• ECCE
  • School Edu
  • Higher Edu
  • Edu Tech
  • Skills
  • Jobs
  • Advertise
  • Login
[t4b-ticker]
  • Home
  • Latest
  • Spotlight
  • Perspective
  • Interview
  • Videos
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Student Kiosk
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Latest
  • Spotlight
  • Perspective
  • Interview
  • Videos
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Student Kiosk
No Result
View All Result
Education21
Home Higher Edu

Amrita University’s women-led marine climate solution wins SGP Best Innovator Award

education by education
March 4, 2026
in Higher Edu, Winners
0
Amrita University’s women-led marine climate solution wins SGP Best Innovator Award
0
SHARES
3
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

At the World Sustainable Development Summit 2026, Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham was conferred the SGP Best Innovator Award under the Global Environment Facility Small Grants Programme (GEF-SGP) on Feb 26. The honour recognises the university’s pioneering skilling model that positions women at the frontline of climate action – a transformational journey that strengthens coastal livelihoods while advancing marine ecosystem restoration, sustainable aquaculture, and climate resilience.

The GEF Small Grants Programme (SGP) is a partner initiative that includes the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change (MoEF&CC), TERI and UNDP. The event was attended by policymakers and development leaders, including Ms Tanvi Garg, Joint Secretary and GEF Operational Focal Point (OFP), MoEF&CC. The initiative was implemented with financial support from ESRI and Transworld.

In many ways, the award marks a quiet return to an older idea — that education is not merely the transfer of knowledge but the shaping of responsibility and values. The award honours a philosophy. Amrita’s approach is centred on transforming community realities through research rooted in compassion. And in a world searching for sustainable answers, the most powerful innovation may simply be a university willing to step outside its campus and learn before it teaches.

At Amrita, students and faculty do not merely study sustainability — they live it through the Live-in-Labs programme. They travel to villages, spend weeks with families, observe daily struggles, and co-design solutions alongside communities. The premise is simple yet radical: development cannot be delivered; it must be built together.

Representing the institution, Dr Bhavani Rao R, Dean, School of Social and Behavioural Sciences, described the model as research that listens before it speaks.
“Knowledge becomes meaningful only when it touches life. When we work with communities, we realise poverty is not only about resources but also about exclusion. If compassion enters research, sustainability follows naturally,” she said.

She emphasised that universities occupy a rare space — capable of translating grassroots wisdom into structured knowledge and carrying it upward into policy conversations.

The gathering, attended by heads of state and government, senior policymakers, representatives of multilateral institutions, development agencies, scholars, corporate leaders, youth representatives, and civil society organisations from across the world, reflected the growing global consensus that climate resilience must be built in partnership with those most affected by change — farmers, women’s collectives, and local communities.

Isabelle Tschan, Deputy Resident Representative, UNDP India, highlighted why partnerships with academic institutions matter.
“Long-term change happens when communities lead decisions, not just participate in projects. Institutions that combine evidence with local understanding help small initiatives grow into lasting systems,” she said.

What distinguished Amrita’s work, speakers noted, was its hybrid nature — part university, part implementing partner. The institution conducts research, tests solutions in the field, and refines them through real-world feedback. The result is not a project that ends with funding, but a model that sustains itself.

For decades, programmes measured success by numbers — beneficiaries reached, funds allocated, infrastructure built. Increasingly, impact is being measured by ownership — whether communities continue the work long after the experts leave. Amrita’s initiatives, many led by women’s groups and local networks, have demonstrated precisely that continuity. The recognition also reflects a broader shift in development thinking: from scale to depth, from intervention to inclusion.

 

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS Feed
Previous Post

ICAI Launches Data Protection Compliance & Audit Certification at CoE Hyderabad

education

education

Related Posts

FLAME University Launches National Digital Knowledge Repository
Higher Edu

FLAME University Launches National Digital Knowledge Repository

by education
February 26, 2026
IIT Ropar marks 18th foundation day with major launches; Punjab Governor Kataria delivers keynote
Higher Edu

VESCOP signs MoU with Saint Louis University, USA for Academic Collaboration

by education
February 25, 2026
IIT Ropar marks 18th foundation day with major launches; Punjab Governor Kataria delivers keynote
Higher Edu

IIT Ropar marks 18th foundation day with major launches; Punjab Governor Kataria delivers keynote

by education
February 25, 2026
University of Bristol opens Mumbai Enterprise Campus
Higher Edu

University of Bristol opens Mumbai Enterprise Campus

by education
February 25, 2026
Sharda University Hosts ISPN Conference on Mental Health & Nursing
Higher Edu

Sharda University Hosts ISPN Conference on Mental Health & Nursing

by education
February 25, 2026
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS Feed

Useful Announcements

  • All
  • Useful Announcements

ICAI Launches Data Protection Compliance & Audit Certification at CoE Hyderabad

March 3, 2026

Ministry of Education invites participation of youth for Yuva Sangam (Phase VI); Online registrations started from Mar 2

March 3, 2026

Dost Education convenes “Talk, Care, Play” to Spotlight Playful Caregiving on March 9 in Delhi

February 26, 2026

MAT February Registration to Close on March 2

February 26, 2026

ISH launches B.Sc. in Global Business and Entrepreneurial Leadership

February 26, 2026

MoU signed for IIRIS Chair of Infosec and Forensic Society at NLU Jodhpur; a joint certificate programme in cyber forensics also launched

February 25, 2026

Heriot-Watt University Dubai launches May Intake beginning in 2026

February 25, 2026

ABBS launches MBA (Entrepreneurship) Admissions 2026

February 25, 2026

Artzopia Eklavya Festival being organized in Bengaluru on March 8

February 24, 2026

Unnati Foundation’s UNXT Program listed on NSE’s Social Stock Exchange (SSE)

February 23, 2026

Download current issue Not available

https://online.pubhtml5.com/jlyo/bxvr/

Monthly Magazine : Feb 2024

Interactive (Quizzes/Surveys)

Start Monthly Quiz
Education21

An initiative in continuation of Curriculum Magazine, Education21.in, is a platform for New India that aspires to be a valuable innovator, partner and collaborator for a just and sustainable world. Continuing with our steady and 360 degree coverage of education system and skills landscape, we are here more oriented towards learner community.

Useful Links

  • About us
  • Team
  • Contact
  • Editorial opportunities
  • Subscriptions
  • Job Opportunities
  • Features

Important Links

  • Blog
  • Archives
  • People
  • Careerwise
  • Resources
  • Downloadable
  • Old issues

Newsletter

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS Feed

Copyright © 2020 All rights reserved. Education21.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Latest
  • Spotlight
  • Perspective
  • Interview
  • Videos
  • Events
  • Shop
  • Student Kiosk

Copyright © 2020 All rights reserved. Education21.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Create New Account!

Fill the forms bellow to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Cleantalk Pixel