Jamie Margolin

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Jamie Margolin


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Jamie Margolin is a Colombian-American organizer, activist, author, public speaker, and Film & TV student (2024).

When she was 15, she co-founded the international youth climate justice movement called Zero Hour that led the official "Youth Climate Marches" in Washington, DC and 25+ cities around the world during the summer of 2018. Jamie is also a plaintiff on the Our Children's Trust Youth v. Gov Washington state lawsuit, Aji P. vs. State of Washington, suing the state of Washington for denying her generation their constitutional rights to a livable environment by worsening the climate crisis.

Jamie is the author of countless thought provoking Op-Eds for various publications such as The New York Times, Teen Vogue, The Washington Post, TI
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Average rating: 4.03 · 227 ratings · 32 reviews · 4 distinct worksSimilar authors
Youth to Power: Your Voice ...

4.02 avg rating — 213 ratings — published 2020 — 9 editions
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Climate Emergency Atlas

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4.23 avg rating — 48 ratings8 editions
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Nu jij!

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liked it 3.00 avg rating — 4 ratings
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Youth to Power

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating2 editions
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Quotes by Jamie Margolin  (?)
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“Find out what triggers your unhealthy feelings, and avoid or find healthy ways to cope with them as much as possible!”
Jamie Margolin, Youth to Power: Your Voice and How to Use It

“So if our goal is to shift the culture, we have to work on making influences in mediums that control the culture. So what does control our culture? Art. Music, photography, paintings, drawings, films, videos... if you think about what shapes and moves our society forward, it's art. If you think about what you spend most of your time listening to and looking at, whether an Instagram photo, a show, a song--all of that is art. So not only is it important to use art in our resistance and activism; it is vital. Because how else are we going to reach people? Art is a universal language, a way of making people see and understand experiences in a profound new light. Art influences society by changing opinions, instilling values, and translating experiences across space and time. Art is a way of taking up space and reclaiming narratives that are never told otherwise.”
Jamie Margolin, Youth to Power: Your Voice and How to Use It

“The truth is that "activism" can and must be practiced in many ways that often go unnoticed. It is listening and building relationships. It's writers who focus on issues and perspectives outside the status quo. It's teachers who lift up marginalized voices and try to also learn from their students. It's prison inmates reading books to educate themselves about politics and business. It is being what society deems "other" or "not normal" and yet radically loving yourself. As people focus on "trendy" activism--youth who get attention from the media, give powerful speeches at rallies, and attempt to do the biggest and flashiest possible things--we (myself very much included) have to remember that those attention-generating strategies are not the only way to create change. As activists, we must keep educating ourselves, listening to other perspectives, and remembering to be aware as much as possible. We must challenge ourselves not to just advocate for "our own" issues, but strive to lift up other issues, voices who aren't being heard, and ways in which issues intersect...

At the same time, we are all on a journey to find our own strengths and passions and use them for good, to make this type of daily "activism" a norm in every occupation and community. That work is often hard, it's not flashy, it can go against the societal expectation of being complacent and following rules, but it's so important. Whoever you are, you can be an activist too--you just have to figure out the way that will work best for you.”
Jamie Margolin, Youth to Power: Your Voice and How to Use It



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