United Nations Population Fund
Background
UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, is the leading UN agency dedicated to addressing gender-based violence as a key component in advancing a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth is safe, and every young person’s potential is fulfilled.
UNFPA makes the highest level of investment in ending gender-based violence, including leadership on technology-facilitated gender-based violence, globally through the inter-related pillars of Response, Prevention, Enabling Environments and Data and Research across the humanitarian, peace and development continuum.
Policy framework
UNFPA is guided by and promotes the principles of the groundbreaking Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development (1994), which includes the commitment that advancing gender equality and equity and the empowerment of women, and the elimination of all kinds of violence against women, and ensuring women’s ability to control their own fertility are cornerstones of population and development-related programmes.
Areas of Focus
It remains a strategic priority for UNFPA to prevent and respond to gender-based violence across humanitarian, peace and development settings, including eliminating harmful practices such as female genital mutilation, child marriage and gender-biased sex selection. UNFPA supports comprehensive, survivor-centred responses across the humanitarian, peace and development continuum. Under the period of the last UNFPA Strategic Plan (2022 and 2025) UNFPA invested $1,925.6 million in initiatives to eliminate GBV and harmful practices.
UNFPA’s Work on GBV
Advocacy/Policy:
UNFPA collaborates with national and international stakeholders to address gaps in legislation and law enforcement related to GBV and harmful practices. It supports the development of culturally sensitive, rights-based policies and plans for GBV prevention and response, with a strong emphasis on integrating these efforts into the health sector. UNFPA also works to align national frameworks with international agreements such as the SDGs, CEDAW and the Beijing Platform for Action.
Capacity Development:
UNFPA partners with women’s and youth feminist organizations, civil society, governments, and other stakeholders to transform harmful gender and social norms to promote gender equality in families, communities and institutions. It focuses on building the capacity of governments, civil society, and service providers to respond and prevent GBV, across the social services, health, legal and justice and education sectors.
Data and Evidence Generation:
UNFPA plays a critical role in collecting, analyzing, and utilizing data to understand the prevalence, incidence, and impact of GBV worldwide. It partners with national statistics offices and relevant ministries to strengthen national data systems and ensure the ethical collection of GBV-related data. Through initiatives like kNOwVAWdata UNFPA provides technical support and capacity building for evidence-based policymaking in several regions and languages.
In humanitarian settings, UNFPA leads the Gender-Based Violence Information Management System (GBVIMS), which harmonizes data collection across 25 crisis contexts. An adapted version of GBVIMS is also used in development settings to safely collect, store, analyze, and share survivor-reported data. These efforts ensure that data informs decision-making, resource allocation, and the development of effective GBV prevention and response programmes.
Service Delivery:
UNFPA promotes a survivor-centred integrated approach to addressing GBV through dynamic systems of prevention, protection, and response, including through sexual and reproductive health services. It strengthens survivors’ access to quality health care, social services, and legal and justice support, guided by the Essential Services Package for Women and Girls Subject to Violence and the Interagency Minimum Standards on Gender-Based Violence in Emergencies Programming. UNFPA also leads the Gender-Based Violence Area of Responsibility (GBV AoR) under the Inter-Agency Standing Committee, coordinating global and national efforts to address GBV interventions in humanitarian settings.
From 2023 to 2026, with the support of Takeda, UNFPA is implementing the Women at the Center programme, which strengthens case management and professional social-service workforce capacities in Azerbaijan, El Salvador, Indonesia, Madagascar, and Zimbabwe.
Preventing GBV:
UNFPA works to dismantle harmful social and gender norms that perpetuate inequality and violence. It implements prevention programming as outlined in the RESPECT framework, partnering with UN Women, WHO, and UNDP. UNFPA also promotes comprehensive sexuality education as a primary prevention tool, fostering gender-equitable attitudes among adolescents to reduce violence and promote healthier relationships.UNFPA also engages communities, including men and boys in advancing gender equality and ending harmful practices, while remaining accountable to feminist movements.
Through the EmpowerED programme, UNFPA is harnessing the potential of CSE to contribute to the prevention of gender-based violence. Implemented in 10 countries across six global regions, EmpowerED is supporting the strengthening of CSE to be gender-transformative and trauma-informed and to include the key elements of GBV prevention programmes, as well as the establishment of referral pathways between CSE and GBV services. UNFPA is also building the evidence base on the impact of CSE in GBV prevention outcomes, including changes in attitudes towards violence and increased support seeking behaviours.
