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Duchess of Cambridge on the prowl for charities

Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge arrives at Santa Barbara Racquet and Polo Club for a Foundation Polo Challenge that benefits the American Friends of the Foundation of Prince William and Prince Harry on July 9, 2011, in Santa Barbara, Calif. Chris Jackson

LONDON (CBS/AP) Following the footsteps of her late mother-in-law, Kate, Duchess of Cambridge, is hunting for charities she can support.

St. James's Palace on Sunday confirmed that the newlywed royal is spending the next few months exploring the charitable sector as she follows a family tradition championed by Princess Diana.

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The idea is "to get to know a number of charitable and other causes better, so she can make well-informed decisions about her future role," her spokesman said, declining to elaborate. "The duchess plans to meet a wide range of people and make private visits."

He spoke on condition of anonymity, as required by palace policy.

The Sunday Times said the 29-year-old princess had already begun making under-the-radar trips to various unnamed U.K. institutions.

The Duchess's focus will be on disadvantaged young people, veterans' issues, and conservation projects, The Times said. Cahrities have ben asked to keep the visits quiet until after the duchess announces her choices.

Running or founding charities has long been a favored pastime for Britain's royals. Prince Charles, Kate's father-in-law, is the patron or president of no fewer than 20.

But it was Charles' former wife, Princess Diana, whose hands-on approach set the bar for future royal charity work.

Diana was famously photographed crossing an Angolan minefield, and a 1987 picture of her holding the hand of an AIDS patient helped change public attitudes toward the disease at a time when many wrongly thought that HIV could be spread by touch.

Prince William, Diana's son and Kate's husband, has pulled occasional publicity stunts in the same vein. In 2009, he spent one December night out on the streets near London's Blackfriars bridge with the chief executive of a homelessness charity that his mother used to support, in a bid to raise awareness of the issue.

On a recent visit to California, both William and Kate visited an arts center in Skid Row, where some 4,000 homeless people live in downtown Los Angeles.

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