United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women
Background
UN Women is at the forefront of global efforts to eliminate violence against women and girls (VAWG), leveraging its unique triple mandate of normative support, UN system coordination, and operational activities. Through strategic partnerships, evidence-based programming, and advocacy, UN Women works to prevent violence, support survivors, and promote gender equality worldwide. Violence against women and girls remains one of the most pervasive human rights violations globally, impeding progress toward gender equality and sustainable development. UN Women's Strategic Plan 2022–2025 outlines a comprehensive approach to address VAWG, emphasizing prevention, survivor-centered responses, and the transformation of harmful social norms. The organization collaborates with governments, civil society, and other stakeholders to implement policies and programs that protect women's rights and promote their empowerment.
On behalf of the United Nations system, the UN Women administers the United Nations Trust Fund to End Violence Against Women (UN Trust Fund), which provides core, flexible and long-term funding along with technical and strategic support services for civil society and women’s rights organizations across the humanitarian-development-peace nexus. As the secretariat of the United Nations Inter-Agency Network on Ending Violence Against Women and Girls VAWG, UN-Women will coordinate system-wide efforts to end all forms of VAWG, including in advocacy for sustainable financing.
Policy framework
UN Women's work to end VAWG is firmly anchored in international human rights instruments and political commitments. These include the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, particularly Goal 5: Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls.
UN Women supports Member States to uphold these commitments by aligning national legislation, policies, and programs with international standards. The organization plays a central role in global norm-setting spaces such as the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW), where it supports the negotiation and implementation of agreed conclusions on gender equality and the elimination of VAWG. UN Women also contributes substantively to the Secretary-General’s reports on VAWG and related topics, helping ensure that these issues remain central to the international policy agenda.
Through its Strategic Plan (2022–2025), UN Women emphasizes the elimination of violence as one of its core impact areas, promoting integrated, survivor-centered, and multisectoral approaches that are responsive to intersecting forms of discrimination and grounded in feminist values.
There are a number of internationally agreed norms and standards that relate to ending violence against women, including:
- The 1979 Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination against Women does not explicitly mention violence against women and girls, but General Recommendations 12, 19, and 35 clarify that the Convention, as per Article 2 on non-discrimination, extends to violence against women, and also makes detailed recommendations to States to address violence against women.
- The 1993 World Conference on Human Rights recognized violence against women as a human rights violation and called for the appointment of a Special Rapporteur on violence against women in the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action.
- The 1993 Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women was the first international instrument explicitly addressing violence against women, providing a framework for national and international action.
- The 1994 International Conference on Population and Development drew links between violence against women and reproductive health and rights.
- The 1995 Beijing Platform for Action identifies specific actions for governments to take to prevent and respond to violence against women and girls. Ending violence is one of 12 areas for priority action. In 2020, a major stock-taking UN Women report revealed that more than 80 per cent of countries (of 166 in total) reported that action to implement, and enforce, violence against women laws had been achieved in the previous five years, and 87 per cent of countries reported introducing, or strengthening, services for survivors of violence.
- In 2006 the Secretary-General’s In-Depth Study on All Forms of Violence against Women was released, the first comprehensive report on the issue.
- The 2011 Council of Europe Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence became the second legally binding regional instrument on violence against women and girls.
- The UN General Assembly adopts biannual resolutions on the issue of violence against women. The resolutions, first adopted in 2012, include the intensification of efforts to eliminate all forms of violence against women, trafficking in women and girls, and intensifying global efforts for the elimination of female genital mutilations. These resolutions are renegotiated biannually, and the most recent reports were submitted on these resolutions during the 75th session of the UN General Assembly.
- The UN Human Rights Council first adopted a resolution on accelerating efforts to eliminate all forms of violence against women in 2012.
- In 2020, at the 64th session of the Commission on the Status of Women, leaders pledged to ramp up efforts to fully implement the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, including ending all forms of violence and harmful practices against women and girls.
