the current power dynamics while serving as tokenistic acts for both activists and those in power. Bringing the voices of those that do not make it out of the congested media environment, which is already stacked against them, is one of the many struggles that face grassroots activists in poor and marginalised communities around the world. So what do we need to strengthen the voices of grassroots activists? What are the barriers to the voices of grassroots activism being heard?

    Our guests:

    Luisa Neubauer was one of the lead organisers of Fridays For Future in Germany - a movement that brought 1.4 million people to the streets of German towns and cities in September 2019. A talented community organiser and rousing public speaker, she has since become a powerful voice among a generation of young Germans who are taking a stand against climate inaction.

    Follow Luisa’s work:

    Twitter: @Luisamneubauer Instagram: @luisaneubauer


    Sashi Kiran is the trailblazing founder and chief executive officer of a grassroots not-for-profit that provides economic opportunities for underserved communities in Fiji. She started FRIEND as it is better known, after Fiji’s 2000 political crisis to create income generating opportunities for women and men from rural and peri-urban settlements and villages, youth and people with special needs; and to strengthen relations between Fiji’s two main communities. She has worked with the Commonwealth Foundation, and networks such as CIVICUS: World Alliance for Citizen Participation, Asia South Pacific Association for Basic and Adult Education and serves on the Regional Advisory Group Member of the Global Network of CSOs on Disaster Risk Reduction (GNDR).

    Follow Sashi’s work:

    FRIEND Fiji website: http://friendfiji.comLinkedIn

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    Click here to watch a full video version of this episode.

    Learn more about Power, People & Planet on the website:
    https://powerpeopleplanet.org

    To watch full episodes of the podcast follow Kumi's YouTube channel

    Follow Kumi on social media:

    LinkedInInstagramTwitterFacebook

    -----------------------

    Power, People and Planet is produced in association with the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy:
    https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Additional support for the podcast was provided by the Robert Bosch Stiftung:
    https://www.bosch-stiftung.de/en

  • In this special live episode, Kumi discusses the connection between arts and activism with the renowned artist Olafur Eliasson and Molly Fannon, CEO at Museum for the United Nations - UN Live.

    In the face of collective action problems such as the climate crisis, one of the biggest weaknesses in activism is the inability to communicate its narratives, messages, and vision beyond certain groups of people. How can the work of artists help create change? What can art and activism learn from each other?

    This episode was recorded at an event hosted by the Robert Bosch Stiftung on the 20th April 2022.

    Our guests:

    Ólafur Elíasson is an Icelandic–Danish artist known for his large-scale installation art employing elemental materials such as light, water, and air temperature to enhance the viewer's experience. Regarded as a leading artist in bringing awareness of climate and environmental issues to the public, Ólafur’s work often focuses on the interaction between spectator and environment, and the common ground between art and science. He currently lives and works in Berlin, where he was a professor at the Berlin University of the Arts. His studio now employs more than 40 people including artists, architects, scientists, and technicians.

    Follow Ólafur’s work:

    Website: https://olafureliasson.net/Instagram: @studioolafureliasson


    Molly Fannon is the CEO of Museum of the United Nations - UN Live, a global institution based in Copenhagen with a mission to “unleash the power of culture to inspire local action and drive global change”. Before joining UN Live, Molly was Director of the Smithsonian’s Office of International Relations and Global Program, leading partnerships with major global organizations such as the World Economic Forum and governments worldwide. Molly’s early career centred around designing and managing largescale international development programs, funded by institutions such as USAID and the World Bank. Her professional experience spans more than 40 countries on 6 continents.

    Follow Molly’s work:

    UN Live website: https://www.museumfortheunitednations.com/LinkedIn

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    Click here to watch a full video version of this episode.

    Learn more about Power, People & Planet on the website:
    https://powerpeopleplanet.org

    To watch full episodes of the podcast follow Kumi's YouTube channel
    Follow Kumi on social media:

    LinkedInInstagramTwitterFacebook

    -----------------------

    Power, People and Planet is produced in association with the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy:

    https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Additional support for the podcast was provided by the Robert Bosch Stiftung:

    https://www.bosch-stiftung.de/en

  • In this episode, we reflect on the critical importance of the power of intersectional approaches between different movements so that they might win bigger battles faster. Intersectionality refers to the interconnected nature of social categories such as race, class, and gender. They create overlapping and interdependent systems of discrimination or disadvantage. Intersectionality is a lens that allows us to view the hidden and invisible connections in our society. While many in civil society and different movements recognize this theoretically, there’s still far too high a propensity towards siloed activism.

    Our guests:

    Naomi Klein is an award-winning journalist, columnist, and international bestselling author of eight books including No Logo, The Shock Doctrine, This Changes Everything, No Is Not Enough and On Fire, which have been translated into over 35 languages. She is a Senior Contributing Writer for The Intercept. She was the inaugural Gloria Steinem Endowed Chair in Media, Culture and Feminist Studies at Rutgers University, and is now Honorary Professor of Media and Climate at Rutgers.

