A wide environmental portrait of South Sudanese women standing together in the Sudd wetlands during the golden hour. They hold hand-woven seed baskets, with the vast, reflective waters and acacia trees in the background. Warm, natural documentary photography style, high-contrast shadows.
A wide environmental portrait of South Sudanese women standing together in the Sudd wetlands during the golden hour. They hold hand-woven seed baskets, with the vast, reflective waters and acacia trees in the background. Warm, natural documentary photography style, high-contrast shadows.

Movement for Organic and Vulnerable Ecosystems

Bridging the Gap Between Conservation and Gender Justice

  • The Ecological Crisis: South Sudan holds some of the most ecologically significant yet deeply threatened landscapes in Africa—from critical wetlands to dense equatorial forests. These vulnerable ecosystems are rapidly facing climate strain, habitat destruction, and resource degradation, threatening both wildlife and human survival.

  • The Leadership Gap: Grassroots and indigenous women are the primary managers of local resources and the true stewards of these threatened habitats. Yet, they are systematically excluded from environmental governance, land rights, and conservation funding. Traditional environmental strategies fail when they ignore the women who live alongside these natural resources.

Restoration Guided by Local Sovereignty

Vision Statement

A resilient South Sudan where vibrant biodiversity and vulnerable ecosystems thrive under the sustainable stewardship and equal leadership of empowered grassroots women.

Mission Statement

To protect critical biodiversity and restore vulnerable ecosystems across South Sudan by amplifying the voices, securing the rights, and investing in the traditional ecological knowledge of local women leaders.

Our Three Core Pillars

Our Strategic Pillars

Ecosystem Stewardship

Gender & Climate Justice

Traditional Knowledge Preservation

We drive community-led conservation, habitat restoration, and local ecosystem protection initiatives that are designed and managed directly by the women living within these vulnerable landscapes.

We advocate for secure community land rights for women, dismantle barriers to their participation in climate governance, and provide systemic support to local women environmental defenders.

We document, safeguard, and scale indigenous, women-led ecological practices, sustainable natural resource management, and traditional seed-saving methods.

True ecological restoration begins when those who have stewarded the land for generations hold the decision-making power.

We bridge the gap between ancestral community stewardship and international conservation funding. By directing resources straight to grassroots councils, we ensure transparent, high-impact ecological protection.