My
name is Laura Hopps. I’m 28 year-old Friend from Yardley, PA, alumna of George School, and more recently Harvard Divinity School. This past year, I started as Program Director of the Quaker non-profit ProNica and live in
Managua, Nicaragua.
It's wonderful to meet the other grantees here and learn about their inspiring work in creating rooftop gardens, organic farming, mapping of reconciliation efforts in Rwanda, supporting Quaker camp programs, and increasing access to summer camp for kids of color. All great initiatives from all over the country and the world, and I look forward to learning more about them as the year progresses!
Here's a bit of background on ProNica and what I hope to use the funds from the Pickett Endowment for in the coming months:
ProNica Origins
Check us out on on Facebook!: here
ProNica
was born out of the U.S.-backed Contra War of the 1980s in Nicaragua, when a
dedicated group of Friends from the St. Petersburg Meeting gathered to stand in
solidarity with the Nicaraguan people. In opposition to the war and economic embargo
the U.S. imposed against Nicaragua, these dedicated Friends began collecting
and shipping material aid to communities in need.
Laura Hopps and former ProNica Program Director, Lillian Hall, July, 2012 |
ProNica
supports Nicaraguan grassroots organizations focused on:
- Sustainable agriculture initiatives and community organizing
- Women’s health, rights, and empowerment
- Children’s rights and rehabilitation of street children
- Access to education and community-based educational programs
My Project: Investigating Food Security & Agroforestry Initiatives as a Response to Climate Change and Environmental Destruction
With
the support of the Pickett Endowment, I will be conducting research on
organizations involved in food security initiatives in Nicaragua. In a 2012
report from the climate change research institute German Watch (report http://germanwatch.org/en/ download/7170.pdf), Nicaragua was
listed as among the top 4 countries in the world already most impacted by
climate change-related extreme weather events.
This
grant will enable me to learn more about food security initiatives in Nicaragua
today so that ProNica can facilitate information to our community partners working in agriculture and
identify potential partners focused on these issues. Unlike conventional agriculture that depends on mono-cropping of annual crops, agro-forestry, simply described, means increasing dependence on tree crops. Tree crops planted in dynamic and diverse systems (sometimes described in terms of "permaculture") have many benefits over mono-cropped annual plants including supporting reforestation and:
- Regeneration and protection of soils depleted by conventional agriculture
- Protection of groundwater
- Creation of wildlife habitat and support for dwindling biodiversity
People
in Nicaragua have already begun to feel the effects of increased frequency and
intensity of hurricanes each year, with the harshest in 1998 with Hurricane
Mitch and in 2007, Hurricane Felix. Both extreme flooding and droughts have
increased in the past decades, as predictable growing seasons have been thrown
off, endangering food staples. As the second poorest country in terms of Gross Domestic Product in the Western Hemisphere, Nicaraguan communities are very vulnerable in the face of climate change.
Already in recent years there have been food shortages when an untimely flood has ruined bean crops nationally, and other variants have caused food prices to go up. In a country where 80% of the population lives on less than $2 a day, most Nicaraguan families cannot bear increases in the principle staples of rice and beans. Many working in the area of climate change, such as the Nicaraguan research institute Centro Humboldt, list the promotion of agro-forestry, permaculture, and seed-saving of native seeds among the top strategies to improve food security in Nicaragua.
With the support of the Pickett Grant, I will learn more about climate change adaptation strategies already being implemented in Nicaragua that improve food security.
Great to see you connecting with other Pickett grantees through the blog! Very excited to hear more about the project's outcomes.
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