Cécile Ndjebet

Cécile Ndjebet
President of the African Women's Network for Community Management of Forests
Personal details
Born
Alma materWageningen Agricultural University
Occupationenvironmental activist
Awards2022 Wangari Maathai Award

Cécile Bibiane Ndjebet is a Cameroonian environmental activist and social forester. She is recognised internationally for her work in advocacy for women's rights to land and forest resources. For her contribution to conservation and gender equality, she was awarded the 2022 Wangari Maathai Forest Champions Award and the 2025 Kew International Medal.[1]

Early life and education

Ndjebet was born in a rural locality near Edea in the Littoral region of Cameroon, the 9th of 14 children.[2] Her mother was a farmer, and Ndjebet was raised with a pratical understanding of forestry and rural life.[3] From the age of four, she learned to farm and gather forest products, such as mushrooms, firewood, and medicinal plants.[4] These early experiences established a sense of responsibility and resourcefulness regarding the ecological presence in her life.[4]

Growing up in a remote part of Cameroon, Ndjebet was aware of the hardships endured by rural women. She observed her mother and others laboring from dawn to dusk- growing crops, tending to animals, and raising children- often performing back-breaking work on land they could not own due to their gender.

Ndjebet's formal education in agronomy was driven by a realization of these struggles and a desire to advocate for women and improve their lives.[5] She holds an agronomy degree from a university in Cameroon, studied at University of Wolverhampton in the UK, and earned a Master of Science in Social Forestry from Wageningen Agricultural University in the Netherlands.[6]

Her academic background integrates ecological science, gender studies, and rural development, bridging the gap between environmental policy and women empowerment.[7] Currently recognized as a gender specialist, she is a PhD candidate at the Central Africa Catholic University, where her research focuses on "Gender relations, access to land and socio-economic situation of women in the Cameroon rural coast".[8]

Career

Ndjebet started her career in Cameroon as a civil servant 1986. In 1997, she joined the civil society Organizations. She has been devoted to women's rights issues and is being involved in the national, regional and international forestry, REDD+ and climate change processes for the past 15 years. In 2009, to promote women’s direct and effective participation in natural resources management in Africa, Ndjebet, together with a group of African Women Rights advocates.[8] In 2012, she was elected Climate Change Champion of the Central African Commission on Forests.[9] She is the President of the African Women's Network for Community Management of Forests (REFACOF), an organization promoting women's participation in natural resources management in. Over 600 hectares of degraded land and mangrove forests which have been restored under her stewardship of Cameroon Ecology, an organization she founded in 2001.[5] Ndjebet is a member of a good number of networks and professional societies at national, regional and global levels. She is the national coordinator of the CSO Platform for REDD+ & CC and regional coordinator of the Central Africa CSO Platform for REDD + & CC. In May 2021, she was selected as Advisory Board member of the UN Decade on Ecosystems restoration, 2020-2030. Ndjebet is an Agronomist and Social Forester by profession. Gender specialist and Women Leadership trainer and adviser.[8] Her role as a social forester is to link interaction of people and forests in a positive way. Women work the land for food crops but do not own it. However, planting trees provides ownership, so she worked to convince men to allow women to plant trees, and this take ownership of, for example,non-productive, degraded land.[2] Ndjebet was inspired about tree planting after meeting Wangari Maathai in 2009.[10] Those early experiences would shape Ndjebet's life. She would go on to become a leading voice for women’s land rights in Africa, spending three decades advocating for gender equality while also repairing hundreds of hectares of nature marred by development the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) has named Ndjebet a Champion of the Earth for Inspiration and Action, one of the United Nations’ highest environmental honours.[5] Humanity has significantly altered three-quarters of Earth’s dry land, chopping down forests, draining wetlands, and polluting rivers at rates experts warn is unsustainable. Ndjebet is among the leaders of the movement to repair that damage. Her vision has resulted in a project by Cameroon Ecology to train women to revive more than 1,000 hectares of forest by 2030.[8] In 2012, she was elected Climate Change Champion of the Central African Commission on Forests for her leading role in mobilizing civil society organizations to sustainably manage forests. Ndjebet is also a member of the advisory board of the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, a global push to revive degraded landscapes.[5]

Cécile selected for her work campaigning to preserve forests and improve the lives of people that depend on them in Cameroon and wider African region. Ndjebet was presented with the Kew Medal at the Royal Society, saying: "My vision is a world where we are successful at halting temperature increase and living in harmony with nature. Here, women and Indigenous Peoples take their rightful seat at the table to take action, and youth are taken seriously."[11]

Awards

  • 2022 : Wangari Maathai Forest Champions Award[5]
  • 2022 : United Nations Champion of the Earth for Inspiration and Action[12]
  • 2023: Gulbenkian Prize[8]
  • 2025: Kew International Medal awarded for globally recognized work adding to knowledge and understanding of plants and fungi, for championing women's rights in forest management.[13][2]

References

  1. ^ Woo-hyun, Shim (2022-05-08). "African activist Cecile Ndjebet wins 2022 Global Forest Championship Award". The Korea Herald. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
  2. ^ a b c "Woman's Hour – June Sarpong, Disability benefit changes, Women war artists – BBC Sounds". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 2025-03-20.
  3. ^ "La Camerounaise Cécile Bibiane Njebet lauréate du prix Champions de la Terre de l'ONU". RFI (in French). 2022-11-23. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
  4. ^ a b "Cecile Ndjebet | The Convention on Wetlands, The Convention on Wetlands". www.ramsar.org. Retrieved 2025-11-18.
  5. ^ a b c d e UN Environment Programme (2022-11-10). "Cécile Bibiane Ndjebet | Champions of the Earth". www.unep.org. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
  6. ^ "Ms. Cécile Bibiane Ndjebet | Department of Economic and Social Affairs". sdgs.un.org. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
  7. ^ "Cécile Ndjebet". Events at Global Landscapes Forum. Retrieved 2025-11-18.
  8. ^ a b c d e "Cécile Ndjebet | The Forests Dialogue". theforestsdialogue.org. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
  9. ^ "Laureate pushes for women's rights and a greener future". UNEP. 2022-11-25. Retrieved 2023-04-30.
  10. ^ Melody, Chironda (5 December 2022). "Cameroon: Cécile Bibiane Ndjebet – A Champion Who Pushes for Women's Land and Forest Rights #AfricaClimateHope". Allafrica. Retrieved 30 April 2023.
  11. ^ "Cameroonian activist Dr Cécile Ndjebet awarded Kew International Medal for her work advocating for women's rights in forest communities | Kew". www.kew.org. Retrieved 2025-11-20.
  12. ^ Italia, UNRIC (2023-03-15). "UNEP's 2023 Champions of the Earth Award with a focus on plastic pollution solutions". ONU Italia (in Italian). Retrieved 2023-05-01.
  13. ^ "Post by @rbgkew.bsky.social". Bluesky. 20 March 2025. Retrieved 20 March 2025.