FR stories
2024 Future Rising Fellow
FR Alumni
FELLOWS
For the past three years, the Future Rising Fellowship has been a cornerstone of Girl Rising’s commitment to supporting young leaders around the world in their work for climate justice and gender equity. The Fellows have been at the forefront of change, creating impactful projects that advance girls’ rights, education and address climate change.
While we are not currently seeking new applications for the Future Rising Fellowship, we remain committed to supporting the current and past Fellows as they continue their vital work. We encourage you to stay connected with us for updates on the Fellows’ progress and for information about new opportunities with Future Rising.
Thank you for your continued interest and support.
Future Rising Fellows have spoken at some of the world’s most influential convenings including the United Nations Goals House, One Young World, COP28, UN Right Here Right Now, and the Salzburg Seminar.
Future Rising Fellows
Every year, Girl Rising embarks on a global search for 10 new Future Rising Fellows.
They are young leaders between the ages of 17-25 working at the intersection of gender equity and climate justice. Future Rising Fellows are leaders, scientists, artists, educators, social innovators, communicators, and entrepreneurs. They share a deep passion for channeling the power of girls and women to make a just and sustainable future.
Through the Future Rising Fellowship, we provide financial support, skill building and training especially in storytelling, mentorship, professional opportunities, and access to networks.
Future Rising Fellows have spoken on some of the world’s most influential convenings including United Nations General Assembly Goals House, COP28, UN Right Here Right Now, and Salzburg Seminar.
2023 FUTURE RISING FELLOWS:
Andrea Villarreal Rodríguez
Mexico
Andrea Villarreal Rodríguez is a visual storyteller and environmental activist. Her work highlights the leadership of girls and women in addressing the climate crisis. She is a National Geographic Young Explorer and Communications Fellow at Girl Up Mexico— a United Nations Foundation initiative for gender equality. In 2022, she founded the Girl Up Mexico Storytelling Lab, collaborating with youth to craft impactful narratives through documentary film.
Her Future Rising Project is a short film about a group of women and their campaign as urban citizen scientists to save the urban ecology of the Santa Catarina River. This body of water, endangered by rapid urban growth and pollution, flows through Monterrey, Mexico. This group works as a collective, called “Journey to the Microcosmos,” to document the unique biodiversity of the river and rebuild the city’s relationship to the natural resource.
Charitie Ropati
Yup’ik & Sāmoan, Alaska Native and Pacific Islander
Charitie Ropati is an activist and ecologist of Yup’ik and Samoan heritage who researches the connections between plant ecology, permafrost and cultural resilience in coastal Native communities. She is an Arctic Youth Ambassador, an Arctic Resilient Youth Communities Fellow, and an Aspen Ideas Fellow. She co-founded a non-profit called lilnativegirlinSTEM, which promotes equity in STEM for Indigenous women and girls. She works to create access to education and climate justice for Indigenous voices. She is pursuing a Bachelor’s degree in civil engineering and anthropology at Columbia.
Charitie's Future Rising Project is a short film highlighting Indigenous women with successful careers to inspire and aid young girls in navigating academia and the workforce. In addition to the short film, Charitie hopes to create workshops for young Indigenous girls to share their experiences and stories.
Dayana Blanco Quiroga
Bolivia
Dayana Blanco Quiroga is an Aymara Indigenous woman from Oruro, Bolivia, and the first Indigenous professional woman in her family. She co-founded the Uru Uru Team— an initiative focused on saving Uru Uru Lake from harmful pollution through Indigenous traditional knowledge. The lake is a vital source of life for the surrounding Indigenous communities under threat from mining, wastewater, and activity, causing immense pollution. The Uru Uru Team seeks to use indigenous traditional knowledge to address these local environmental challenges and spread awareness of these harmful practices and industries.
