Africa: Women Deliver Calls for Global Systems to Put Communities First This IWD

Africa: Women Deliver Calls for Global Systems to Put Communities First This IWD


As the world marks International Women’s Day 2026 under the theme “Rights. Justice. Action. For ALL Women and Girls” , Women Deliver is calling for changes in how global systems operate and how power and resources are distributed.

Women Deliver CEO Maliha Khan said the world is at a decisive moment.

“Across the world, hard-won gains in gender equality are under attack. Authoritarian and far-right movements are growing more organized. Sexual and reproductive health and rights are being rolled back. Civic space is shrinking. Funding that communities rely on has disappeared overnight.

For years, the international development system has depended on a small group of donors and centralized institutions. Power, funding, and decision-making remain concentrated in a handful of Global North capitals far removed from the communities they affect. When donor priorities change, essential services such as health, education and sexual and reproductive health and rights are often the first to suffer.


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More funding alone will not fix a model built on concentrated power. We need a system where citizens can hold their own governments accountable for delivering basic services.”

Maliha said International Women’s Day cannot stop at statements and events.

“Governments are responsible for protecting people’s rights. Donors and global institutions need to look honestly at how their funding shapes what countries can and cannot prioritize, even and perhaps especially when local civil society priorities differ from donor or iNGO agendas. Civil society must have the resources and space to hold leaders accountable. Protecting democracy and human rights means changing who holds power and how it is used.”

In response, Women Deliver and partners have convened consultations across Latin America, Africa, the Middle East, Europe, Australia, and Asia to co-create a Feminist Playbook, a collective declaration that defines a shared vision for justice and outlines concrete commitments to achieve it.

While the Playbook is still being shaped through consultations, a consistent theme has emerged: the need to dismantle colonial systems that keep power and decision-making in the hands of rich, Global Minority governments and a small pool of donors. Ultimately, the international development system must center on community priorities and support the ability of local civil society to hold their governments accountable to their needs. Early discussions call on States to meet their human rights obligations, on donors and global institutions to better support national leadership and civil society, and on organizations across sectors to commit to clear, measurable actions.