Network Leadership
ICP’s second pillar of work centers the importance of our Collaborations & Partnerships in order to contribute to climate solutions from the ground up.
We collaborate with organizations, networks, coalitions and alliances who are dedicated to addressing key climate issues and also help ameliorate the health, economic, and social disparities that frontline communities in the islands face. We engage with our organizational allies through both thought partnerships and program collaborations in Hawai‘i and beyond.
ICP works alongside grassroots organizers to build a more diverse and inclusive world, which is more sustainable and has more peace. For example, ICP has partnered with and hosted place-making circles to bring together diverse audiences to discuss how to engage in futures-thinking, problem solving, and peacebuilding as they face the impacts of climate change in their home communities.
ICP engages with NGOs and civil society coalitions at the local, state, regional, and national level to drive people-centered climate action from the ground up. For instance, in one project we united to support Indigenous environmental protections of our islands in the first-ever climate case seeking zero emissions in transportation in Hawai‘i. Our network engagement is thorough and thoughtful, including signing on to the efforts of others and supporting action plans.
ICP deeply values the wealth of knowledge and innovative ideas that thought and expert leaders share with and bring to our organization. With the community of relationships that our team has built and sustained, we are able to stay at the forefront of emerging and current events, best practices, and meaningful solutions. ICP continues to foster these relationships by serving as fellows, advisory board members, and contributors across our networks.
ICP works alongside academic institutions, namely colleges and universities, to inspire climate solutions that are young people led and relevant to 21st century learners. For example, ICP creates ancillary syllabus for classrooms to get out into the environment and engage in practical environmental justice that is then incubated into the curriculum of the colleges and universities through experiential education.
ICP participates with governing bodies whose decision-making impacts our local community and its residents at a systems level. We provide information such as research, fact sheets, and data to leaders who have the ability to right past wrongs, and support a sustainable future through their actions. As a non-profit, our voices are critical to providing real world examples from the frontlines.
ICP joins forces with donors and funders to build trust through trust-based philanthropy, solidarity philanthropy, and relationships of accompaniment to deliver on the work we are funded to do. We host open dialogues and exploration sessions which make connections between donor and recipient, funding and community, people to people, that are mutually impactful and supportive.
ICP works alongside grassroots organizers to build a more diverse and inclusive world, which is more sustainable and has more peace. For example, ICP has partnered with and hosted place-making circles to bring together diverse audiences to discuss how to engage in futures-thinking, problem solving, and peacebuilding as they face the impacts of climate change in their home communities.
ICP engages with NGOs and civil society coalitions at the local, state, regional, and national level to drive people-centered climate action from the ground up. For instance, in one project we united to support Indigenous environmental protections of our islands in the first-ever climate case seeking zero emissions in transportation in Hawai‘i. Our network engagement is thorough and thoughtful, including signing on to the efforts of others and supporting action plans.
ICP deeply values the wealth of knowledge and innovative ideas that thought and expert leaders share with and bring to our organization. With the community of relationships that our team has built and sustained, we are able to stay at the forefront of emerging and current events, best practices, and meaningful solutions. ICP continues to foster these relationships by serving as fellows, advisory board members, and contributors across our networks.
ICP works alongside academic institutions, namely colleges and universities, to inspire climate solutions that are young people led and relevant to 21st century learners. For example, ICP creates ancillary syllabus for classrooms to get out into the environment and engage in practical environmental justice that is then incubated into the curriculum of the colleges and universities through experiential education.
ICP participates with governing bodies whose decision-making impacts our local community and its residents at a systems level. We provide information such as research, fact sheets, and data to leaders who have the ability to right past wrongs, and support a sustainable future through their actions. As a non-profit, our voices are critical to providing real world examples from the frontlines.
ICP joins forces with donors and funders to build trust through trust-based philanthropy, solidarity philanthropy, and relationships of accompaniment to deliver on the work we are funded to do. We host open dialogues and exploration sessions which make connections between donor and recipient, funding and community, people to people, that are mutually impactful and supportive.
Grassroots and Community-Based Groups
ICP engages with NGOs and civil society coalitions at the local, state, regional, and national level to drive people-centered climate action from the ground up. For instance, in one project we united to support Indigenous environmental protections of our islands in the first-ever climate case seeking zero emissions in transportation in Hawai‘i. Our network engagement is thorough and thoughtful, including signing on to the efforts of others and supporting action plans.
Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) and Civil Society Coalitions
Academia
ICP works alongside grassroots organizers to build a more diverse and inclusive world, which is more sustainable and has more peace. For example, ICP has partnered with and hosted place-making circles to bring together diverse audiences to discuss how to engage in futures-thinking, problem solving, and peacebuilding as they face the impacts of climate change in their home communities.
ICP engages with NGOs and civil society coalitions at the local, state, regional, and national level to drive people-centered climate action from the ground up. For instance, in one project we united to support Indigenous environmental protections of our islands in the first-ever climate case seeking zero emissions in transportation in Hawai‘i. Our network engagement is thorough and thoughtful, including signing on to the efforts of others and supporting action plans.