Responding to GBV Across Contexts:
UNFPA supports comprehensive, survivor-centred responses in both humanitarian and development settings, ensuring access to health care, social services, and legal support. Its initiatives are guided by the Flourish: UNFPA Gender-Based Violence Operational Plan and the UNFPA Strategy and Operational Plan to Scale Up and Strengthen Interventions on Gender-Based Violence in Emergencies 2023–2025. UNFPA also addresses the growing intersections between GBV, climate change, protracted crises, and population movements, working across the humanitarian-development-peace nexus to strengthen preparedness, resilience, and long-term development.
At the regional level UNFPA/EECA, the major milestone in 2025 was the co-development of the eight Regional GBV Case Management systems (Regional tool) strengthening tools through ongoing engagement with seven country offices (COs) in the region (Albania, Armenia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, North Macedonia, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan). The regional tool offers a practical and adaptable approach to apply intersectional systems thinking tools to strengthen GBV case management systems. It is conceived as a living resource, to be further developed through future applications, learning and country and sub-national experiences. The toolkit is intended to support peer learning and experience sharing across EECA country offices as they work with national partners to prevent and respond to GBV and harmful practices.
Addressing Technology-Facilitated GBV (TFGBV):
UNFPA has been leading work on addressing TFGBV since 2021 with publication of Making All Spaces Safe: Technology-facilitated GBV and launched the Making All Spaces Safe global programme (2024–2027), with the support of Global Affairs Canada, to tackle this issue. This initiative focuses on addressing TFGBV through comprehensive, survivor-centred programming. It works to improve frontline, multi-sectoral response to TFGBV, integrates digital literacy into prevention programming, advocates for rights-based law reform, and promotes safety-by-design standards in technology design in order to mitigate harm. The programme is being implemented globally, with a focus on Kenya and Benin, to address the evolving nature of GBV in digital spaces. UNFPA are also leading the Safety Showcase: Re-imagining Gender in Technology with the support of the United Kingdom to highlight tech products, policies and features that prioritise safety, security and privacy at the heart of design and deployment.
Global Initiatives and Partnerships:
UNFPA is a key partner in the UN Trust Fund to End Violence Against Women, supporting civil society initiatives worldwide. It also actively participates in the 16 Days of Activism against Gender-Based Violence, advocating for increased activism to ensure women and girls can live free from violence and coercion. Through its global programmes and partnerships, UNFPA continues to set standards for survivor-centred care and drive transformative change to end GBV in all its forms.
Women at the Centre is UNFPA's first global programme focused on increasing and sustaining quality GBV case management services for survivors, with a particular focus on women and girls from marginalized communities, including those with disabilities, Indigenous and rural women, and LGBTIQ+ people. Supported by Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited, the programme invests in workforce professionalization, accreditation pathways for the social service workforce, and the first UNFPA global curriculum on GBV case management, strengthening survivor-centred systems aligned with international standards. Women at the Centre is being implemented in El Salvador, Indonesia, Madagascar and Zimbabwe, and previously in Azerbaijan.
The kNOwVAWdata initiative supports countries to conduct safe and ethical research on the prevalence of violence against women, and to translate this evidence into policy and programming. Originally focused on Asia and the Pacific, the initiative has expanded to Africa, Eastern Europe and Central Asia, Latin America and the Caribbean and the Middle East. A core feature is the kNOwVAWdata course, developed with the University of Melbourne and adapted regionally in partnership with institutions including the American University of Central Asia and the American University in Cairo, which builds the capacity of national statistical systems, civil society and researchers to generate, analyze and use data in line with SDG indicators 5.2.1 and 5.2.2.
Launched in 2024 with the support of Global Affairs Canada, Making All Spaces Safe (MASS) is UNFPA's global programme addressing technology-facilitated GBV (TFGBV). The programme strengthens global, national and community-level capacity to prevent, mitigate and respond to TFGBV through five pillars: response, prevention, law and policy, research and evaluation, and convening efforts. MASS comprises global interventions alongside country programmes in Benin, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria and, soon Tunisia, and promotes rights-based law reform and safety-by-design standards in technology development. Tools developed under the programme include the TFGBV SHIELD tech-safety checklist for front-line service providers and a Global Response Hub that connects GBV service providers with technologists and cybersecurity experts to support on complex cases.
