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So our first exchange that we did with Global Exchange was called "Transformative Advocacy in Bolivia." We brought a group of ten environmental justice lawyers from throughout North America to work in partnership with grassroots women leaders in Bolivia, with the focus on sustainable agriculture and food security issues.
Before her time in Sacramento she worked for environmental NGOs throughout Arizona, California, and Bolivia. Valley CAN’s signature programs, Tune In & Tune Up and Clean Cars 4 All, have become key examples of California’s global leadership toward clean transportation in disadvantaged communities. “I Isabella received her B.S.
The most powerful impact we found was actually in the women's leadership and influence locally. You can just go on there and you can be talking immediately to women in Bolivia, and in Nepal, and drawing strength, courage, and support from them, and vice versa. They're coming from Nepal, the Philippines, and Bolivia.
I co-developed and co-taught a series of summer executive institutes at Stanford about women and leadership. It is very different to interview sex workers who have been trafficked in Phnom Penh, than to interview women who are doing knitting in Bolivia. Right at the end of that period, I also was teaching.
"I think there are many different ways in which you define leadership. I think what makes us unique is that we are really investing in women's leadership and women's creativity in developing local solutions to some of the world's most challenging problems. I think there are many different ways in which you define leadership.
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