Dayana’s Future Rising Project will be a multicultural and bilingual graphic novel, with both Aymara native dialect and English, to tell the story of Uru Uru Lake from Aymara ancestors to the present day. The book explains the environmental threats to the lake and highlights the work of the Uru Uru Team to restore a collective understanding of the lake’s importance for the community.
Maria Yaschenko
Argentina
Maria Yaschenko is a Ukrainian LGBT refugee and environmental advocate living in Argentina. She is a hydro-meteorologist and environmental education activist. She works to provide education access to vulnerable populations by teaching online courses for children lacking education opportunities, and hopes to launch a program to provide additional support. In her hydro-meteorology work, she studied climate change impacts by modeling Amazon River discharge.
Maria’s Future Rising Project is a film documenting the prominent women across Argentina making strides in climate and environmental justice work. Her project will highlight the issues facing the region and the women working to tackle climate change.
Shakhzoda Mirakova
Uzbekistan
Shakhzoda Mirakova is an aspiring journalist and documentary filmmaker from Uzbekistan. As an Uzbekistan Youth Leadership Program fellow, Shakhzoda received resources and funding to start EcoChange– an initiative where 100 volunteers found homes for 250 trees in Bukhara to combat deforestation. In February 2023, she was selected to represent Uzbekistan and her perspective on gender equality at the Harvard Conference for Asian and International Relations in Massachusetts. Her work highlights Central Asian voices and their stories of climate resilience. She is pursuing a degree in Journalism at the American University of Central Asia in Kyrgyzstan.
Shakhzoda’s Future Rising Project is an article and photo essay about a young woman fighting against pollution and deforestation in her hometown. The project follows a woman whose bravery made her a national activist, who continues this work today as the initiator of the ecological movement in Uzbekistan.
Anjali Boyd
United States
Anjali D. Boyd is a marine ecologist, educator, entrepreneur, and elected official from North Carolina. Her research focuses on developing cost-effective restoration and management practices to restore and conserve vulnerable marine ecosystems. Anjali is a National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellow, Ford Fellow, and National Geographic Explorer. As the Director of iNviTechnology, she works to combat the underrepresentation of women and ethnic minorities in STEM fields through educational, entrepreneurial programs for children. Anjali also serves as an elected official in her hometown of Durham, N.C., as a Durham County Soil and Water Conservation District Supervisor. She is a Ph.D. Candidate and Dean’s Graduate Fellow in the Nicholas School of the Environment at Duke University.
Anjali’s Future Rising Project is a short film that tells the story of a group of Black women marine scientists’ journey through the field of marine science. The film focuses on the importance of friendship to help these women persevere through adversity and hopes to inspire young Black women to see themselves as the future of marine biology.
Collins Busuru
Kenya
Collins Busuru is a wildlife biologist based in Amboseli, Kenya; he works to protect wildlife through conservation education and ecosystem restoration. In his role at the Center for Human Development— Conservation Kenya, Collins engages with the local community to provide education and resources in the face of deforestation, overgrazing, and drought, to foster climate resilience. Collins and his team in Amboseli run a mentorship program for local Maasai girls, supporting young women as they pursue their education.
Collins’ Future Rising Project will focus on the stories of these young Maasai girls and their relationship to nature. Based just outside Amboseli National Park at the base of Mt. Kilimanjaro, these young women learn skills to conserve their land in the face of worsening drought and threats from dangerous wildlife
Khongorzul Batbayar
Mongolia
Khongorzul is an educator from Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia. She works to close the divide between youth in rural and urban areas while creating deeper connections to the environment and conservation. She currently works as a program coordinator at the Mongol Ecology Center where their youth programs incorporate Mongolian nomadic culture and heritage into conservation education. While Khongorzul mainly focuses on youth education, she has begun to work with the rangers of protected areas of Mongolia and isolated communities in the fight against the climate threats of desertification and overgrazing.
Khongorzul’s Future Rising Project is a short film about a woman who works as a National Park Ranger to protect the environment and her journey as a young woman in a field dominated by older men. Her story highlights the critical job of Mongolian Rangers and their role in educating youth and engaging local communities to fight climate change together.