Supported by Global Affairs Canada, EmpowerED is UNFPA's global initiative to increase access to gender-transformative comprehensive sexuality education (CSE) for adolescents and young people, both in and out of school, enhance young people’s sexual and reproductive health and rights, and help them achieve full bodily autonomy and a life free from violence. EmpowerED has a particular focus on addressing gender inequality and preventing GBV, and is currently being rolled out in 10 countries across all six UNFPA regions. The programme seeks to iIncrease the availability, accessibility and quality of comprehensive sexuality education content and delivery through traditional and digital channels; accelerate the scale-up of programmes in the 10 focus countries and foster links to sexual and reproductive health and gender-based violence protection services; and leverage civil society networks and partnerships for advocacy, knowledge generation and technical collaboration on comprehensive sexuality education.
UNFPA is one of three core implementing UN agencies for the Spotlight Initiative, alongside UN Women and UNDP, under a joint partnership with the European Union launched in 2017 to eliminate all forms of violence against women and girls by 2030. During its first phase (2017-2023), close to 3 million women and girls accessed GBV services, and prevention campaigns reached audiences of nearly 384 million. UNFPA continues to draw on the lessons and partnerships of the Initiative to inform its programming and advocacy at global, regional and country levels.
UNFPA serves on the Global Steering Committee of the WPHF alongside sister UN entities, CSO partners, and Member States. Through the WPHF, UNFPA advances our support and engagement with women-led organizations working on women, peace, and security and humanitarian action around the world. As a member of the board, we: i) support partnerships, coordination, advocacy and resource mobilization at global level; ii) support the establishment, validation, and adjustment of the Fund’s strategic direction as well as the management of the Fund’s operations; iii) decide on the allocation of funds to eligible countries and the transfer of funds to participating organizations for global projects and sudden onset emergencies; iv) provide quality assurance of the Fund’s knowledge products; v) approve the Fund’s risk management strategy and reviewed risk regularly; and vi) monitor progress against the results framework, provided general oversight and exercised overall accountability of the WPHF.
At the country level, UNFPA serves as the PUNO in Libya, Chad, Syria, Iran, and Sudan where WPHF funds have been used for humanitarian crisis and response, conflict resolution, the protection of women and girls, peacebuilding and recovery and towards fostering an enabling environment for WPS. More specifically, WPHF has been used to: i) enhance the safety, security, and mental health of women and girls and ensure the respect of their human rights; ii) provide women and adolescent girls with accessible and high-quality GBV prevention and response services; iii) avail capacity-building support to women-led CSOs in view of empowering women and youth for sustainable peacebuilding; iv) address priorities and close gaps in funding women's rights/led organizations that promote the participation, decision-making, leadership, and protection of adult and young women in response to humanitarian crises, among other areas.
Resources
An Infographic Guide on Technology-Facilitated Gender-Based Violence (TFGBV) (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/infographic-guide-technology-facilitated-gender-based-violence-tfgbv)
A Framework for TFGBV Programming (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/framework-tfgbv-programming)
Our Bodies, Our Rights! Addressing Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights and Gender-based Violence for Women and Young People with Disabilities (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/our-bodies-our-rights-addressing-sexual-and-reproductive-health-and-rights-and-gender)
UNFPA Strategy and Operational Plan to Scale-up and Strengthen Interventions on Gender-based Violence in Emergencies, 2023-2025: Executive Summary (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/unfpa-strategy-and-operational-plan-scale-and-strengthen-interventions-gender-based)
Flourish. UNFPA Gender-Based Violence Operational Plan: Summary (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/flourish-unfpa-gender-based-violence-operational-plan-summary)
Guidance on the Safe and Ethical Use of Technology to Address Gender-based Violence and Harmful Practices: Implementation Summary (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/implementation-summary-safe-ethical-use-technology-gbv-harmful-practices)
A Guide to Better Understanding and Using Violence Against Women Prevalence Data (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/guide-better-understanding-and-using-violence-against-women-prevalence-data)
2022 Global Symposium on Technology-facilitated Gender-based Violence Results: Building a Common Pathway (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/2022-global-symposium-technology-facilitated-gender-based-violence-results-building)
Measuring technology-facilitated gender-based violence. A discussion paper (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/measuring-technology-facilitated-gender-based-violence-discussion-paper)
