Dame Jane Goodall was a pioneer whose research not only reshaped science but also rewrote how humanity sees its place in nature. Through patience, empathy, and relentless curiosity, she bridged the gap between humans and animals in a way no one had before. She also inspired countless people to become conservationist, particularly women in STEM.
With her passing at the age of 91, the world has lost a brilliant scientist, and a deeply compassionate voice who urged us to care more fiercely for the planet we share. Yet even as we mourn her, we celebrate a life that transformed our understanding of nature and inspired millions to protect it.
In 1960, a young Jane arrived at Gombe Stream National Park with nothing more than a notebook, a pair of binoculars, and an unshakable sense of wonder. At a time when most women weren’t even encouraged to pursue science, she did something quietly revolutionary: she sat, she watched, and she listened. Her approach wasn’t the cold, clinical observation of the era — it was patient, empathetic, deeply curious. And it was this perspective that led her to one of the most groundbreaking discoveries of the 20th century: chimpanzees, she observed, make and use tools.
It might sound simple now, but at the time, it shattered a scientific consensus. Toolmaking had been considered a defining trait of humans — to see our closest living relatives fashioning sticks to fish termites out of mounds forced scientists to rethink not only what it meant to be human, but what it meant to be animal. Goodall’s work dissolved the rigid boundary we’d drawn between ourselves and the rest of the natural world, replacing it with something more profound: a recognition of kinship.
But perhaps the most remarkable part of Jane Goodall’s story is that her influence didn’t stop at discovery. Over the next six decades, she transformed from field researcher into one of the most powerful environmental voices on the planet. Through the Jane Goodall Institute — which today operates in nearly 70 countries — she championed habitat conservation, ethical treatment of animals, and sustainable, community-led solutions that uplift both people and the ecosystems they inhabit.
And then there’s Roots & Shoots, the youth-led program she founded in 1991 with a handful of Tanzanian students. What began as a small local initiative is now a global movement spanning 100 countries and empowering tens of thousands of young people to take action on issues from climate change to human rights. Jane always believed that every individual makes a difference — and through Roots & Shoots, she proved that belief over and over again.
It’s this ability to evolve — from scientist to storyteller, advocate to educator — that made her not just a pioneer, but a true global force. She spoke in packed lecture halls and remote classrooms alike, addressed heads of state and sat cross-legged with children planting trees. Even into her 90s, Jane spent nearly 300 days a year travelling the world to share a simple but urgent message: that our future depends on our willingness to care, to connect, and to act.
Her impact on women in science is equally profound. At a time when the field was dominated by men, Jane forged her own path with quiet determination and unwavering integrity. She showed that science could be empathetic, that observation could be intuitive, and that knowledge could be built on patience and respect as much as on hypothesis and experiment. In doing so, she opened the door for generations of women to follow — not by demanding space, but by creating it.
“Her [Goodall’s] work obviously inspired a lot of what I’m doing now, including disrupting traditional views of women in the field, ” said Wildlife veterinarian & conservationist Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka.
Kenyan wildlife conservationist Paula Kahumbu is cited in The Washington Post to credit Jane Goodall for making wildlife work accessible and impactful for Africans and women scientists.
And Xylo Systems Founder and WWF Board Member Camille Goldstone wrote movingly in LinkedIn about meeting her in 2019.
“That meeting stirred something deep in me,” said Camille. “It was the year before I founded Xylo Systems. Jane’s words pushed me to reach for better, to communicate with more clarity, to inspire more hope and to turn conviction into action.
“Jane was a trailblazer. At a time when women were rarely given space in science, she carved her own path in wildlife conservation and transformed how the world understood nature. She showed us that empathy, courage and relentless dedication could change global conversations. May her legacy and mission live on in those, like me, that she inspired.”
Today, as we grapple with biodiversity loss, deforestation, and a rapidly warming planet, Jane Goodall’s legacy feels more vital than ever. She taught us that science is about knowing and understanding. That conservation is about protecting species and nurturing relationships. And that hope isn’t naïve, it’s necessary.
What a force of nature she was. A voice for nature itself. A champion for women in science. An enabler of young people. Deeply wise and tireless. Jane Goodall didn’t just change the way we study animals; she changed the way we think about ourselves and our place in the living world.
And even though she is no longer with us, her most powerful lesson endures: every single one of us has the capacity to make a difference. All we have to do is start — with empathy, with curiosity, and with the courage to listen.
Thank you, Jane. For redefining science. For redefining leadership. And for reminding us, again and again, that even one small voice — when guided by purpose — can echo across the entire planet.