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Contributor Guidelines

Submitting guest blogs is open to Global Washington’s members of the Atlas level and above. We value a diversity of opinions on a broad range of subjects of interest to the global health and development community.

Blog article submissions should be 500-1500 words. Photos, graphs, videos, and other art that supports the main themes are strongly encouraged.

You may not be the best writer, and that’s okay. We can help you shape and edit your contribution. The most important thing is that it furthers an important conversation in your field, and that it is relatively jargon-free. Anyone without a background in global development should still be able to engage with your ideas.

If you include statistics or reference current research, please hyperlink your sources in the text, wherever possible.

Have an idea of what you’d like to write about? Let’s continue the conversation! Email comms@globalWA.org and put “Blog Idea” in the subject line.


Girls in the World: Malala Yousafzai

This past Friday the Nobel Committee awarded the Nobel Peace Prize to the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), though in the running for the prize was 16-year old Pakistani Malala Yousafzai.

Malala is the youngest nominee for the Peace Prize, and has been working hard to promote girl’s education around the world. She received international acclaim in 2012 when the Taliban in Pakistan targeted her for her activism. One day on her way to school armed men stopped her school bus and shot her. Fortunately she survived, and is now thriving and using this tragedy to work even harder for the right to an education. She has become an international emblem for the struggle against oppression and giving girls around the world a voice. Continue Reading

Focus on Land in Africa

GlobalWA member, Landesa, fully refreshed a new resource on land and natural resource rights in Africa: Focus on Land in Africa (FOLA). FOLA is an educational resource for development practitioners and policy makers that explores how land and natural resource rights affect, and are effected by, development in Africa. Through raising awareness of these issues, FOLA aims to elevate land and natural resource rights as an urgent priority for development in Africa. The following highlights specific examples of what elevating these rights can mean for people living in rural Africa.

In Rivercress County, Liberia, women are planting life trees—rubber and plantain—that will bring needed income and add value to their farms (Ali Kaba, Talking Land). Just one year ago, such investments seemed impossible.  But in the interim, the Liberian government developed a land policy that promises to grant secure land rights to rural people, and, today, change is underway. Continue Reading

GlobalWA Member Organization Featured in the Huffington Post

Tim Hanstad, Landesa’s President and CEO, recently had a blog post entitled, “What We Can Learn from the Last Case of Polio” published in the Huffington Post on women and girls, land, and the interconnectedness of the global development sector.

To hear more about this topic, register to attend the GlobalWA screening of the film Girl Rising at Intiman Theater on the 17th of November.  A Landesa representative will be seated on the panel after the film to answer questions and explore how land rights can help to positively affect women and girls in the developing world.