Technology-Facilitated Gender-Based Violence: Feminist Design (https://www.unfpa.org/resources/technology-facilitated-gender-based-violence-feminist-design)
Technology-Facilitated Gender-Based Violence: Rights-Based Regulation (https://www.unfpa.org/resources/technology-facilitated-gender-based-violence-rights-based-regulatio)
Technology-Facilitated Gender-Based Violence: Data and Measurement (https://www.unfpa.org/resources/technology-facilitated-gender-based-violence-data-and-measurement)
Addressing Gender-Based Violence Across Contexts: Gender-Based Violence Interagency (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/addressing-gender-based-violence-across-contexts-gender-based-violence-interagency)
Addressing Gender-Based Violence Across Contexts: Gender-Based Violence Interagency Minimum Standards and the Essential Services Package for Women and Girls Subject to Violence (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/unfpa-implementation-essential-services-package-women-and-girls-subject-violence)
Technology-Facilitated Gender-Based Violence: Making All Spaces Safe (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/technology-facilitated-gender-based-violence-making-all-spaces-safe)
Getting to Zero: Mapping UNFPA Leadership on Ending Gender-based Violence (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/getting-to-zero)
Reporting on Gender-Based Violence in Humanitarian Settings: A Journalist’s Handbook (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/reporting-gender-based-violence-humanitarian-settings-journalists-handbook)
The RESPECT framework: https://respect-prevent-vaw.org/
The Inter-Agency Minimum Standards for Gender-Based Violence in Emergencies Programming (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/inter-agency-minimum-standards-gender-based-violence-emergencies-programming)
Essential Services Package for Women and Girls Subject to Violence (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/essential-services-package-women-and-girls-subject-violence)
Minimum Standards for Prevention and Response to Gender-based Violence in Emergencies (https://www.unfpa.org/publications/minimum-standards-prevention-and-response-gender-based-violence-emergencies-0)
Brasilia Call to Action on Climate Justice, Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights, Gender Equality, and Impacted Populations (https://brazil.unfpa.org/sites/default/files/pub-pdf/2025-08/Final_Brasilia%20Call%20to%20Action_Global%20Symposium.pdf)
Since 2024, UNFPA has significantly strengthened its GBV prevention through a series of strategic and evidence-driven initiatives:
View MoreSince 2024, UNFPA has significantly strengthened its GBV prevention through a series of strategic and evidence-driven initiatives:
- The organization undertook a comprehensive internal mapping of GBV prevention programmes across regions, which, combined with a global literature review on “what works”, has informed the development of new internal guidance on GBV prevention. This forthcoming guidance is designed to support country offices in planning, implementing, and scaling evidence-based interventions, while ensuring alignment with UNFPA’s Strategic Plan and its gender strategy Agency, Choice and Access and GBV Operational Plan, Flourish. It reinforces work across legal reform, social norms transformation, youth empowerment, and feminist movement strengthening.
- UNFPA has deepened the integration of GBV prevention into comprehensive sexuality education (CSE). This includes the development of a forthcoming policy brief that leverages the potential of CSE for GBV prevention, alongside operational guidance that translates evidence into practical steps for integrating violence prevention intervention components, gender-transformative approaches and trauma-informed approaches into CSE programming. UNFPA is also building the evidence base on how CSE contributes to preventing violence and the impact of CSE in improving access to GBV services.
- Through the Women at the Centre (WAC) programme, UNFPA community outreach efforts focused on adapting social and gender norms change theory into local contexts in five countries including Azerbaijan, El Salvador, Indonesia, Madagascar, and Zimbabwe. Countries adapted UNFPA’s Global Social and Gender Norms Change Toolkit or other globally recognized prevention models like SASA! targeting women leaders, adolescents, caregivers/adults, and religious/community leaders. UNFPA additionally implemented diverse TFGBV awareness initiatives through the WAC programme, such as media training and educational game kits in El Salvador and the development of public booklets in Indonesia. Madagascar and Zimbabwe utilized community outreach and radio campaigns during the 16 Days of Activism to address digital safety and online violence. These integrated efforts across the four countries focused on adapting social and gender norms change theory to local contexts to better protect women and youth in virtual environments.
- UNFPA, together with UNWOMEN, WHO and UNDP, has developed forthcoming guidance on the Dos and Don’ts of Engaging Men and Boys, emphasizing that such efforts must remain accountable to women’s rights movements, challenge harmful masculinities and power imbalances, adopt intersectional approaches, and avoid diverting resources from women- and girl-centred programming.