Selma Bichbich
Algeria
Selma Bichbich is an Algerian climate youth activist. She co-founded the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) Youth Network to engage young people across the region on climate and human rights issues. She represents North Africa at the Global Youth Leadership Council in the EarthUprising NGO, and is one of the Center of United Nations Constitutional Research delegates. She will serve as the delegate of Algeria at the Conference of Parties (COP) 27. Her work advocates for civic engagement and global unity to promote a sustainable future of stability. She works with youth across the MENA region to combat negative climate impacts for vulnerable communities. She is pursuing a Bachelor’s degree in Political Science in Lebanon.
Selma’s Future Rising Project is a social media campaign to share the experiences of young people affected by climate change through blog entries, articles, and videos. This campaign will highlight resilience and emphasize the local solutions in Algeria, the Mediterranean, and the MENA regions.
Sushmita Krishnan
India
Sushmita Krishnan is an ecologist. During her masters stint at Bharathidasan University, India she received fellowships to work on invasive species at the Indian Institute of Sciences and worked in collaboration with UNESCO’s Digital Games for Peace program as an individual specialist. She is an advocate for sustainability and a passionate writer as early as 15 years of age during her schooling at Montfort School, Trichy, India.
Sushmita’s Future Rising Project is an interactive story about an aquatic invasive weed, Eichhornia crassipes (water hyacinth), and the entrepreneurial ingenuity of different women engaged to repurpose this weed into a plethora of products to create sustainable businesses. She tells the story of these women who lack primary education leading to sustainable business opportunities.
2022 FUTURE RISING FELLOWS:
Anu Bazarragchaa
Mongolia
Anu Bazarragchaa grew up in rural Mongolia where she witnessed the intensifying impacts of climate change in her community. She is a feminist, computational biologist and writer who uses storytelling to explore the impact of climate change on women’s lives and on her family’s community who are nomadic pastoralists whose livelihoods are threatened by a changing environment. Anu plans to draw on traditional folklore of the Buryat and Tsaatan people in her Future Rising Fellowship project to highlight the intensifying water crisis in her country. She has written for Breathe Mongolia and is also a regional facilitator and a girl advisor at FRIDA | The Young Feminist Fund. She is inspired by her younger sister and wants her to grow up free from gender-based discrimination.
Geela Garcia
Philippines
Geela Garcia is a multimedia journalist based in Manila, Philippines. Her photographic work, which documents stories of women, food sovereignty, and the environment, aims to rewrite history from the lived experience of its all too often unseen makers. Her writing and photography have been featured in Thomson Reuters, South China Morning Post, and Philstar among others. Her Future Rising Fellowship project will chronicle the lived experiences of indigenous Ivatan women on the island of Batanes and how they maintain their traditional farming practices despite the impact of climate change in this remote archipelagic province located on the northernmost island of the Philippines.
Tashi Lhazom
Nepal
Tashi Lhazom is a filmmaker from Limi valley, located in the heart of the Himalayas in Nepal. She is the daughter of a herder and the first one in her family to get an education. Tashi learned to be political, loud and assertive from a young age. She uses her voice to advocate for her community and inspire young girls from her village to dream big, own their spaces, and give back to their community. Tashi’s Future Rising Fellowship project is a short film about the pastoralist women in Limi whose way of life has changed drastically due to climate change.
Hilda Flavia Nakabuye
Uganda
Hilda Flavia Nakabuye is a Ugandan climate and environmental rights activist who founded Uganda's Fridays for Future movement. She has spoken at major global convenings to advocate for climate justice for her country Uganda, as well as gender equality and racial diversity within the climate movement. One of her environmental concerns is saving Lake Victoria, which connects Uganda to neighboring countries. As part of her activism, Nakabuye visits schools and communities to empower women to join the fight against climate change. She also created Climate Striker Diaries, an online platform to encourage digital awareness about climate change. HIlda’s Future Rising Fellowship Project will be a photo essay that chronicles her own journey as a climate activist and educator. She will tell the story of how she founded a movement in her country and her work with local communities to deploy sustainable solutions to preserve the ecosystems in and around Lake Victoria.
