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ABOUT THE MILLENNIUM FELLOWSHIP - CLASS OF 2022

United Nations Academic Impact and MCN are proud to partner on the Millennium Fellowship. Over 31,000 young leaders on 2,400+ campuses across 140+ nations applied to join the Class of 2022.  200+ campuses worldwide (just 8%) were selected to host the 3,000+ Millennium Fellows.

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UNITED NATIONS ACADEMIC IMPACT AND MCN PROUDLY PRESENT WILMA KIM BRAND, A MILLENNIUM FELLOW AND CAMPUS DIRECTOR FOR THE CLASS OF 2022.

Griffith University | Brisbane, Australia | Advancing SDG 12, SDG 13, SDG 16 & UNAI 9

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" Sharing experiences whilst enabling networks and relationships to develop are my motivation in promoting, building, and fostering a community. Being a part of the Millennium Fellowship enables collaboration to support social impact in Business, Health, Environment and Governance aligned with UNAI principles and SDGs. It is an honour and privilege for me to be able to share the vision that shapes our futures generation. "

Millennium Fellowship Project: The Clothing Library

Our project takes inspiration from a traditional book library, and applies it to clothing. The basic premise is that students would be asked to donate quality clothing to the library. Once enough garments are collected, we would ideally like to create both an online catalogue and in-person space where students from the university can ‘browse’ for clothes and ‘borrow’ them out. They would then have to return the clothing within a set time period, and would only be permitted to borrow a set quantity of clothes at a time. We have also considered charging an initial subscription fee to cover running costs.

This project has several goals. Primarily, we hope to minimise textile waste within our university community and promote slow, ethical fashion. We hope to make ethical clothing affordable and inclusive for university students, and to use the project as a means of educating the community on the issue of fast fashion, and showing them how to practice slow clothing principles. The project would also assist students who need specific outfits for placements or other events, eliminating the need to buy cheap, ‘one-off’ outfits which are then discarded. Furthermore, the project hopes to be size inclusive and remove the status and stigma behind different clothing brands. Additionally, in removing the profit incentive which perpetuates fast fashion, the project will be better equipped to remain consumer-focused, rather than profit-motivated. This will ensure that the library remains accessible to people from all economic backgrounds. Finally, we believe that this project would even appeal to students who do not have an interest in slow clothing or ethical consumerism, as the concept of free clothes is itself enticing for university students on tight budgets, even without the social and environmental benefits. It would hopefully then be able to encourage them to think more about their consumer choices.

About the Millennium Fellow

Wilma Brand is a passionate, committed, and strategy driven of Business Innovation at Griffith University (Australia). A Malaysian native with extensive education experiences in Singapore and Australia, she fosters a profound dedication to Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure (SDG 9). Foresight projects have always been a passion of hers focusing on sustainable future thinking for cities and communities. Wilma’s drive and motivation take shape from her global citizenship experiences, which lead to her enthusiasm for progressive action and social responsibility. She has successfully organized various events and benevolent projects working together in partnership of all kinds that demonstrate her outstanding leadership within her local region. Wilma aspires to continue the vision of global communities in her professional field that will promote and cultivate the contribution and development of United Nation’s Sustainable Goals.

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