- UNFPA is piloting innovative approaches such as a digital redirection intervention to counter online sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) misinformation and gendered disinformation, linking young people to accurate information and services. Together, these efforts reflect a more integrated, systemic, and forward-looking prevention agenda.
- UNFPA ASRO technically supported the establishment of a regional digital hub on child marriage in the Arab region through the launch of the Regional Action Forum (RAF) website in 2025, which is hosted and coordinated by UNICEF. The digital hub hosts over 80 technical and advocacy resources, strengthening access to evidence, visibility, and cross-country learning among UN agencies, CSOs, iNGOs, academia, and women’s rights organisations.
- UNFPA Morocco supported the Aman Laki - an innovative digital solution for GBV prevention and response, providing women, especially survivors and those in vulnerable situations, with easy access to integrated support services. Through a user-friendly interface, the platform enables online requests, connects users to listening centers and specialized services, and facilitates referrals to multisectoral institutions, including pathways for support and economic empowerment.
- UNFPA Sudan strengthened the role of Women-Led Organizations (WLOs) as frontline GBV responders by supporting localization efforts through technical and financial assistance, coordination platforms, and increased visibility. This enhanced their capacity, representation, and influence, ensuring grassroots women’s leadership is better integrated into humanitarian, peacebuilding, and recovery processes.
UNFPA is supporting the rollout of the UN statistical framework on femicide, with pilot initiatives in countries such as Pakistan and the Dominican Republic.
View MoreUNFPA is supporting the rollout of the UN statistical framework on femicide, with pilot initiatives in countries such as Pakistan and the Dominican Republic. This work places particular emphasis on strengthening Civil Registration and Vital Statistics (CRVS) and medico-legal death investigation systems, recognizing their critical role in improving the accuracy, completeness, and use of data on femicide. By integrating administrative data systems and fostering cross-country learning, UNFPA aims to enhance measurement, inform policy, and ultimately contribute to the prevention of femicide.
UNFPA Algeria has made significant progress in strengthening its national response to GBV by developing and finalising Intersectoral Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs).
View MoreUNFPA Algeria has made significant progress in strengthening its national response to GBV by developing and finalising Intersectoral Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs). These SOPs establish a formal bridge between the Ministry of Justice, the National Gendarmerie (DGSN), and the Ministry of Health, creating a unified framework for prevention and response.
UNFPA continues to serve as the IASC-designated lead for Gender-Based Violence in Emergencies (GBViE) within the Protection Cluster:
View MoreUNFPA continues to serve as the IASC-designated lead for Gender-Based Violence in Emergencies (GBViE) within the Protection Cluster:
- UNFPA has supported a wide network of actors at global and field levels. In line with its mandate as the GBV Provider of Last Resort (PoLR), UNFPA has worked with partners to deliver survivor-centered, multi-sectoral, life-saving services. These services provide assistance to GBV survivors, including survivors of conflict-related sexual violence (CRSV). These efforts have resulted in increased access to essential life-saving services, support, and protection for vulnerable individuals, particularly women and girls.
- In 2025, UNFPA undertook a comprehensive review and update of its internal Guidance on Prevention, Mitigation and Response to Conflict-Related Sexual Violence. The updated Guidance outlines UNFPA’s approach to addressing CRSV in humanitarian settings. While reinforcing the critical role of UNFPA in coordinating gender-based violence service providers, strengthening and maintaining safe referral pathways, and promoting survivor-centered standards across all humanitarian interventions, it also sets clear parameters to ensure that UNFPA uses information and trends of CRSV to inform programming, coordination, service delivery, and advocacy efforts, including in contexts where UNFPA coordinates the Monitoring, Analysis, and Reporting Arrangements (MARA).
- In the DRC, UNFPA is the convening and administrative agency for a new joint UN Programme on the reparation of CRSV survivors financed by the DRC Government’s FONAREV fund.
- In 2025, UNFPA implemented for the first time a qualitative methodology (Voices) in the DRC that was previously used in Syria, Sudan, and Cameroon. Voices collected data on women and girls’ perceptions and experiences of GBV. The findings include CRSV elements, further informing prevention and protection strategies in these contexts. In addition, UNFPA in the DRC also led the pillar on CRSV of the Humanitarian Country Team (HCT) protection advocacy strategy that was adopted by the humanitarian country team.
