Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation Among Funders Backing Environmental Leaders from Diverse Backgrounds
Philanthropy and environmentalism are generally very white spaces, and efforts to diversify the movement have been characterized by one influential report as “lackluster.” But there is a set of foundations and nonprofits aware of just how important it is for the movement to not only reflect those most impacted by environmental issues, but also to follow their lead.
The Goldman Prizes come to mind, as does sustainable agriculture work happening at the Jessie Smith Noyes Foundation, the climate work of the Chorus Foundation, and a growing initiative at the Democracy Alliance, to name a few. The Green 2.0 initiative has been driving and documenting progress on this front, including a push for greater transparency among nonprofits and foundations.
One such initiative working to back leaders from diverse backgrounds is the Bullitt Environmental Fellowship, which grants $100,000 across two years to grad students in the Pacific Northwest pursuing leadership positions in the environmental field. Faculty nominate students, and while anyone is eligible regardless of citizenship, nominees must be from communities that are underrepresented in the environmental movement. They also must be currently enrolled at a school in British Columbia, Washington State or Oregon.
The latest winner is Cornelius Adewale, a Ph.D. student at Washington State University originally from Nigeria, who is a rising star in sustainable agriculture research. Adewale has an inspiring story, growing up working on cocoa farms in a rural community, then becoming a star student of agriculture as an undergrad. He showed showed an incredible commitment to sustainable food production by turning down a job at global consulting firm Accenture to start up an organic farm, which he eventually grew to five acres...