We believe in the power of partnerships. Collective action is central to our advocacy approach, and we participate in, support and convene civil society networks and women’s movements to achieve commons goals at the community, national, regional and global levels.
That is why we work with networks and strategic partners to greater amplify the voices of the women we work with. Explore the key networks and coalitions we participate in below and some of our partnership projects like the Beyond Consultations tool and Resourcing Change.
Funded by the UK Government’s Conflict, Stability and Security Fund, the ‘Resourcing Change’ project has provided 21 women’s rights organizations in Nigeria, South Sudan, and Yemen with an average of £35,000 each in flexible core funding, with relatively easier requirements and processes, as well as capacity and movement strengthening support.
Access to the core and flexible funding - in recognition of women's rights organizations' greater knowledge and experience of their contexts - enables them to prioritize and respond to their self-identified community needs even when this change unexpectedly. We have taken the learnings from the implementation of this project and shared them with donors and decision-makers to advocate for them to better support and partner with women’s rights organizations in conflict-affected countries. We have also created opportunities for women’s rights organizations themselves to participate in decision-making spaces and for them to share their own needs and experiences directly with donors and governments. In the UK, we work closely with the Gender Action for Peace and Security (GAPS UK) network to ensure that the UK Government’s policies and actions meet their commitments to marginalized women affected by conflict.
In 2019, in partnership with the GAPS UK Network, we launched the Beyond Consultations Tool. The tool was developed through extensive and inclusive consultation with over 225 women and women’s rights organizations across 13 conflict-affected countries in response to feedback that consultation exercises, most often led by governments and international organizations, tend to be extractive, tokenistic, and disempowering.
In the UK, we work closely with the network, GAPS, to ensure that the UK Government’s policies and actions meet their commitments to marginalized women affected by conflict.
Bond is the UK's International Development network. Women for Women International is a member of Bond working closely on the implementation of the SDGs and on ODA transparency.
GADN is an influential network of UK-based NGOs and leading experts working with partners worldwide to put gender equality and women’s rights at the heart of international development.
The U.S. Civil Society Working Group on Women, Peace and Security (U.S. CSWG) is a non-partisan network of over 60 civil society organizations with expertise on the impacts of conflict on women and their participation in peacebuilding.
The NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security is a consensus-based coalition of leading civil society actors currently consisting of 19 members that represent a broad spectrum of fields spanning the entire peace and security spectrum including: human rights and women’s rights, humanitarian assistance, refugees and forcibly displaced populations, international humanitarian law, disarmament, security sector reform and transformative justice.
The Compact on Women, Peace and Security and Humanitarian Action (WPS-HA) is working to realise a world for women and girls in conflict and crisis in which financing, participation in peace processes, economic security, leadership and agency, and protection of their human rights are all possible.