    Follow Naomi’s work:

    Website: https://naomiklein.org/Twitter: @NaomiAKlein

    Laura Garcia is a Mexican feminist who has advocated for human rights, social justice, and civil society throughout her career. Before joining Global Greengrants as CEO, Laura served for seven years as the Executive Director of Fondo Semillas, a Mexican non profit organisation that finances grassroots organisations to achieve gender equality. Laura has co-created networks to promote community philanthropy in the Global South. She currently serves on the boards of Oxfam Mexico, Co-Impact, and the Global Fund for Community Foundations.

    Follow Laura’s work:

    Global Greengrants Fund website: https://www.greengrants.org/Twitter: @lauragarciac

    Georgia Hirsty is the co-founder and executive director of Frailty Myths, a community-rooted diversity, equity, and inclusion group that uses hands-on activities and the principles of practice to transform oppressive cultures and advance justice. Georgia has worked extensively with Greenpeace and across social and environmental movements in a variety of leadership roles, with a focus on direct action, empowerment, and a deep interest in long term behaviour change. All of her work grows from the ethos that we must practice being in the new world we want to live in so as not to replicate destructive patterns.

    Follow Georgia’s work:

    Frailty Myths website: https://frailtymyths.org/Georgia’s blog: https://georgiafayehirsty.wordpress.com/

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    Click here to watch a full video version of this episode.

    Learn more about Power, People & Planet on the website:
    https://powerpeopleplanet.org

    Follow Kumi on social media:

    LinkedInInstagramTwitterFacebook

    Power, People and Planet is produced in association with the Green Economy Coalition

    https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Additional support provided by the Robert Bosch Stiftung

  • Power, People and Planet returns for its second season to tackle the toughest and most urgent questions of our time.

    In this new series of in-depth discussions, host and veteran activist Kumi Naidoo talks with guests from across the globe about the current state of activism, its failure, its successes and its future.

    In the most consequential decade in humanity's history, we must focus and improve our efforts not simply for change but for a just transition to a more equitable, more inclusive and more sustainable world.

    ***
    Learn more about Power, People & Planet: https://powerpeopleplanet.org

    Follow Kumi Naidoo:
    Twitter
    Instagram
    LinkedIn
    Facebook

    ***
    Power, People and Planet is produced in association with the Green Economy Coalition
    https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Additional support for this season was provided by Robert Bosch Stiftung
    https://www.bosch-stiftung.de/en




  • "We utilise the power of culture to our own benefit"

    Islam Elbeiti is a Sudanese bass player, radio presenter, and social change activist. She serves as Community Engagement Lead at The Innovation for Policy Foundation, Cultural Wave Support Lead at The Global Assembly and is co-founder of the Sudanese Innovation and Entrepreneurship Network.

    In this episode, Kumi speaks with Islam about her journey as a bass player, the enduring and transformative power of culture, the role that music played in the Sudanese revolution and changing attitudes towards female artists in Africa.

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    Produced by the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy: https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Islam on Twitter: @islamelbeiti

    Islam on Instagram: @islamelbeiti

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    Learn more about Power, People & Planet by visiting: https://powerpeopleplanet.org

  • "There is no alternative to alliances and there is no alternative to solidarity"

    Born in Mumbai, Lysa John started out building grassroots campaigns around urban poverty, governance and housing rights. Since then she has worked with Save the Children International and as Head of Outreach for the UN High Level Panel on the Sustainable Development Goals, and today describes herself as “a relentless enabler of activism.” She currently serves as the Secretary General of CIVICUS, a global alliance of civil society organisations and activists.

    In this episode Lysa and Kumi discuss the future and vulnerability of citizen action and civil society, the limitations of international organisations, and the growing dangers of the widening inequality gap. They also speak about her early work as a grassroots organiser in Mumbai, outdated geo-political thinking and her idea that "the present system is not merely broken but deliberately malevolent".

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    Produced by the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy: https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Lysa on Twitter: @lysajohn

    CIVICUS on Twitter: @CIVICUSalliance

    CIVICUS website: https://www.civicus.org/

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    Learn more about Power, People & Planet by visiting: https://powerpeopleplanet.org

  • “What we need are good politicians
 who understand how basic access to water and sanitation is, if you want to deliver on any other development priority ”

    Lawyer and human rights activist Catarina de Albuquerque made history as the first person to serve as United Nations Special Rapporteur on the right to safe drinking water and sanitation (2008 - 2014). She currently serves as CEO of Sanitation and Water for All, a global multi-stakeholder partnership with the goal of ensuring the availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation worldwide.

