The Project is built on the idea that better visibility and stronger connections can increase the impact of environmental work. Support does not have to mean a formal commitment. Even small contributions — a useful contact, a missing actor, a good resource or a thoughtful suggestion — can help make the map more complete, relevant and useful.
There are several ways to contribute:
1. Suggest actors to include
Recommend NGOs, networks, researchers, public bodies, companies, local initiatives or informal groups active in climate, nature or environmental work, including smaller efforts that are easy to miss.
Send reports, datasets, articles, directories, maps, policy documents, case studies or other material that can strengthen the knowledge base and improve how actors, topics and activities are understood.
Point out existing collaborations, shared focus areas, overlapping campaigns, related projects or possible links that could make relationships between actors more visible and useful.
Help improve categories, filters, actor descriptions, missing topics, accuracy and usability so the map and directory become clearer and easier to work with.
Offer subject-matter input on climate, biodiversity, communication, psychology, activism, policy, funding, data or stakeholder engagement to improve both content and structure.
Introduce the project to people or organizations with relevant knowledge, networks or practical interest in the map. Even one well-placed contact can help gather information and build trust.
7. Share the project
Mention The Project to relevant networks, colleagues, organizations or people looking for a way into environmental engagement, especially those who may want to contribute or use the map.
8. Bachelor or master thesis
Explore a thesis topic that adds knowledge, analysis or practical insight, such as public engagement, climate narratives, professional identities, social tipping points or industry roles in sustainability transitions.