Astrid Peraza
Costa Rica
Astrid Peraza is a climate activist from Costa Rica. She studies Materials Science and Engineering, and is a spokesperson for the Escazu Ahora CR campaign, which works for the ratification of the Escazu Agreement in Costa Rica. Astrid is a leader with Greentalist, a program that advocates for girls’ access to climate education. Her Future Rising Fellowship project will be a short documentary film about the achievements and dreams of a women’s cooperative in a small fishing village on the Pacific Coast of Costa Rica.
Titas Ganguly
Bangladesh
Named after a river in Bangladesh, Titas Ganguly grew up in Kolkata, India where increasingly frequent weather events have led to thousands of lives being uprooted and properties destroyed. As a young person he witnessed the inundation of farms with saltwater and the subsequent migration of men from his rural community to the cities where they sought work. Titas went on to found Green Crusaders India, a community-based organization that seeks to help women build sustainable economic opportunity and environmental stewardship in the Sundarbans where the world’s largest delta houses the largest tidal mangrove vegetation. Titas’ Future Rising Fellowship project will be a film about the women of the Sundarbans, the challenges they face and the inventive local solutions they are leveraging to tackle economic and environmental instability.
Mercy Wanjiku Kamonjo
Kenya
Mercy Wanjiku Kamonjo is a Kenyan environmentalist and food security activist. She is also the founder of the Kuza Generation Initiative, a youth-led nonprofit organization that empowers rural communities struggling with the impacts of climate change. Mercy provides training for women and girls in arid and semi arid areas on how to use resilient climate smart agriculture techniques. Her Future Rising Fellowship project will be a short film about a group of women in one rural community and their efforts to build food security despite a worsening drought. Mercy is a final year student at Kenyatta University pursuing a bachelors in environmental studies (resource conservation).
Connie Molina and
Faebian Cueller
Colombia
Connie Molina and Faebian Cueller, 24 and 27, are award-winning multifaceted artists from Colombia. The gender non-binary activists are working with the organization Priya’s Shakti and have created an animation project featuring the first Colombian female superhero. They have worked on various agro-ecological and permaculture projects to create sustainable living spaces. Their Future Rising Fellowship project will be a series of short animated films about the impact of climate change on indigenous communities and on Colombia's rich biodiversity and ecosystems.
Aida Namukose
Uganda
Aida Namukose is a photographer from Jinja, Uganda who has worked with the Kimanya Ngeyo Foundation documenting their work teaching organic and sustainable farming practices to lower income urban families. Her Future Rising Fellowship project will be a series of photo essays that tell the stories of women in her community who work in agriculture and local food industries. She will focus on farmers, market vendors, restaurant staff, and roadside vendors demonstrating the impact of the nearby Bujagali Dam, and how it has affected the women who had previously farmed on the river banks.
Raini Sydney
Kenya
Raini Sydney, is a gardener, a storyteller and a creative-in-learning. His experience is built on collaborating with and learning from entities and individuals driving social development at the grassroots level. Having spent most of his childhood on the rural farms of the Kenyan countryside, he saw the negative effects of climate change and pesticides on the livelihoods of the rural populations. Raini’s Future Rising Fellowship project will tell stories of female rural smallholder farmers who draw on ancestral knowledge and natural solutions to build climate-resilient agricultural practices. Raini is a graduate of the African Leadership University (ALU), with a bachelor's degree in Global Challenges. He is also a trained conservationist with a Conservation Leadership Pathway training from the ALU School of Wildlife Conservation.