Areas of Focus
Response
UN Women leads global efforts to strengthen survivor-centered responses to VAWG through its support to essential services and multisectoral coordination. It plays a critical convening and technical role in promoting the Essential Services Package for Women and Girls Subject to Violence, developed in collaboration with WHO, UNFPA, UNDP, and UNODC. This package outlines a coordinated, quality approach to providing health, justice and policing, and social services for survivors. UN Women supports countries in adapting and implementing the package, building the capacity of service providers, and promoting accountability mechanisms.
UN Women also works to ensure that crisis response—including in humanitarian settings and during global emergencies such as the COVID-19 pandemic—integrates measures to prevent and respond to VAWG. It supports the development of national action plans, referral pathways, and inter-agency coordination mechanisms to ensure timely and effective service delivery to survivors.
Prevention
UN Women is a global leader in VAWG prevention, advocating for and operationalizing primary prevention strategies that transform harmful gender norms, challenge patriarchal power structures, and promote gender-equitable relationships. UN Women’s prevention programming is grounded in the RESPECT Women framework, developed with WHO and other partners. The framework outlines seven evidence-based strategies: Relationship skills strengthened; Empowerment of women; Services ensured; Poverty reduced; Environments made safe; Child and adolescent abuse prevented; and Transformed attitudes, beliefs and norms.
UN Women supports governments and civil society to design, implement, and evaluate prevention programs at scale. It fosters social mobilization campaigns, school- and community-based interventions, and engagement with men and boys to shift norms and attitudes. In particular, the organization works with feminist movements and youth-led initiatives to amplify transformative, intersectional approaches to prevention.
Research and Data
As the custodian of knowledge on gender equality and VAWG, UN Women invests significantly in strengthening the global evidence base to inform policy and programming. It hosts and manages the Global Database on Violence Against Women, the only global repository of measures taken by governments to address violence against women. The database enhances transparency and promotes peer learning by providing accessible information on laws, policies, services, and research.
UN Women provides technical and financial support to national statistical offices to collect and analyze prevalence data on VAWG through population-based surveys. It advocates for the regular collection of comparable, quality data disaggregated by sex, age, disability, and other factors, and builds capacity to use data in planning and budgeting. In collaboration with international partners, UN Women has developed guidance and standards to improve the measurement of VAWG, including through the Inter-Agency Group on Violence against Women Data and the UN Survey Module on VAW Prevalence.
Women’s Movements and Leadership
UN Women recognizes that feminist and women’s rights organizations are indispensable actors in efforts to end VAWG. Through the ACT for Feminist Movements programme, UN Women provides long-term, flexible funding and capacity-building support to women-led organizations and networks, particularly those working at the grassroots level.
ACT supports advocacy, coalition-building, knowledge generation, and service provision by feminist movements, enabling them to influence laws and policies, hold duty-bearers accountable, and mobilize communities. UN Women also facilitates platforms for movement-building, such as the Generation Equality Action Coalitions, ensuring that women’s voices are central in decision-making spaces at all levels.
Safe Public Spaces and Sexual Harassment
UN Women pioneered the Safe Cities and Safe Public Spaces Global Initiative—the first-ever global effort to develop comprehensive, multi-stakeholder approaches to preventing and responding to sexual harassment and other forms of sexual violence in public spaces. The initiative is implemented in over 65 cities worldwide, working with local and national governments, transport and other service providers, women's rights organizations, and grassroots groups and the private sector to co-create solutions that reduce sexual violence in public spaces and increase women and girls’ safety and inclusion.
Interventions supported by UN Women include social norms programming (multiple levels), gender-responsive planning in urban and rural settings, , community policing, and the use of data to inform the development and monitoring of comprehensive programmes. The initiative promotes women’s political decision making, policy change, behavior transformation, and infrastructure improvements to ensure that women and girls can move freely and safely in public spaces without fear of violence or sexual harassment.
