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Mattel unveils Jane Goodall Barbie, complete with chimp by AFP Staff Writers Washington (AFP) July 12, 2022 American toy manufacturer Mattel has unveiled new specialty Barbie dolls modeled after the famous English primatologist Jane Goodall and her beloved research specimen, a chimpanzee named David Greybeard. The Goodall doll, which Mattel says will be partly made with recycled plastic, sports the researcher's classic beige collared shirt and shorts, as well as a pair of binoculars and a blue notebook. David Greybeard was the chimpanzee on whom Goodall wrote her initial research papers, which documented for the first time the species' usage of tools. "I'd been suggesting it for a long time that girls don't want just to be film stars and things like that," said Goodall in a promotional video. "Many of them, like me, want to be in the out in nature studying animals." The new Barbie is the latest in a series of dolls Mattel has dedicated to feminist or other inspirational icons. Before Goodall, the toy-maker had produced dolls modeled off tennis star Naomi Osaka, the co-creator of AstraZeneca's Covid vaccine, Sarah Gilbert, and an anonymous female "robotics engineer." "My heroes, my models were Tarzan, Dr. Dolittle," said Goodall. "There weren't women doing the kind of things I wanted to do... so in all my dreams, I was a man." To all the little girls who like her would like to be changemakers, the primatologist recommends to "go for a walk in nature, learn to love it and then protect it." vgr/dax/des/jh
Market values are destroying nature: UN report Paris (AFP) July 11, 2022 A major UN report warned Monday that a global economy focused on short-term profit is wrecking the planet and called for a drastically different approach as to how we value nature. Without this shift, universally accepted goals of sustainable development and greater equity will remain out-of-reach, the science advisory panel for biodiversity, known as IPBES, found. "The way we understand economic growth is at the core of the biodiversity crisis," Unai Pascual, an ecological economist at the Univ ... read more
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