14 Inspirational Women Who Embody 'What's Working' In The UK By Striving To Improve The Lives Of Others

14 Women Who Make The Lives Of Other People Infinitely Better
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When confronted with a problem, it's far easier to bury our heads in the sand and pretend it doesn't exist.

But across the UK, women are saying "no" to the easy option and instead, are choosing to improve the lives of others.

Whether combating issues such as FGM and gang culture, or highlighting social injustice such as sexism and LGBT discrimination, these women embody everything HuffPost UK's What's Working series is all about.

Here are just a few of the women working to make a difference in Britain:

Jennie Price

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As CEO of Sport England, Jennie Price has helped to tackle the fact that millions of women and girls are afraid to exercise because of fear of judgement.

Earlier this year, Sport England launched the groundbreaking This Girl Can campaign and inspired women across the country to dig out their trainers.

Leyla Hussein and Nimco Ali

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These two women started the phenomenal Daughters of Eve project along with Sainab Abdi. The non profit organisation works to protect girls and young women who are at risk from female genital mutilation (FGM).

The charity aims to raise awareness about FGM both among the government and the public.

Camila Batmanghelidjh

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Since Camila Batmanghelidjh founded Kids company in 1996, the charity has helped povide practical, emotional and educational support to vulnerable children, young people and families across the UK.

The charity estimates that they help 36,000 people across London, Bristol and Liverpool, including the most deprived and at risk children whose parents are unable to care for them due to their own practical and emotional challenges.

Laura Bates

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It has been three years since Laura Bates founded the Everyday Sexism Project, and what a three years they have been.

By launching a website where women could share their experiences of sexism, Bates opened up discussion on gender equality around the world. Everyday Sexism has now received posts from more than 100,000 people and has gained international media coverage in the likes of the New York Times to the Times of India.

JK Rowling

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We already loved JK Rowling for creating the Harry Potter series, but now she's made it onto our What's Working list for she's using her influence to make the world a better place.

In 2004, the author founded Lumos - a charity which works to support the eight million children in institutions worldwide, help them regain their right to a family life and to end the institutionalisation of children.

Lucy Ann Holmes

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We couldn't create a list of women who are sparking debate and inspiring change without mentioning No More Page 3 founder Lucy-Ann Holmes.

Holmes' petition asking the Sun to stop using topless models on page three has now received over 240,000 signatures.

Doreen Lawrence

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After her son Stephen Lawrence was murdered in an unprovoked racist attack in 1993, Doreen Lawrence tirelessly campaigned for justice for her son, as well as for other victims of racist crimes.

In 1998, she founded the The Stephen Lawrence Charitable Trust - a charity that supports young people nationally to transform their lives, overcome disadvantage and discrimination and have the opportunity to get into their chosen career.

She became Baroness Doreen Lawrence in 2013.

Emma Watson

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Under her role as the UN Women Goodwill Ambassador, Emma Watson has helped catapult the #HeForShe campaign into the spotlight and gain support for the feminist movement around the world.

As well as calling on men to join in the fight for gender equality, Watson has highlighted the fact that males can also be subject to discrimination due to sexism and gender-stereotyping.

Carlene Firmin

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In 2011 Carlene Firmin became the youngest black woman to ever receive an MBE - it was certainly well-deserved.

In 2010 she founded the Girls Against Gangs (GAG) project, supporting women affected by gang violence to become empowered and act as local advisors on gender and youth violence.

Three years later in 2013, she created the The MsUnderstood Partnership, bringing together the University of Bedfordshire, Imkaan and the Girls Against Gangs Project.

Frances Scott

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Men currently occupy 77% of the seats in the House of Commons. Frances Scott has created the 50:50 Parliament campaign in order to change that.

Scott contends that for women's issues to be taken seriously in the UK, we need fair representation in Westminster. Her petition has already gained over 9,000 supporters.

Julie Bentley

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Since Julie Bentley became the chief executive of Girl Guiding UK in 2013, the 105 year-old British institution has undergone a fabulous feminist makeover.

Bentley has paved the way for thousands of young women to question what it means to "be a girl". Under her leadership, Girl Guiding UK has signed the No More Page 3 petition and has teamed up with Dove to launch a game-changing body confidence campaign.

