
Sofia Jaramillo
Contributor at National Geographic
Adventure Photographer and Filmmaker at Freelance
she/her | @natgeo contributor | Adventure Photographer & Filmmaker | Colombian-American creative advocating for BIPOC in outdoor sports
Articles
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Dec 6, 2024 |
outsideonline.com | Sofia Jaramillo |Kyra Kennedy
While visiting the lodge at Idaho’s Sun Valley Resort a few years ago, Colombian-American photographer Sofía Jaramillo noticed something disconcerting about the pictures lining the walls. In the images, which date back to the ski hill’s opening in 1936, nearly everyone was white. “That’s when I got the idea—how cool would it be to re-create these, except centering people of color?” Jaramillo says.
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Sep 28, 2024 |
rfkhumanrights.org | Sofia Jaramillo
As we celebrate this year’s International Day of Universal Access to Information (IDUIA), we are reminded that the ability to access information is more than a right—it is the foundation of democracy. This year’s focus, “Mainstreaming Access to Information and Participation in the Public Sector,” could not be more relevant. Across the globe, we see how transparency and public participation are essential in shaping governance and ensuring accountability.
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Sep 10, 2024 |
philanthropy.com | Ben Gose |Sofia Jaramillo
In an old ranch house that serves as the headquarters of the Wind River Tribal Buffalo Initiative, Jason Baldes greets federal officials and others with doughnuts and coffee. It is his second stop of the day: Early that morning, he drove out to the herd just west of Morton, Wyo., to feed formula to a 3-month-old bison calf whose mother had died. New donor collaboratives are experimenting, but few national foundations bring big dollars or a strategy.
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Oct 5, 2023 |
wsj.com | Nancy Keates |Sofia Jaramillo
Is Driggs, with its one main road and 2,200 permanent residents, destined to join Jackson, Wyo., and Park City, Utah, as the next scene-y western mountain hot spot? To look at the town now, it seems unlikely. It is surrounded by vast farmlands and plains that lead up to the tall, cragged peaks of Wyoming’s Teton Range. There are no velvet-rope nightclubs, Michelin-starred restaurants or swanky hotels—just small lodges and motels, some with cabins and teepees.
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Jun 20, 2023 |
nationalgeographic.com | Sofia Jaramillo
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