Protection, Support and Services for Victims/Survivors
In 2025, UN Women strengthened survivor-centred responses through expanded access to integrated, multisectoral services, scaling implementation of the Essential Services Package and supporting national systems to improve coordination across health, justice, policing and social sectors.
These efforts reached over 14 million women and girls, including 7.4 million in crisis contexts, and expanded support across 59 countries, strengthening the availability and quality of coordinated services. Innovative delivery models—including one-stop centres, specialized services and digital solutions—enhanced accessibility, particularly in humanitarian and complex settings.
Examples of country level results include:
- a 51.5% increase in survivors accessing services in Kazakhstan, driven by improved referral pathways and service availability, and
- 10,534 women accessing GBV services in Côte d’Ivoire, illustrating expanded reach in crisis and development contexts.
In 2025, UN Women strengthened survivor-centred responses through expanded access to integrated, multisectoral services, scaling implementation of the Essential Services Package and supporting national systems to improve coordination across health, justice, policing and social sectors.
These efforts reached over 14 million women and girls, including 7.4 million in crisis contexts, and expanded support across 59 countries, strengthening the availability and quality of coordinated services. Innovative delivery models—including one-stop centres, specialized services and digital solutions—enhanced accessibility, particularly in humanitarian and complex settings.
Examples of country level results include:
- a 51.5% increase in survivors accessing services in Kazakhstan, driven by improved referral pathways and service availability, and
- 10,534 women accessing GBV services in Côte d’Ivoire, illustrating expanded reach in crisis and development contexts.
New global tools further strengthened service delivery, including guidance on survivor-centred counselling and ethical survivor engagement frameworks, supporting improved quality, accountability and inclusiveness of services. Capacity-building initiatives for institutions and frontline providers enhanced consistency and effectiveness of responses across sectors. Investigation protocols were developed in Latin America and the Carribean for gender‑based violence, in collaboration with the gender‑specialized network of public prosecutors, strengthening institutional capacity and coordination within justice systems.
Complementary programming also reinforced safer environments and integrated service delivery, including Safe Cities initiatives implemented in 40+ countries, with new programmes launched in Guatemala, Panama, Zanzibar and India, and engagement of 150+ leaders from 21 countries to advance coordinated action.
Overall, these efforts improved access to justice, protection and support for survivors, strengthened system-wide coordination, and reinforced survivor-centred approaches at scale across diverse contexts.
Access to coordinated, survivor-centred services across health, justice, psychosocial, and legal sectors is essential to ensuring that women and girls who experience violence receive the support they need and that perpetrators are held accountable. Spotlight Initiative works to strengthen multi-sectoral response systems and the capacity of frontline institutions to deliver quality, integrated care.
In 2025, over 1.5 million people accessed gender-based violence services across Spotlight Initiative programmes. In Uganda, Spotlight Initiative-supported innovations – including mobile legal clinics, paralegal networks, and community-based case management mechanisms — strengthened survivors’ access to justice and accountability for sexual and gender-based violence. These efforts contributed to convictions in dozens of SGBV cases heard at Special High Court sessions, with over 400 survivors securing restitution and the recovery of property. In Ecuador, police officers were trained under the National Protocol on Urgent Protection Measures, strengthening institutional capacity to issue and enforce protective orders for survivors at risk.
View MoreAccess to coordinated, survivor-centred services across health, justice, psychosocial, and legal sectors is essential to ensuring that women and girls who experience violence receive the support they need and that perpetrators are held accountable. Spotlight Initiative works to strengthen multi-sectoral response systems and the capacity of frontline institutions to deliver quality, integrated care.
In 2025, over 1.5 million people accessed gender-based violence services across Spotlight Initiative programmes. In Uganda, Spotlight Initiative-supported innovations – including mobile legal clinics, paralegal networks, and community-based case management mechanisms — strengthened survivors’ access to justice and accountability for sexual and gender-based violence. These efforts contributed to convictions in dozens of SGBV cases heard at Special High Court sessions, with over 400 survivors securing restitution and the recovery of property. In Ecuador, police officers were trained under the National Protocol on Urgent Protection Measures, strengthening institutional capacity to issue and enforce protective orders for survivors at risk.
Fragmented service delivery remains one of the most significant barriers to effective response; integrated, well-resourced systems are essential to ensuring survivors receive consistent, rights-based support regardless of where they enter the system.
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. 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.
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. 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.
UN Trust Fund-supported initiatives enabled 74,300 women and girls to access specialist support services; supported 581,198 women and girls to access information, goods and services to prevent or respond to violence; strengthened 738 institutions to improve survivor-centred service provision; and facilitated access to justice for 7,960 women and girls in cases of violence. The portfolio also prioritized women and girls facing intersecting forms of discrimination and exclusion. In 2025, funded initiatives directly reached over 39,000 women survivors of violence, 12,727 refugee and internally displaced women and girls, 7,444 women and girls with disabilities, 8,828 Indigenous women and girls, and 2,736 lesbian, bisexual and transgender women and girls, and in 2025 alone nearly 100,000 cases of sexual and gender-based violence against women and girls were reported or referred to local state service providers through support provided by the UN Trust Fund grantee partners.
View MoreUN Trust Fund-supported initiatives enabled 74,300 women and girls to access specialist support services; supported 581,198 women and girls to access information, goods and services to prevent or respond to violence; strengthened 738 institutions to improve survivor-centred service provision; and facilitated access to justice for 7,960 women and girls in cases of violence. The portfolio also prioritized women and girls facing intersecting forms of discrimination and exclusion. In 2025, funded initiatives directly reached over 39,000 women survivors of violence, 12,727 refugee and internally displaced women and girls, 7,444 women and girls with disabilities, 8,828 Indigenous women and girls, and 2,736 lesbian, bisexual and transgender women and girls, and in 2025 alone nearly 100,000 cases of sexual and gender-based violence against women and girls were reported or referred to local state service providers through support provided by the UN Trust Fund grantee partners. Through support from Wellspring Philanthropic, the UN Trust Fund also initiated a series of briefs on practice-based knowledge on essential services for women and girls, highlighting the key role of civil society organizations as service providers across the humanitarian development peace nexus.
Overall, these efforts improved access to justice, protection and support for survivors, strengthened system-wide coordination, and reinforced survivor-centred approaches at scale across diverse contexts.