¶¶Òõh Inspired is a weekly Sunday feature that focuses on people and organizations in ¶¶Òõh who are working toward solving problems and making the world a better place.

The section is published in Baton Rouge, New Orleans and Acadiana. If you know of someone or an organization that is doing exceptional work to make ¶¶Òõh better, please let us know by emailing us at lainspired@theadvocate.com.Ìý

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After six months in a new home, this week I feel like I finally began to settle into the place. Anyone who has ever packed up all their bits and bags and moved from one home to another, from one city to another, knows the pain. We had been in our previous home for 16 years. We loved it. It loved us.Ìý

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Editor's Note: This story, written by Chris Winters at YES! Magazine, is part of the SoJo Exchange from the Solutions Journalism Network, a nonprofit organization dedicated to rigorous reporting about responses to social problems. Each week, ¶¶Òõh Inspired will feature one Solutions Journalism story providing tangible evidence that positive change is actually happening right now, in our own communities and around the world.

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Editor's Note: This story, written by Ally Hirschlag at Hakai Magazine, is part of the SoJo Exchange from the Solutions Journalism Network, a nonprofit organization dedicated to rigorous reporting about responses to social problems. It has been edited to include ¶¶Òõh statistics to accompany Hirschlag's reporting in Maryland. Each week, ¶¶Òõh Inspired will feature one Solutions Journalism story providing tangible evidence that positive change is actually happening right now, in our own communities and around the world.Ìý

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One summer day, when I was 15, my dad and I drove to the first Toyota dealership in the region. It was in Carthage, Mississippi, a little town about 30 miles from where I grew up. He ended up buying a car that day, ostensibly for me as a new driver. Even so, I was never allowed to call it "my car." 

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Camille Manning-Broome is recognized internationally for her expertise in resilience and adaptation planning. Her leadership on issues of land loss, coastal community sustainability, climate change resilience and adaptation as well as resident-led community planning has contributed to the transformation of cities, towns and parishes throughout ¶¶Òõh. Her work has created knowledge of interest to peers throughout the U.S. and the globe, from South Africa to Scotland to Denmark.

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