climate change
… technology, when designed with love and local wisdom, can transform both climate adaptation and sexual health outcomes.
Climate change is having effects on health and, more specifically, sexual and reproductive health needs and services for women and marginalised populations.
Today I told him that rain wasn’t from evaporation or condensation. I said clouds cried because they missed water so much.
हमने सालों में जो हुनर, रिश्तों के जाल और टिके रहने की ताक़त बनाई है, वो सिर्फ़ हाशिए की कहानियाँ नहीं हैं – वो ऐसे औज़ार हैं जिनसे पूरी व्यवस्था सीख सकती है।
… climate change is not just environmental. It is social, political, economic, emotional. And it demands that we listen carefully to who is affected, how, and what they are already doing to survive.
My birthday is in May, a peak time of summer heat in the Awadh region of Uttar Pradesh. We knew that it was going to be hot, but did not have any idea of how bad it could get.
I’ve never known the answer to childhood questions…
To talk about climate justice, then, is to talk about who gets to feel safe, who gets to choose, who gets to want.
The skills, networks, and resilience we’ve built over years aren’t just stories from the margins; they’re tools the whole system can learn from.
Reasons why SRHR is not prioritised—but should be—in climate change policies, strategies, financing, and programmes are because women’s contribution and roles as agents of change are often disregarded due to gender inequality.