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Global Health & Gender Policy Brief: Women and Girls in Wartime

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Maternal Health Initiative
First page of Global Health and Gender Policy Brief

Throughout history, women have played crucial leadership roles during wartime, even if their contributions were not always well-documented or recognized. In times of conflict, societal norms sometimes shift, allowing . Despite indisputable evidence of women’s leadership and bravery during conflict, however, women continue to be construed as “victims” and “passive actors”—rather than the political agents, leaders, soldiers, and visionaries that they are.

The world is currently bearing witness to a surge of ongoing conflicts, each with complex geopolitical, socioeconomic, and cultural factors, which contribute to their continuation and intractability. The impact on women is clear. In 2022, some . Evidence shows that armed conflict increases the risk of gender-based violence (GBV) and maternal deaths, decreases girls’ attendance in school and women’s participation in the paid economy, and has led to the .  

In a new policy brief, Women and Girls in Wartime, the ǿմý Center’s Maternal Health Initiative explores the diverse ways women and girls are affected by conflict, both as targets of violence and as leaders for peace and security. We highlight existing US foreign policies to support, protect, and empower women and girls during conflict and offer recommendations to improve the wellbeing and acknowledgment of women’s and girls’ roles during wartime.

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Maternal Health Initiative

Housed within the ǿմý Center's Environmental Change and Security Program, the Maternal Health Initiative (MHI) leads the ǿմý Center’s work on maternal health, global health equity, and gender equality.   Read more

Maternal Health Initiative