Harmful Practices: Child Marriage and Female Genital Mutilation (FGM)
UN Women addresses harmful practices such as child marriage and FGM as severe violations of human rights and forms of gender-based violence. The organization works at global, regional, and national levels to support the repeal or reform of discriminatory laws, advocate for strong enforcement mechanisms, and promote comprehensive services for survivors.
Through partnership with UNFPA, UNICEF, and civil society organizations, UN Women supports community-led approaches to change social norms, raise awareness, and empower girls and young women. The organization also contributes to the global evidence base on what works to end harmful practices, including supporting research, policy dialogue, and evaluation of interventions.
Trafficking in Women and Girls
UN Women’s approach to combating trafficking in persons, particularly women and girls, focuses on prevention, protection, and rights-based responses. As a member of the Inter-Agency Coordination Group against Trafficking in Persons (ICAT), UN Women ensures that anti-trafficking strategies are gender-responsive and survivor-centered.
UN Women works with governments to integrate anti-trafficking measures into national development and gender equality plans, supports the provision of legal aid and psychosocial services to survivors, and strengthens efforts to reduce the risks of trafficking in conflict, crisis, and migration contexts. It also advocates for addressing the structural inequalities—such as poverty, discrimination, and lack of access to education and employment—that increase women’s vulnerability to exploitation.
Technology Facilitated Violence Against Women and Girls (TF-VAWG)
Recognizing the rapid rise in online and technology-facilitated violence, UN Women has taken a leadership role in addressing this emerging form of VAWG. TF VAWG includes online harassment, non-consensual image sharing, doxing, cyberstalking, and digital sexual exploitation, disproportionately affecting women and girls—particularly journalists, activists, and public figures.
UN Women supports policy and legal reforms to recognize and criminalize TF VAWG, and works with governments, civil society, and technology companies to develop safe digital environments including the Global Digital Compact, an annex to Pact for the Future. It conducts research to better understand the scope and impact of TG VAWG, and raises awareness through global campaigns such as #SafeSpacesNow and #OrangeTheWorld.
Resources
RESPECT women: Preventing violence against women (2019)
Training Manual on Gender and Female Genital Mutilation and Cutting (2017)
Handbook for National Action Plans on Violence Against Women (2012)
Essential Services Package for women and girls subject to violence (2015)
Femicides in 2023: Global estimates of intimate partner/family member femicides.
Safe consultations with survivors of violence against women and girls (2022)
Handbook on gender responsive police services for women and girls subject to violence (2021)
*See also the resource links to numerous tools referred to in the narrative above and under specific measures.
In Bolivia with UN-Women’s technical assistance, the Office of the Ombudsman commissioned an analysis of the level of compliance with the legislation on VAWP at sub-national levels. The research findings concluded that only 19% of Municipal Autonomous Governments and 5 out of 9 Departmental Autonomous Governments have internal regulations in line with Law 243. The publication titled "Regulatory Package, for the Prevention and Sanctioning of Harassment and Political Violence against Women, in Departmental Autonomous Governments and Municipal Autonomous Governments",[1] aims to assist Municipal and Departmental Autonomous Governments to tackle key barriers to address VAWP providing tools to develop and implement regulations and procedures in line with the national law including: i) a model proposal for General Rules of Procedures of the Departmental Assembly or the Municipal Council; ii) draft Rules of Procedure of Ethics Commissions; iii) internal staff regulations and iv) a model proposal for the disciplinary regime
An institutional protocol to monitor and address Violence Against Women in Elections was developed by the National Electoral Commission in Liberia. UN Women provided technical support .
UN Women ESARO supported the development of a model law for establishment of special mechanisms to fast track SGBV cases by International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR) with UN Women support. This had been one of the articles of the Kampala Declaration (2011) and provides a comprehensive framework to facilitate development of national instruments to fast track prosecution of SGBV cases.
In Kenya, UN Women provided both financial and technical support in the development of the GBV policy for Migori County. This was done through a participatory, multi-sectoral workshop attended by state and non-state GBV actors in the county.
