At first glance, not obvious kindred spirits.
"And if we are to reach our goals, and we do generally as a world care about the natural environment, then we need more of these guys and girls."Rangers are tasked with overseeing natural areas and the wildlife within them, but increasingly have to fend off poachers, who seek to traffic or kill animals - such as elephants, tigers and rhinos - that have body parts prized by some.
Poachers can be armed and encounters with rangers can prove fatal. In the year to May 2024, 38 out of 140 deaths were homicides, according to the International Ranger Federation (IRF).In November, the princeto cover 10,000 rangers who safeguard Africa's wildlife.
The screening was also attended by Rohit Singh, vice-president of the IRF, who described rangers as "essential planetary health workers" and echoed the Prince's concerns.He said: "One statistic that always comes to my mind is that 82% of rangers say they don't want their kids to become rangers - so if we don't change this, how are we going to get more rangers?
"There are more hairdressers in the UK than there are rangers in the world's protected areas."
to keep up with the latest climate and environment stories with the BBC's Justin Rowlatt. Outside the UK?Young people who grew up in care have been invited to turn their "pain into power" by creating art that describes their lived experiences.
The Woven Worlds project has delivered free art workshops to two groups - young people in Manchester who have spent time in care, and survivors of war in Kitgum, northern Uganda.Fashion designer Jessie Stringer-Fewtrill, who grew up in care, obtained funding from the British Council to deliver the workshops with a Ugandan friend.
"I used art and words as a form of self expression, like creative therapy," said Miss Stringer-Fewtrill, who added that she loved to see the workshops' participants benefiting in the same way.She said she hoped the sessions would help encourage care leavers to recognise that coming from a place of hardship is "something to be celebrated".