Ruth Hunt

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As Stonewall CEO, Ruth Hunt is helping to combat discrimination faced by lesbian, gay and bisexual people across the UK.

In 2013, Stonewall teamed up with the Gay Football Supporters Network to create Rainbow Laces - a campaign to tackle homophobia in football - which gained high-profile supporters both on and off the pitch.

In February, Hunt announced plans to extend campaigns run by Stonewall to include the transgender community.

Anne-Marie Imafidon

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Despite making up 46% of the overall UK workforce, government figures show that women hold just 15.5% of jobs in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Maths).

Anne-Marie Imafidon founded Stemettes - an organisation that aims to inspire the next generation of females into the industry and prove that women can, and do, have successful careers in stereotypically male fields.

How Amazing Women Are "Making It Work"
Laci Green, Sex-Positive YouTube Blogger And Peer Sex Educator(01 of32)
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"I think the fact that when people attack [feminists], it’s a sign of our own power. We are obviously threatening them in some way and threatening that ideology."Read more here. (credit:The Official Laci Green Facebook Page)
Anna Quindlen, Author(02 of32)
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"Feminism has been the ruling impulse of my adult life, and is frankly responsible for the existence I have." Read more here. (credit:Getty Images)
Dame Sue Ion, Engineer(03 of32)
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"People tend to think they know what science is and what scientists do, but many people actually have no idea what engineering is really about. It's engineers that make our lives possible day after day."Read more here. (credit:Courtesy of Dame Sue Ion)
Michelle Monaghan, Actress(04 of32)
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"I shouldn’t be allowed to tell other women’s stories if I can’t say that I’m a feminist. I have to be a feminist in order to represent other women."Read more here. (credit:Getty Images)
Kathryn Morgan, Ballet Dancer(05 of32)
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"I think we need to encourage healthy dancers and healthy bodies, not sickly. At the end of the day, though, it is an aesthetic art and the guys need to be able to lift you. You have to be able to get off the ground when you jump."Read more here. (credit:Paul Kolnik)
Jenny Mollen, Actress And Author(06 of32)
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"I think as a woman and as somebody in the entertainment industry, we have to be careful what we’re putting out there and what we’re trying to say. And that’s why I’m so happy that there’s been this sort of movement with female comedy. I think that that is paving the way for new ways of looking at things."Read more here. (credit:Jenny Mollen Instagram)
Busy Philipps, Actress(07 of32)
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"I don't know one mom or wife or working woman who has a day where they think that they've nailed anything. But if you have a day where you feel 80 percent there, that's a win to me."Read more here. (credit:Getty Images)
Erin Andrews, Sportscaster(08 of32)
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"I just feel like without women there would be a lot of lost people. Not to beat our own chest here, but we’re really the reason things get done. We make the world go round."Read more here. (credit:AP)
Sophia Amoruso, CEO Of NastyGal(09 of32)
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"I think it’s important that everyone understands that there’s no real prescription to having an awesome life."Read more here. (credit:Ami Sioux)
Debra Messing, Actress And Director(10 of32)
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"When I was younger, I thought if I worked hard enough, studied hard enough, or was dedicated enough and gifted enough I would be able to be everything to everyone. I think as we get older, you realize it's just not possible."Read more here. (credit:Heidi Gutman via Getty Images)
Lea Michele, Actress, Singer And Author(11 of32)
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"The level of strength that a woman has inside of her is just unbelievable."Read more here. (credit:Frederick M. Brown via Getty Images)
Michelle Williams, Singer(12 of32)
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"We don’t celebrate everyday women enough. They make the world go around, not the people you see on the magazine covers."Read more here. (credit:Getty Images)
Ann Shoket, Editor In Chief Of Seventeen Magazine(13 of32)
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"There are a lot of things about being a teenager that are eternal. It’s that feeling of wanting to be independent and feeling like you know everything and yet knowing that you know nothing. The idea that your life is pure possibility."Read more here. (credit:Getty Images)
Cindy Gallop, CEO And Founder Of Make Love Not Porn(14 of32)
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"I’ve realized from the great height of age 54, that the single worst dynamic in life and in business is the fear of what other people think."Read more here. (credit:Getty Images)