In South Africa, UN Women as the lead UN agency has significantly made financial and technical contributions to the Coordination stream of the work of the Interim Steering Committee to ensure that the structure and legislation are drafted and the drafting of the Nation Strategic Plan. Other UN agencies have contributed in other streams of work.
Funding intersectional violence against women and girls (VAWG) services
This policy brief highlights the value that ‘by and for’ organizations bring to the fight to end violence against women and girls (VAWG) and examines how the current funding landscape jeopardizes the existence and autonomy of these organizations. It provides key recommendations on improving the nature of funding frameworks to support organizations that address the specific needs of minoritized women and girls.
Good Practices in Responding to Domestic Violence : A Comparative Study
With the aim of assisting the Agency for Gender Equality of Bosnia and Herzegovina in supporting responsible government bodies to advance minimum standards in ensuring response and assistance to victims of gender-based violence, good practices were analyzed across four countries, two EU Member States (Austria and Spain), and two non-EU States within the Western Balkan region (Albania and Serbia). This document provides a detailed, technical description of national programmes and initiatives that have been recognized internationally as good practice. It provides comparative information from the four selected countries in order to demonstrate distinct approaches and models. The aim is to provide diverse options to assist relevant actors in Bosnia and Herzegovina in selecting the best approach tailored to their current needs and circumstances in line with international standards. For each practice, after setting forth the relevant international standards based on the Istanbul Convention, the UN Guidelines on Essential Services Package, jurisprudence from the European Court of Human Rights and Council of Europe Guidelines, the flagship best-practice initiatives are described, comparing like models, where good practice exists in more than one country. Challenges to implementing each good practice model are also noted, including deviations from international standards as well as practical barriers to implementation.
UN Women Analysis of the Capacities for the Implementation of Council of Europe Convention of Preventing and Combating Domestic Violence and Violence against Women in Police and Free Legal Aid Sector in Bosnia and Herzegovina
With this analysis, UN Women seeks to support the Agency for Gender Equality of the Ministry of Human Rights and Refugees Bosnia and Herzegovina to establish minimum standards for service provision to survivors of gender-based violence in several sectors in Bosnia and Herzegovina. The analysis examines the two sectors' capacity to implement the standards derived from the Istanbul Convention including state obligations and due diligence, integrated policies and data collection, prevention, protection and support, substantive law, investigation, prosecution, and procedural law. In addition to the detailed assessment of legal, operational and institutional framework, the analysis further examines the capacities of responsible sectoral governmental institutions and service providers at the local level, including relevant NGOs. Detailed information from institutions and service providers were collected from interviews, representing the opportunity for identifying a new way of understanding the topic at hand. The analysis will add to the evidence-based support to the activities of institutions in the country with a view of meeting the obligations that stem from the Istanbul Convention, and ultimately providing adequate support to victims of gender-based violence and domestic violence, as well as processing of perpetrators.
https://eca.unwomen.org/en/digital-library/publications/2019/05/bosnia-police-and-free-legal-aid
National Action Plan on Anti-Trafficking in Persons (2021-2025) in Malaysia
The National Action Plan on Anti-Trafficking in Persons (2021-2025) or “NAPTIP 3.0” was successfully launched by the Ministry of Home Affairs on 31 March. The new NAPTIP provides the policy and implementation directions for Malaysia’s anti-trafficking efforts in the next five years. The NAPTIP 3.0 was developed through a collaborative process among the Malaysian Council for Anti-Trafficking in Persons, UN Women, ILO, UNODC (as the implementing agencies of the Safe and Fair Programme) and civil society organizations. The inputs from UN Women and ILO mainly focused on enhancing the prevention of trafficking in persons by addressing risk factors, protection through legal remedies and provision of services to survivors, including increased prosecution of TIP.
