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Letter: Establish an Independent International Accountability Mechanism for Afghanistan
28 August 2025
Letter: Establish an Independent International Accountability Mechanism for Afghanistan
Related Publications
Letters
22 October 2025
Letter: 100+ Reproductive Health, Rights, and Justice Organizations Urge UN to Ensure U.S. Doesn’t Avoid Human Rights Review
We the undersigned 115 reproductive health, rights, and justice organizations are dedicated to the protection and realization of human rights for all people, and we are deeply concerned about the United States Government’s decision to withdraw from the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) process, an unprecedented step that signals a worrying retreat from our human rights obligations and the global mechanisms of accountability.
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Letters
29 September 2025
Open Letter: Call for UN member states to uphold, preserve and strengthen international refugee, human rights and humanitarian treaties
Q&As
28 July 2025
Q&A: Documenting Reproductive Violence in Conflict and Crisis
In September 2024, UN Women and Global Justice Center issued a report detailing challenges and offering legal guidance to improve the documentation of reproductive violence in crisis and conflict by UN international investigations. These investigations play a key role in guiding international responses, so omitting documentation of reproductive violence can have devastating ripple effects.
This Q&A draws from the report to provide information on what reproductive violence is, why its documentation in conflict and crisis situations matters, and how this documentation can be done more effectively.
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Letters
03 July 2025
1,200 NGOs from 167 Countries and Territories urge States to #RenewIESOGI
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25 June 2025
Oral Statement: Interactive Dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls
Violence against women and girls is pervasive, evolving, and requires an all-tools approach by the Council if it is to be ended. Excluding a gender analysis from efforts to addressing violence against women and girls – an established standard in international law – is legally and substantively insufficient. It risks excluding historically marginalised populations from essential protections, including rights to non-discrimination, bodily autonomy and freedom from torture or other ill-treatment. It undermines efforts to address the root causes perpetuating gender-based violence.
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UN/Government Submissions
11 June 2025
Joint Submission to UN Special Rapporteur on Health: Health and Care Workers as Human Rights Defenders
Abortion
Human Rights Treaties
International Human Rights Law
Reproductive Rights
United Nations
United States
US Abortion Laws
Our coalition recently developed a joint submission to the UN Human Rights Council before the USA’s upcoming 4th Universal Periodic Review. This submission focused on the significant deterioration of sexual and reproductive rights and justice across the country since the elimination of a federal right to abortion and amid a broader undermining of rights in the USA.
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UN/Government Submissions
23 April 2025
Joint Submission to the Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women and Girls’ Call for Inputs on the Report, “Surrogacy and Violence Against Women”
The remit of the UN Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women and Girls’ mandate is to consider the human rights implications of violence against all individuals involved in surrogacy arrangements: gamete donors and surrogates, intending parent(s), and children, once born, from this process...The practice of surrogacy is not inherently coercive or exploitative and does not amount to a human rights violation. Attempts to criminalize surrogacy fall short of the duty of governments to help realize the enjoyment of human rights for all.
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10 April 2025
Submission for the Universal Periodic Review of the United States: Diminishing Reproductive and Bodily Autonomy in the USA
As the United States (“US”) approaches its 4th Universal Periodic Review (“UPR”), individuals’ sexual and reproductive health and rights have significantly deteriorated across the country, particularly with regard to abortion and related healthcare. Following the Supreme Court’s 2022 decision, Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization,1 a growing number of states have implemented complete bans or aggressive restrictions on abortion, resulting in millions without access to care. Many seeking care, particularly in the South, are now forced to travel long(er) distances, seek medication through additional formal and informal means, or continue pregnancies against their will. Simultaneously, states are increasingly hostile to and criminalizing abortion seekers and providers, third parties who help individuals access care, and/or circumstances surrounding pregnancy, with laws that impose harsh penalties including fines, prosecution, and imprisonment.
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UN/Government Submissions
07 April 2025
Joint Stakeholder Report for the United Nations Universal Periodic Review: Impunity for Past Human Rights Violations and Transitional Justice in Liberia
Widespread and systematic violations of international human rights and humanitarian law characterized Liberia’s two brutal armed conflicts, which took place between 1989 and 2003. Liberian men, women, and children were gunned down in their homes, marketplaces, and places of worship. In a few cases hundreds of civilians were massacred in a matter of hours. Girls and women were subjected to horrific sexual violence3 including gang rape, sexual slavery, and torture. Children were abducted from their homes and schools and pressed into service, often after witnessing the murder of their parents. The violence blighted the lives of tens of thousands of civilians and displaced almost half the population.
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