28th avril 2023

Submission to the Office of the UN Secretary-General’s Envoy on technology on the Global Digital Compact

This submission was made by UN Women on behalf of the Action Coalition on Gender Based Violence; Equality Now; and the Alliance for Universal Digital Rights (AUDRi).

Under The Common Agenda, the UN Secretary General called for a Global Digital Compact to be agreed at the Summit of the Future (September 2024) to “outline shared principles for an open, free and secure digital future for all.” Ensuring that women’s rights organizations in all their diversity feed into this process is critical to shape a vision of digital cooperation and governance based on human rights and feminist principles. In his report to UNGA77, on the Intensification of efforts to eliminate all forms of violence against women and girls, the Secretary General proposed a high level consultation on violence against women and girls in digital contexts to inform the Global Digital Compact.

On 6th March 2023 the Alliance for Universal Digital Rights (AUDRi), Equality NowWomen Leading In AI, UN Women representing the Generation Equality Action Coalition on Gender Based Violence and the Governments of Spain, Finland and Mexico co-hosted a consultation event, with the participation of the UN Tech Envoy, to provide opportunities for women’s rights organizations, civil society and grassroots women’s groups to share their perspectives to and feed into the consultation process to ensure that the Global Digital Compact prioritizes women and girls’ safety and human rights in digital spaces.

Download your file

Missing gravity form id.

Key recommendations

Eighty participants from around the world[1] attended the session and were divided into eight groups to discuss the following questions:

  1. What would the final version of the Global Digital Compact look like if it were rooted in a human-rights-based, feminist and intersectional approach?
  2. What do women in your region need to benefit from the digital revolution? And what needs to happen for all women and girls to experience safety, freedom and dignity when they are online?
  3. What actions do Governments, Businesses, CSOs, UN bodies, Regional Bodies and International Actors need to take in order to realise this?

This submission summarises the key points and recommendations that emerged during the session.

[1] Civil society and women’s rights organisations from different countries included Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Cameroon, Canada, Finland, Kenya, Mexico, Nigeria, Poland, Romania, Rwanda, Spain, Sudan, Sweden, Tanzania, Ukraine, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Zimbabwe.

Explore more resources

1

2

3

Intervention on the Activity Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Refugees, Asylum Seekers and Internally Displaced Persons

Equality Now’s shadow report calls for urgent reform of discriminatory nationality laws across Africa that deny women equal rights to confer citizenship to their children and spouses. These laws heighten the risk of statelessness, poverty, family separation, and violence, undermining the fundamental right to nationality.

Grounded in regional advocacy and human rights standards, the report urges African Union Member States to enshrine gender equality in nationality laws, centre affected communities in reform processes, and sign and ratify the AU Nationality Protocol without delay.

Mexico – CEDAW submission on sexual violence, access to justice, and gender budget cuts

Civil society submission to CEDAW highlights budget cuts, weak justice systems, and gaps in legal frameworks affecting survivors of sexual violence in Mexico.

Tajikistan – Joint submission to the UN Universal Periodic Review 53rd Session of the UPR Working Group of the Human Rights Council

UPR submission on Tajikistan addressing violence against women and girls, child and forced marriage, disability inclusion, legal reform, and survivor-centred protections.

Newsletter Sign-up

Make a donation

I want to donate