    In this frank and powerful conversation, Catarina and Kumi discuss the vital but often overlooked topics of water and sanitation. While access to these have been human rights since 2010 (thanks in part to Catarina’s work) she explains the ongoing crises and impacts that continue to affect billions in both the Global North and South. Water and sanitation, as you will hear, are not just matters of health and well-being but impact every aspect of human development from security, to education, to national prosperity.

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    Produced by the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy: https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Catarina on Twitter: @CatarinadeAlbuq

    Sanitation and Water for All website: https://www.sanitationandwaterforall.org/

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    Learn more about Power, People & Planet by visiting: https://powerpeopleplanet.org

  • “There are no prisons big enough for ideas. They can’t put our ideas behind bars. Your movement and what you work for will always be bigger than you.”

    Disha Ravi is an Indian climate and environmental activist. She is a founder and active member of Fridays For Future India with a focus on “MAPA” (most affected people and areas). Her arrest and detention by the Indian government in February of 2021 was met with widespread international condemnation.

    In conversation with Kumi, Disha shares her perspective as a youth climate leader from the Global South. She explains what it means to be part of a movement that is bigger than oneself, how the climate struggle differs between rich and poor countries, and speaks passionately about what brings her inspiration and keeps her fighting.

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    Produced by the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy: https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Disha on Twitter: @disharavii

    Disha on Instagram: @disharavii

    Fridays For Future website: https://fridaysforfuture.org

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    Learn more about Power, People & Planet by visiting: https://powerpeopleplanet.org

  • “The social contracts can always be negotiated. I think our responsibility actually is to be constantly negotiating what that social contract looks like. How we relate to each other. How we live with one another.”

    Dr Amara Enyia is a community organizer, lawyer and political strategist. A former candidate for Mayor of Chicago, she is currently the managing director of Diaspora Rising, an advocacy hub dedicated to strengthening the bonds amongst members of the global Black family.

    In this conversation, Kumi and Amara take an in-depth look at the relationship between cities and their residents, the intersection between environmental & urban justice issues, and what it means to be an organiser and activist on both local and international levels.

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    Produced by the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy: https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Dr Amara Enyia on Twitter: @AmaraEnyia

    Amara's website: https://amaraenyia.com

    Diaspora Rising website: www.diasporarising.org

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    Learn more about Power, People & Planet by visiting: https://powerpeopleplanet.org

  • “Understanding that actually power lies inherent in us. It’s the responsibility and the rights and the beauties and the power to actually change society from within and outside.”

    Ashish Kothari is an Indian green activist, scholar and co-founder of the Kalpavriksh Environmental Action Group. He has served as chair of Greenpeace India, on the board of Greenpeace International and has been active with a number of people’s movements. He has also been part of the Indian government’s Environmental Appraisal Committee and other government initiatives.

    In this episode, Kumi and Ashish discuss alternatives to how societies can govern themselves, the need for radical ecological democracy and how activists can fight back against increasingly hostile governments.

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    Produced by the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy: https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Ashish Kothari on Twitter: @chikikothari
    Kalpavriksh website: https://kalpavriksh.org

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    Learn more about Power, People & Planet by visiting: https://powerpeopleplanet.org

  • "Health is a public good. So if we have a market system that's not working for the public good, then that needs to change."

    Dr Tolullah Oni is a public health physician and urban epidemiologist. She grew up in Lagos and today is a Clinical Senior Research associate with the University of Cambridge as well as an Honorary Associate Professor at the University of Cape Town. She is also Founder of UrbanBetter, an Africa-led, youth-privileged, science-based and equity-centred learning collaborative designing health and sustainability in cities.

    In this episode, Tolullah explains the deeper structural issues that surround public health, how cities can play an important role in health, and the failures the COVID-19 pandemic has exposed in our systems.

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    Produced by the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy: https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Tolullah on Twitter: @DrTolullah
    UrbanBetter website: https://urbanbetter.science/

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    Learn more about Power, People & Planet by visiting: https://powerpeopleplanet.org

  • "There's nothing like watching the home that you live in being demolished by bulldozers to make you politically conscious."

    Growing up in Cape Town's District 6 in the 1970s, Tasneem experienced racial segregation, forced eviction and discrimination first hand. Her anti-apartheid activism eventually took her into politics, serving as a provincial environment minister in South Africa’s post-apartheid ANC government. As a radical minister within a conservative bureaucracy, Tasneem fought to connect environmental issues to poverty and development.

    Since then, Tasneem has served as WWF's head of global climate policy, going behind the scenes as head of delegation at the Paris Climate Talks, and now leads the Climate Action Network – the planet’s largest coalition for climate justice.

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    Produced by the Green Economy Coalition, the world’s largest movement for a green and fair economy: https://greeneconomycoalition.org

    Climate Action Network website: https://climatenetwork.org

    Social media: @TasneemEssop, @CANIntl

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    Learn more about the Power, People & Planet podcast, subscribe and find more episodes:

    https://powerpeopleplanet.org