- UNFPA continues to support MARA coordination and CRSV related work in Myanmar, Mali, Central Africa Republic, South Sudan and Ukraine.
- UNFPA Sudan leads GBV programs and Area of Responsibility, coordinating a large-scale, survivor-centred response across all states, strengthening referral pathways, expanding Women and Girls Safe Spaces, and driving integrated GBV–SRH service delivery through mobile teams and one-stop centres, while also supporting local women-led organizations and frontline workforce capacity.
- UNFPA Yemen co-leads, despite severe funding constraints and access limitations, the GBV AoR and maintains a multisectoral response that combines case management, shelters, mental health services, and prevention interventions, alongside strong coordination with national actors and investment in social norms change and evidence generation.
- UNFPA Syria reached 488,000 people with GBV prevention and response services (94% Female) with a majority in the conflict related zones. This included timely access to WGSS, MHPSS, and integrated sexual reproductive health services.
- UNFPA Palestine sustained in 2025 a lifesaving GBV response despite extreme crisis conditions, providing services through safe spaces, shelters, and MHPSS centres while ensuring case management, psychosocial support, and referrals for survivors. UNFPA also played a key coordination role, maintaining survivor-centred services and protection standards even as needs far exceeded available resources.
UNFPA provided substantial support for legislative development in the following areas:
View MoreUNFPA provided substantial support for legislative development in the following areas:
- UNFPA supported the process of developing the Inter-American Model Law on digital violence against women of MESECVI.
- In Colombia, Perú, Bolivia UNFPA supported the development of the Child Marriage and Early Union Prohibition.
- In Colombia, UNFPA supported the adoption of the law to eradicate Female Genital Mutilation.
- UNFPA Djibouti has taken landmark steps toward eliminating FGM through the adoption of a constitutional amendment to Article 16, explicitly prohibiting FGM under the ban on torture and cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment. This historic legal reform is reinforced by a national fatwa issued by religious leaders explicitly calling for the abandonment of FGM, marking a critical shift in both the legal and normative environment.
- UNFPA Somalia supported a major milestone in December 2025, when the President of the South West State enacted a law prohibiting FGM. The law criminalizes the practice and reflects a strong political commitment to protecting the rights of women and girls and advancing gender equality.
- UNFPA promoted rights-based law and policy frameworks that are survivor-centred and prioritise platform accountability.In partnership with Derechos Digitales, UNFPA released Guiding principles for law and policy reform to address Technology-facilitated Gender-based Violence: Towards a system of accountability at the end of 2025. These principles are based on a comparative analysis of eight global jurisdictions, predominantly from the Global South. UNFPA and UN Women, facilitated by Equality Now, are consolidating two similar documents set to be released in 2026, as well as exploring CSW opportunities.
UNFPA has continued to strengthen national and regional capacities to generate, analyze, and use data on violence against women:
View MoreUNFPA has continued to strengthen national and regional capacities to generate, analyze, and use data on violence against women:
- For the kNOwVAWdata initiative, this includes a comprehensive learning programme that prioritizes safety and ethics in data collection and use and tailored technical support. Particular emphasis is placed on building sustainable in-country expertise, supporting national statistical offices, line ministries, and research institutions to institutionalize high-quality VAW data systems.
- Training and capacity-building activities under the Women at the Centre programme were implemented across all project countries to strengthen gender-based violence (GBV) prevention and response systems. These trainings were delivered to caseworkers, social workers, educators, health personnel, outreach workers, and community leaders. Key areas included GBV case management, survivor-centered approaches, referral systems, and Psychological First Aid. In El Salvador and Indonesia, structured certification and accreditation pathways were advanced, including university-based training systems and national institutional partnerships. Specialized training addressed health sector responses, including clinical care for survivors of sexual and intimate partner violence, as well as adolescent-specific GBV risks and prevention of sexual exploitation and abuse (PSEAH). In Madagascar, capacity building also covered disability inclusion and ethical GBV data management, while Zimbabwe emphasized community outreach and curriculum integration into social work education.
- UNFPA has also organized a dedicated internal technical session on the WHO global estimates on violence against women, aimed at strengthening understanding of estimation methods, data limitations, and their implications for national policy and programming.
