Gender and Development Network

Gender and Development Network

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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. Together, we promote gender equality and the rights of women and girls in all their diversity around the world. We collaborate with feminist organisations in the Global South, amplifying their analysis and prioritie

20/05/2026

Widening conflict in the SWANA region is sending economic shockwaves far beyond its borders and organisations working to protect fiscal space for girls’ rights are navigating the fallout in real time.

On behalf of Akina Mama wa Afrika, Malala Fund, MENAFEM and the Debt Justice for Girls Alliance, we’re pleased to share an upcoming learning circle on 10 June where national organisations from the SWANA region will speak to what they are seeing on the ground and what they need allies to do.

Together, participants will explore what the economic fallout of the war means for girls’ rights and what concrete action is needed to defend and expand resources for girls in this moment.

The session will include live Arabic interpretation.

🗓 Wednesday 10 June

⏰ 12pm BST

💻 Register here: https://mala.la/4ndesnq

Fill | Welcome to the Peace Team Community of Practice at WILPF! 18/05/2026

🕊️Join Women's International League for Peace and Freedom's Peace Team Community of Practice (CoP) for a session on peer-supported dialogue and restorative circles.

Together, participants will slow down, meet in small groups, and practice speaking from the “I”, radical listening and mirroring back with care - core skills for feminist peace work.

📅27 May, 7:30-10pm BST

Sign up to the CoP mailing list to get the Zoom link and future invites:

Fill | Welcome to the Peace Team Community of Practice at WILPF!

New resource: Ensuring institutional capacity for taxing wealth 13/05/2026

There’s growing momentum to tax extreme wealth through net wealth taxes, capital gains and inheritance reforms - but implementation is the missing piece.

CESR's new tool, ‘From Design to Capacity’, sets out an institutional capacity framework so campaigners can diagnose gaps and push for reforms that are enforceable, not just headline‑grabbing.

It draws on lessons from Argentina and Brazil to show how capacity can be built over time.

🔗 https://www.cesr.org/institutional-capacities/

New resource: Ensuring institutional capacity for taxing wealth A CESR and New Economics Foundation report argues taxing the wealthy depends not just on policy design, but on governments’ institutional capacity to implement and enforce it effectively.

11/05/2026

Across Africa, women, gender‑expansive people and informal workers hold together households, communities and economies - yet their labour is still treated as invisible, informal or expendable.

Nawi’s “Feminist Labour Futures in an Age of Crisis” series centres care work, community organising, digital and informal labour as the backbone of how life is sustained – and asks whose labour is valued, recognised and protected.

Join the conversation across four webinars this May (with French interpretation).

🗓 14, 19, 21 & 26 May, 12:00 PM

🔗https://tinyurl.com/yjme98pt

Women Still Carry the Weight of the World’s Water Crisis 08/05/2026

💧New blog from WaterAid UK reveals how Women and girls still carry the weight of the world’s water crisis.

When water is unreliable, unsafe or far from home, it is women and girls who pay the highest price – with their time, their safety, their education and their opportunities.

It also shows what feminist solutions look like in practice: women leading water committees in Timor‑Leste, menstrual health programming with partners across the Pacific, and climate‑resilient, accessible toilets and water systems in Cambodia’s flood‑prone regions.

Water justice is gender justice and feminist movements must be at the table on WASH.

🔗 https://tinyurl.com/2a434bez

Women Still Carry the Weight of the World’s Water Crisis World Water Day highlights how water inequality impacts women and girls. Safe water unlocks education, health and equality.

Gender inequality in education 08/05/2026

❗New blog from Save the Children UK : 272 million children are out of school, including 133 million girls and 139 million boys.

In conflict‑affected contexts, girls remain significantly more likely to be excluded from education altogether and the consequences are profound. Girls are pushed out of school by poverty, child marriage, early pregnancy, gender‑based violence, unsafe or inaccessible school infrastructure and discriminatory norms about whose education “matters”.

When girls miss out on learning, everyone pays the price – from lost earnings (an estimated $15–30 trillion in lost productivity) to weaker community health and political participation.

🔗 Read more here: https://tinyurl.com/3wupmu6z

Gender inequality in education Access to education is a fundamental human right, yet millions of girls and women continue to experience gender inequality which prevents them from receiving the same opportunities as boys and men. This article explores the causes and consequences of gender inequality in education and discusses stra...

Debt and Democracy 06/05/2026

💵 Argentina is in a debt crisis. Payments to external creditors are prioritised over the needs of the Argentine people. In ’s first story for the , Aylén highlights how the country’s dependence on external creditors has undermined sovereignty for decades, and what this means for her daily reality.

Watch her full story 👉

Debt and Democracy European Network on Debt and Development

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