How Green Connect Foundation Is Redefining Conservation in Kenya
There is a way environmental work often presents itself to the public. It arrives in numbers, in targets, in carefully worded updates about trees planted, hectares covered, or communities reached. It looks structured and complete on the surface, yet something about it rarely holds long enough to change outcomes in a lasting way. The effort is visible, the intention is clear, but the impact often struggles to outlive the activity. That pattern has become so familiar that many people no longer question it. Conservation is expected to come in cycles. A campaign begins, energy builds, results are announced, and then, gradually, the system returns to where it was before. Not because people do not care, but because the work is rarely designed to hold itself together once attention shifts elsewhere. Somewhere within Kenya’s environmental space, a different approach has been taking shape, not loudly, not with urgency for recognition, but with a certain discipline that suggests long-term thinki...