- The UNFPA regional office in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) developed a virtual course on strategies to prevent Child Marriage and Early Unions (CMEU)
- In 2024, UNFPA led the successful launch of the GBV Case Management (GBV CM) e-learning program, in collaboration with UNHCR, available in four different languages (English, French, Spanish and Arabic). The program has seen widespread interest and participation, reflecting its value and relevance in strengthening GBV response capacities. This milestone highlights UNFPA’s collective commitment to enhancing skills and knowledge to better support survivors of GBV in humanitarian settings.
- UNFPA ASRO completed a regional mapping of SBC approaches and joint tool review and co-joined a six-day Regional SBC ToT, with UNICEF MENARO, for 8 COs (Iraq, Sudan, Egypt, Yemen, Somalia, Jordan, Djibouti, Lebanon) producing actionable work plans and establishing a Regional SBC Community of Practice.
- UNFPA ASRO developed a “UNFPA's Foundational Women-Led Organization Capacity Strengthening Curriculum” a practical training resource designed to bolster the organizational and administrative capacities of women-led and women's rights organizations (WLOs/WROs) in humanitarian and development contexts. Developed through consultations with WLOs across the Arab States, the curriculum addresses capacity gaps identified directly by these organizations.
UNFPA cohosted the 2025 Global Symposium on Climate Justice and Impacted Populations, with the Government of Brazil.
View MoreUNFPA cohosted the 2025 Global Symposium on Climate Justice and Impacted Populations, with the Government of Brazil. The symposium convened global policymakers, researchers, and practitioners to examine the intersections between climate change, gender equality, sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR), and gender-based violence (GBV). Held ahead of COP30, it positioned climate change as not only an environmental crisis but a human rights issue, disproportionately affecting women and girls.
The symposium assessed critical gaps in research, policy, financing, and data systems linking climate and GBV, while emphasizing the need for integrated, gender-responsive climate action. It culminated in the Brasília Call to Action, which outlined concrete steps to embed SRHR and GBV into climate policies, national adaptation plans, and financing frameworks. The event strengthened UNFPA and UN agency capacity by establishing a shared evidence base that links GBV with climate vulnerability. It improved technical and institutional capacity by identifying integration pathways for GBV within climate frameworks like NDCs. Furthermore, it fostered cross-sectoral coordination among UN entities and governments for scalable responses while enhancing advocacy capacity with a unified narrative to influence COP30 and global climate governance.
Since 2024, UNFPA has significantly expanded its work on data to end violence against women (VAW), with a strong focus on strengthening measurement, capacity, and global comparability.
View MoreSince 2024, UNFPA has significantly expanded its work on data to end violence against women (VAW), with a strong focus on strengthening measurement, capacity, and global comparability.
- Central to this effort is the scaling up of the kNOwVAWdata initiative, which equips governments, researchers, and civil society with tools to collect and use ethical, high-quality VAW data. The initiative has been globalized beyond its initial regional Asia Pacific focus and has been adapted to the African, Latin American, Arabic and Central European specific realities. Training is now also accessible online, making it accessible to practitioners across the globe. In 2025, a major milestone was the finalization of the Harmful Practices module, covering child marriage, female genital mutilation, and gender-biased sex selection. This expanded the methodological scope of kNOwVAWdata and strengthened its contribution to SDG monitoring. Through the support of the University of Melbourne and the American University in Central Asia practitioners have been trained globally and numerous countries supported in implementing VAW prevalence surveys and strengthening national data systems.
- UNFPA has also contributed to global VAW estimates by supporting WHO in the development and refinement of these datasets.
- In parallel, UNFPA has begun advancing the measurement of technology-facilitated violence against women (TFVAW), working with UN Women and WHO to develop a global statistical framework.
- In humanitarian settings, UNFPA continues to lead the Inter-Agency GBV Information Management System initiative including UNICEF, UNHCR, IMC and IRC supporting strengthened case management through safe and ethical data collection.
- In Latin America and the Caribbean, UNFPA has developed two documents providing technical guidance and recommendations to strengthen the generation of data on gender-based violence (GBV): one focused on administrative records and another on GBV prevalence surveys.
- UNFPA ASRO and ESCWA conducted qualitative research “Breaking the Silence: Addressing Elder Abuse in the Arab Region”. The report aims to fill critical knowledge gaps, raise awareness, and provide actionable policy recommendations. The report calls for collective action-by governments, civil society, and international organizations to ensure that older persons, including elder women, are not only protected from abuse but also enabled to live with dignity, autonomy, and full participation in society.
