Ingrid Giskes: Ghost Gear
Listen now
Description
Everything is connected, and every action we take impacts somebody, something, or someplace. As I get older, and learn more about the world, the connections become clearer. Things that seem straightforward on the surface are incredibly complex, and intersect with things that seem completely unrelated. I love this about the world – how we can seem to be on opposing sides of an issue, yet have a shared goal that will benefit us all. Ghost Gear is one of those things – A staggering 640,000 tonnes of abandoned, lost and discarded fishing nets, lines and traps are left in our oceans every year, trapping, injuring, mutilating and killing hundreds of thousands of whales, seals, turtles and birds annually. But this doesn’t only affect wildlife – it affects livelihoods, biodiversity, climate and human rights. To unpack this, I invited Ingrid Giskes (https://twitter.com/igiskes?lang=en) on to the podcast. Ingrid is the Director of the Global Ghost Gear Initiative (https://www.ghostgear.org/) (GGGI) at Ocean Conservancy. The Ghost Gear Initiative brings together a multi-stakeholder approach to solving the problem of ghost gear, with over 100 partners involved, including governments around the world. Ingrid is reading Dreams From My Father (https://www.booktopia.com.au/dreams-from-my-father-a-story-of-race-and-inheritance-barack-obama/book/9781921351433.html), by Barack Obama. Ingrid is listening to the Yoga Girl Daily (https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/yoga-girl-daily/id1475244555) podcast.
More Episodes
We're flipping things for the final episode of season five, and host Leigh Mathews is being interviewed by the wonderful Mel Harwin who has over 15 years experience working as a leader, implementor, human designer and evaluator in the international development, social, and environmental programs...
Published 11/19/21
Published 11/19/21
Ethics is a term we throw around quite often in the doing good sector. But what does it really mean? Where do ethics apply? Is it at the organisational level, the individual level, or both?In the humanitarian sector, where staff are regularly placed in situations where they are required to make...
Published 10/28/21