Maria Shriver, Journalist And Former First Lady Of California(15 of32)
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"I'm trying to teach my daughters that they have to think of themselves as providers and not be the ones being provided for."Read more here. (credit:Getty Images)
Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Author And Activist(16 of32)
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"The word itself comes with such bad baggage. That's one of the reasons I wanted to use the word feminism. [I wanted to] talk to young people, and say, 'forget the history of the word and the baggage it carries, and think about the idea of it.'"Read more here. (credit:Getty Images)
Reese Witherspoon, Actress(17 of32)
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"It's about re-writing the script. Changing people's perspectives about what women are capable of, and also seeing what we've already accomplished."Read more here. (credit:JORDAN STRAUSS/INVISION/AP)
Meryl Davis, Olympic Gold Medalist(18 of32)
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"I am a much happier 27-year-old than I was at 20 years old. I am so fortunate because I have an amazing family, amazing friends and a great support system. I think at 27 it is much easier for me to look at life and appreciate what I have rather than stressing about the little things day to day."Read more here. (credit:Getty)
Jennifer Weiner, Author(19 of32)
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"I would read Erica Jong and Nora Ephron and Fran Lebowitz -- all of these funny, smart, very-specifically Jewish, New York women authors, and I would be so encouraged by those voices and think, 'I can grow up and I can be a writer and I can sound exactly like myself.'"Read more here. (credit:Getty Images)
Issa Rae, Creator Of "Awkward Black Girl"(20 of32)
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"I felt like my voice was missing, and the voices of other people that I really respect and admire and wanna see in the mainstream are missing."Read more here. (credit:AP)
Nanette Lepore, Designer(21 of32)
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"I think you can juggle it. If you're really the kind of person that's super-aggressive about what you do, you're going to make everything work."Read more here. (credit:Elizabeth Lippman)
Anna Holmes, Founding Editor Of Jezebel(22 of32)
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"One of the things I’ve personally found frustrating for most of my life is that my female peers shied away from the word feminism or feminist. It had been made to seem toxic and I never bought into that."Read more here. (credit:Anna Wolf)
Adi Tatarko, Co-Founder and CEO of Houzz(23 of32)
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"You can't have it all and you have to live peacefully with that knowledge."Read more here. (credit:Courtesy of Adi Tatarko)
Victoria MacRae-Samuels, VP Of Operations Of Maker's Mark(24 of32)
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"My focus was, 'I'm going to do it as good or better as all the men who have come before me.'"Read more here.
Debora Spar, Barnard President(25 of32)
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"Feminism was meant to remove a fixed set of expectations; instead, we now interpret it as a route to personal perfection. Because we feel we can do anything, we feel we have to do everything."Read more here.
Michelle Ashford, "Masters Of Sex" Creator(26 of32)
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"The truth is at heart I’m a writer, and that is an incredibly introverted sort of character. I think I’m an introvert that has to act like an extrovert a lot."Read more here. (credit:Getty)
Molly McAleer, "2 Broke Girls" Writer, HelloGiggles Co-Founder(27 of32)
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"I've had a lot of people who were very kind to me, but no one's ever taught me how to do anything. I had to figure all that stuff out on my own."Read more here. (credit:Instagram)
Delia Ephron, Author, Screenwriter, Playwright(28 of32)
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"I think you have a responsibility to help people, period. One of the great joys of life is to help other people fly. That’s the most fun."Read more here. (credit:Getty)
Laura Lippman, Bestelling Author(29 of32)
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"I feel that's harder for women to achieve. Especially if they write about women."Read more here. (credit:Courtesy of Laura Lippman)
Jamie Malone, Award-Winning Chef(30 of32)
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"I just acted like the kitchen was mine until it finally was."Read more here. (credit:Courtesy of Jamie Malone)
Lynn Shelton, Filmmaker(31 of32)
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"There's this real deliciousness to being able to do exactly what you want to do and were meant to do after years of just sort of journeying toward that end."Read more here. (credit:Getty)
Jessica Herrin, Founder of Stella & Dot(32 of32)
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"I do what I do because it's a complete passion project, and I'm utterly convinced that it needs to exist."Read more here. (credit:Courtesy of Stella & Dot)