A Guidance Note to Develop Migrant-Sensitive National Action Plans on Violence against Women
This guidance on inclusion of women migrant workers’ rights and realities related to VAW builds on the UN Women resource, “Handbook for National Action Plans on Violence Against Women”. The Guidance note provides specific recommendations to ensure the concerns and interests of women migrant workers are incorporated into National Action Plans on Ending Violence Against Women.
UN Women Albania:
1- Supported the Albanian State Police to develop policy and procedures against harassment and sexual harassment to protect women and men among the police forces.
2- Supported the Albanian State Police (ASP) to develop an E-Learning Course on the Policy against Harassment, including Sexual Harassment in the Workplace.
3- Supported five municipalities (Durres, Korce, Tirane, Elbasan, Lezhe) to effectively apply gender responsive planning and budgeting in the local MTBP, with a focus on budgeting in VAWG
With UN Women support, Ministry of Interior of Federation Bosnia and Herzegovina has improved standardization of police response to violence against women and domestic violence in Federation of BiH (FBiH). A Framework policy and 10 proposals for improved cantonal policies for internal division of tasks in response to cases of domestic violence was developed to standardize roles within the police force. In place are also a Manual for in-service training of police officers on the response to cases of domestic violence and recommendations for changes in the FBiH Police Academy curriculum for improved knowledge of police cadets on legal and institutional response to DV and VAW.
In Ukraine, with the aim of strengthening the local gender machinery and enabling local governments to develop, implement, monitor and coordinate gender-responsive policies, UN Women successfully advocated with local public authorities the establishment of 13 Local Gender Coordination Councils[ with an extended mandate focusing on Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG), Women, Peace and Security (WPS) and Safe Cities for Women and Girls. Furthermore, because of UN Women advocacy efforts 5 Deputy Heads of communities were appointed as Commissioners on Gender Equality and Prevention and Combating of Domestic and Gender-based Violence delegated with the promotion of equal rights and equal opportunities for women and men at the community level. In Ukraine, women, and girls from 12 communities in Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts benefit now from socio-economic development programs and target programs inclusive of measures on preventing and combating violence against women and girls. UN Women provided expert support to local authorities and tailored capacity development for Self-Help Groups on preventing gender-based violence and participation in decision-making processes.
In Ukraine, 3 conflict-affected communities adopted Safe Cities for Women and Girls Programs using evidence generated by the UN Women Multi-site Scoping Study on the risks and experiences of sexual violence encountered by women in public spaces in conflict-affected East of Ukraine.
In Moldova, with UN Women CO support, The Ministry of Health Labor and Social Protection co-created/developed with all relevant institutions (Ministry of Interior, Ministry of Justice, NGOs, Probation, and women's survivors of violence) the Intersectoral protocols and referral mechanisms on EVAW, which are awaiting approval by the Government in 2021. As well, UN Women CO supported the development of intermediary analysis of EVAW Strategy and as a result a new Plan for 1,5 year was developed and awaiting approval by the Government.
UN Women Kosovo, supported development of the Kosovo Programme for Gender Equality (2020-2024) and the Action Plan (2020-2022), which was approved by the Kosovo government on 23 May 2020. The decision obliges the institutions of Kosovo to implement this Programme according to the activities foreseen in the Action Plan, while the Agency for Gender Equality within the Office of the Prime Minister is obliged to monitor the implementation and to annually report on the implementation of the program. Provisions from the UNSCR 1325, gender sensitive transitional justice activities and support for mainstreaming gender into the security sector were also included in the Kosovo Gender Programme 2020-2024, with direct support of UN Women.
With UN Women Kosovo support, in November 2020, Policy against Sexual Harassment in Public Administration in Kosovo, was adopted by the government. The aim of the policy is to serve as an instrument and in creating a workplace environment free from of any form of sexual harassment and sanction such action. A new Kosovo Strategy and Action Plan on Protection from Domestic Violence (2022-2026) is currently in drafting process, with the support of UN Women.
In Tajikistan, UN Women assisted the GoT in developing localized integrated referral system for survivors of violence.