Women’s Rights Activists from 128 Countries Release Global Treaty to End Violence Against Women and Girls
Women’s Rights Activists from 128 Countries Release Global Treaty to End Violence Against Women and Girls
Every Woman First Draft Treaty Press Release for Circulation
(November 16, 2021) – Today, one week before the UN Women’s 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence begins, women’s rights activists from 128 countries released the first draft of a global treaty to end violence against women and girls after eight years of extensive research and consultation with experts. The treaty will now go to UN Member States who are being urged to finalize and ratify this important international agreement.
“We have international treaties for tobacco, landmines and torture,” said Marina Pisklakova-Parker, one of the Co-Founders of Every Woman Treaty who started the first domestic violence helpline and advocates for changing laws in Russia, for which her organisation is listed as a Foreign agent. “We need a global treaty to protect women and girls from violence.”
According to the World Health Organization, violence against women is “devastatingly pervasive,” impacting 1 in 3 women worldwide, with younger women most at risk. UN Women calls this a “shadow pandemic,” which has only intensified since the outbreak of COVID-19.
Already the President of Nigeria, the Secretary General of the Organization of American States, the former Minister of Women’s Affairs in Afghanistan, and four Nobel Laureates, have come out in favor of this global treaty.
“Violence against women and girls is preventable,” said Judge Najla Ayoubi, another Every Woman Treaty Co-Founder who was the first female judge in her province in Afghanistan when her father and brother were assassinated. Later, she was forced to flee for her own life. “Women’s rights activists put our lives on the line every day fighting for the right to be free of violence, but we can’t do it alone. Laws and policies work.”
In countries that have domestic violence laws, for example, women have a 32% lower mortality rate. Intimate partner violence in eight communities in Uganda was 52% lower after violence prevention training. In the U.S., fifteen years after the Violence Against Women Act passed, intimate partner violence dropped 53%.
But international law does not offer sufficient protection. Right now there are regional treaties, such as the Belém do Pará Convention in Latin America, the Maputo Protocol in Africa and the Istanbul Convention in Europe, which have all proven effective, but leave out three quarters of the world’s population. Efforts made to retrofit CEDAW (the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women) to be interpreted to include violence have not been successful.
The First Draft Global Treaty to End Violence Against Women and Girls was created in consultation with frontline activists, survivors, medical experts, academics, human rights attorneys, legal scholars, diplomats and policy-makers. It’s considered a “first draft,” because ultimately it is the Member States of the UN which will need to ratify it and weigh in on the final version.
“We have done the heavy lifting of creating this viable first draft, and hope this will kick-start negotiations,” said Lisa Shannon, CEO of Every Woman Treaty. “This is not about one country telling another country what to do. This is about nations coming together to take a stand on ending violence against women and girls once and for all.”
“This global draft treaty will be the first to consolidate all of the scattered definitions of violence against women and girls,” said Jane Hodges, Global Policy Advisor for Every Woman Treaty. “It combines the best elements of all into a thorough, wide-ranging, very broad definition that talks about intersectionality, and that certain groups of women and girls are at heightened risk.”
A global treaty will provide essential resources and training to stop violence against women and girls. Specifically, it will:
- Clarify norms to prevent, protect, eliminate and condemn violence against women and girls;
- Provide a specific, metrics-based reporting framework;
- Establish an international monitoring body;
- Require training and accountability for police officers, judges and health professionals;
- Increase funding for survivor services such as shelters, hotlines and legal aid; and
- Prioritize violence prevention education.
“Sadly, almost every woman has a story to share about violence that she or someone she knows has experienced,” said Pisklakova-Parker. “Women’s rights activists need to know that world leaders have our backs.”
Interviews are available with women’s rights activists across the globe about this first draft treaty. Click here to read full treaty, or click here to read summary.
A Network of Women’s Rights Activists From 128 Countries United by One Purpose
(November 16, 2021) - Today, one week before the UN Women’s 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence begins, women’s rights activists from 128 countries released the first draft of a global treaty to end violence against women and girls after eight years of extensive research and consultation with experts. The treaty will now go to UN Member States who are being urged to finalize and ratify this important international agreement.
Frontline Activists put their own lives at risk to protect women and girls from violence. But they can’t do it alone. We urge heads of nations to take a stand and issue a public call for this global treaty.
Meet Some of Our Co-Founders

Judge Najla Ayoubi from Afghanistan was the first female judge in her province, but paid the price defending women’s rights with the assassination of her father and brother before she was forced to flee.

Marina Pisklakova-Parker started the first domestic violence helpline in Russia and worked on the country's first domestic violence laws, which her organisation is listed as a Foreign agent. Dr.

Vidya Sri was a Human Rights Policy Fellow at the Carr Center, Harvard Kennedy School where she examined the legal gaps in the global framework on violence against women, the groundwork for the Every Woman Treaty

Eleanor Nwadinobi from Nigeria advocates for the human rights of widows who experience discrimination and hardship on top of their already devastating loss.
Provide Essential Resources and Training to Stop Preventable Violence Against Women
There are treaties to reduce harm from tobacco, landmines and torture. A treaty to end violence against women and girls is possible. Once ratified it will:
- Clarify norms to prevent, protect, eliminate and condemn violence against women and girls;
- Provide a specific, metrics-based reporting framework;
Establish an international monitoring body; - Require training and accountability for police officers, judges and health professionals;
- Increase funding for survivor services such as shelters, hotlines and legal aid; and
- Prioritize violence prevention education.
- Clarify norms to prevent, protect, eliminate and condemn violence against women and girls;
- Provide a specific, metrics-based reporting framework;
- Establish an international monitoring body;
- Require training and accountability for police officers, judges and health professionals;
- Increase funding for survivor services such as shelters, hotlines and legal aid; and
- Prioritize violence prevention education.
The Global Treaty to End Preventable Violence Against Women and Girls is Here
The first draft of this treaty was created over eight years by survivor experts, academics, and frontline activists around the world. Now, we need Member States of the UN and heads of state worldwide to weigh in on, and ratify, the final version.
Already the President of Nigeria, the Secretary General of the Organization of American States, the former Minister of Women’s Affairs in Afghanistan, and four Nobel Laureates, have come out in favor of this global treaty.
Get the latest news and updates about the Every Women Treaty
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