2021 FUTURE RISING FELLOWS:
Ayomide Solanke
Nigeria
Ayomide Solanke is an activist and visual artist who works on climate justice and gender equity in Lagos, Nigeria. She is writing a graphic novel that highlights how climate change has repercussions for girls in untold ways. Her protagonist is a young girl who finds the agency to escape the money bride system.
Tia Kennedy
First Nations, Canada
Tia Kennedy is a First Nations climate justice activist from the Anishinaabe tribe in Canada. She is making a personal film about the impact of contaminated water on three generations of women in her family.
Calton Muriithi
Kenya
Calton Muriithi is an environmental activist and founder of ‘Rookies To The World’ – an organization that tackles plastic pollution and deforestation in Kenya. He is filming a short film on a family in Gatondo, Kenya and how a dump nearby has drastically changed their way of life from pasturing animals and farming to plastic bottle collection.
Leticia Tituaña
Ecuador
Leticia Tituaña, a Kichwa-Otavalo woman from the Andean region of Ecuador, works to highlight indigenous knowledge and nature-based solutions to the climate crisis which have been erased over time because of lack of education for women. She is writing an essay about Warmi Stem - a group dedicated to connecting women with careers in STEM. She is writing a long form essay about Her work will highlight indigenous knowledge and nature-based solutions to the climate crisis.
Arushi and Kaavya
India
Arushi and Kaavya are the founders of Project Kara – a ‘by the youth, for the youth’ organization created in response to the climate crisis in India, and the effects it is having on mental well-being — particularly that of women and children. They are writing an article highlighting the impact of climate anxiety on young people and activists.
Lauren Ritchie
The Bahamas
Lauren Ritchie is a climate justice advocate and storyteller from The Bahamas. She has organized coastal clean-ups, educational forums, and environmental demonstrations across her island, Grand Bahama. She founded The Eco Justice Project, a digital platform dedicated to sharing the stories of underrepresented communities, environmental education, and promoting intersectional climate advocacy. She also co-hosts the society and pop-culture-centered podcast, Black Girl Blueprint, to highlight the perspectives of Gen-Z Black women. She recently graduated from Columbia University with a degree in Sustainable Development where she created the panel series, Columbia Climate Conversations, to bring activists and scientists of color to speak on environmental issues. She now works for Girl Rising as a Future Rising Senior Fellow leading a community-based storytelling project engaging with Bahamian youth, particularly adolescent girls, through photography, poetry, writing, and film, to give voice to their experience of a changing environment.
Beverley Choo Jia Ying
Singapore
Beverley Choo Jia Ying is the founder of GreenCheck – a platform that serves community-led climate action groups from Most Affected Peoples and Areas (MAPA). She is creating a multimedia piece profiling a young female of the Dayak tribe of Indonesia and the tribe’s plight due to climate change and environmental degradation hastened by palm oil plantations.
Eden Tadesse
Ethiopia
Eden Tadesse is the daughter of climate migrants, an IT specialist, a journalist, changemaker and entrepreneur from Ethiopia. She is producing a podcast that explores the intersection between climate change, migration and young people as agents of change. The first episode features Bahamas native, Alicia Wallace, a human rights defender whose work focuses on education, engagement, and advocacy with gender rights and democracy-building as central.
Alex Nguyen
Vietnam
Alex Nguyen is a photojournalist based in the Ninh Thuan province in Vietnam, an area that is particularly affected by climate change. Alex is creating a multimedia essay using audio interviews, photography, and written prose to illuminate the effects of climate change on three young women from different regions, one woman from within the fishing community in Thuan which is experiencing rising sea levels, other from the ethnic minority group in the Nam Dong District that's experiencing landslides and one woman of the Hmong people living in the mountainous Yen Bai, where climate change has affected tourism and food supply.
Julieta Martinez
Chile
Julieta Martinez founded the global action platform Tremendas, which currently works in 18 countries around the world with more than 1,800 young activists participating. Her film follows a graduate of Climáticas, a school she co-founded and the first academy for climate action in Latin America, with a 600 all-female student body.