- UNFPA ASRO finalized a comprehensive desk review on disability inclusion (2022–2025), mapping progress in integrating persons with disabilities, especially women and girls, into SRH and GBV programming. Key achievements included technical support to the regional disability classification roadmap, rollout of the “We Decide” framework, and high-level advocacy with the League of Arab States.
- UNFPA ASRO translated evidence into action by leading UNFPA ASRO - UNICEF national consultations on the Child Marriage in Humanitarian Settings (CMiHS) study, incorporating inputs from Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and Yemen. The study’s regional launch in July 2025 informed country workplans, advocacy priorities, and technical guidance for 2026–2027 programming.
UNFPA has been actively involved in advancing, implementing, and operationalizing the Belem do Para Convention’s agenda to prevent violence against women through the:
View MoreUNFPA has been actively involved in advancing, implementing, and operationalizing the Belem do Para Convention’s agenda to prevent violence against women through the:
- General Recommendation 5 on GBV and afrodescendant women.
- IV Hemispheric report on the accomplishments of the Belem do Pará Convention
UNFPA ASRO, in partnership with ESCWA, UNDP, and UN Women, strengthened the availability and use of evidence for gender equality advocacy through the Gender Justice and the Law Initiative (GJI)[1]. In 2025, the initiative delivered an updated, comprehensive legal mapping across 16 Arab States, reflecting recent legislative reforms and alignment with international human rights standards.
- The issuance of a Fatwa in Djibouti condemning FGM was a key outcome of UNFPA ASRO’s sustained technical and programmatic support, which strengthened religious engagement and created conditions for faith-based leadership to publicly reject the practice. Key efforts included operating the Shamekhat network, capacity-building for Al-Azhar students, and a South-South cooperation study tour. The tour brought senior religious leaders from Djibouti to Cairo to engage with scholars from Al-Azhar and Dar al-Ifta. This peer-to-peer dialogue and exposure built trust and religious ownership, leading to the national dialogue and the subsequent Fatwa.
The Women at the Centre (WAC) program, established by UNFPA in 2023, is the organization's first global initiative dedicated to increasing the availability and accessibility of quality GBV case management services for survivors, particularly those from marginalized communities.
View MoreThe Women at the Centre (WAC) program, established by UNFPA in 2023, is the organization's first global initiative dedicated to increasing the availability and accessibility of quality GBV case management services for survivors, particularly those from marginalized communities. WAC aims to institutionalize professional training and continuous development via accreditation pathways for the social service workforce.This enables the delivery of survivor-centered, high-quality, multi-sectoral response services, including psychosocial support, safe spaces, integrated Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights (SRHR), and linkages to child protection systems. Key achievements in 2025 include:
- Establishing or expanding GBV case management and certification pathways in Azerbaijan, El Salvador, Indonesia, Madagascar, and Zimbabwe.
- Certifying/accrediting 187 case/social workers in El Salvador and Indonesia.
- Supporting or supervising 81 service points across El Salvador, Indonesia, and Zimbabwe.
- Developing and training instructors on national GBV case management pre-service and in-service curricula.
- Publishing four guidance documents (GD) on ethical and safe GBV communications (GD1, GN2, GD3, GD4)
- Developing policy and guidance materials focused on marginalized survivors (adolescent girls, people with disabilities, LGBTIQ+ people, older women etc.), as well as on SRHR and psychological first aid.
- Establishing referral pathways and supporting helplines, hotlines and safe spaces to increase service accessibility.
UNFPA ASRO led the development and regional endorsement of an updated Arab States Primary Health Care strategy integrating GBV into SRH services, adopted by the League of Arab States Health Ministerial Council resolution number 5. The strategy embeds GBV prevention and response into health systems. In 2026, led by UNFPA ASRO and LAS, the countries will develop action plans to advance the implementation across the region.
UNFPA Algeria has strengthened its health sector response to GBV through the integration of three standardized clinical protocols, covering sexual, physical, and psychological violence, into the national health framework. This ensures that all public health facilities provide a uniform, survivor-centered package of care.
UNFPA Jordan supported the expansion of Women-Friendly Health Centers (WFHCs) to 108 sites, delivering integrated, high-quality SRH and GBV services. Implemented with the Ministry of Health and Health Care Accreditation Council, the programme ensures accessible, rights-based care services to the GBV survivors.