Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the following members of Oxfam GB’s Research Team for editing the articles in this issue of Gender & Development: Filippo Artuso, Silvia Galandini, Irene Guijt, Patricia Espinoza Revollo, Ruth Mayne, and Anam Parvez. We would also like to thank Rosa Wilson Garwood, Ines Smyth, and Natalie Le Cornu for their work on this issue. We are grateful for their support.
Notes on contributors
Irene Dankelman has a background in ecology and specialises in gender and environment issues. Until her retirement in 2019, she worked as lecturer at the Radboud University in Nijmegen (Netherlands). Irene is an author, a regular speaker, and an independent advisor on gender and climate change issues for many organisations and institutions worldwide. Postal address: c/o The Editor, Gender & Development, Oxfam House, John Smith Drive, Oxford OX4 2JY, UK. Email: [email protected]
Kavita Naidu is an international human rights lawyer from Fiji working in climate justice at the Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and Development (APWLD) in Thailand. She works with grassroots women in all their diversity from Asia and the Pacific to build a feminist climate justice movement. She recently joined Progressive International as a Council member to work with activists from around the world to help shape a new progressive international order centred on all people’s well-being. Postal address: c/o The Editor, Gender & Development, Oxfam House, John Smith Drive, Oxford OX4 2JY, UK. Email: [email protected]
Notes
1 See, for example, Bradshaw, Sarah, and Brian Linneker (2014) Gender and Environmental Change in the Developing World, London: International Institute for Environment and Development, 13.