Women Deliver inaugurates ‘Deliver for Good’ campaign
International advocacy organisation for girls and women, Women Deliver, has partnered with 10 organisations to inaugurate the Deliver for Good campaign, a global initiative that applies gender lens to the Sustainable Development Goals and promotes 12 critical investments in girls and women to power progress for all.
“Achieving growth and prosperity for all starts with ensuring equal gender opportunities,” said the Minister for Foreign Affairs of Denmark, Kristian Jensen.
“And that’s why Denmark pledges to support the Deliver for Good campaign—because we know that investing in girls and women is one of the best ways to accelerate global development,” Jensen said.
The Deliver for Good movement will fuel concrete action to address major global issues that disproportionately affect girls and women’s lives.
The campaign aims to secure much-needed investment – political, programmatic, and financial – across 12 issues, from sexual and reproductive health to climate change to women’s political and decision making power.
One of the outputs of Deliver for Good will be a stronger, more comprehensive evidence-based that fills both gaps in knowledge and data on the impact of investment in girls and women.
“We know that inspiring gender equality and women’s empowerment is a necessary condition for ending poverty, inequality, and achieving a better world for generations to come,” said the Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations/Special Adviser to the Secretary-General on the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and Climate Change, Dr. David Nabarro,
“Innovative campaigns such as Deliver for Good will help implement the Every Woman Every Child Global Strategy and achieve greater political, programmatic, and financial improvements at the community, country, and global levels,” Nabarro said.
Investments in girls and women are quite literally investments in families – compared to men, women spend more of their earned income on their families.
The impact of these investments extends to entire communities – when 10 per cent more girls go to school, a country’s GDP increases by an average of three per cent. Fully closing gender gaps to create a scenario in which women participate in the economy identically to men would add up to $28 trillion in global annual GDP by 2025.
“Girls and women carry more than babies. Or water. They carry families. They carry businesses. They carry potential,” said the President/CEO of Women Deliver,Katja Iversen.
“The Deliver for Good campaign will drive action toward what we know is true: investing in girls and women unlocks untapped potential, and creates a ripple effect that benefits families, communities and entire nations,” she argued.
“For me, one of the things that makes the Deliver for Good campaign unique and inspiring is that rather than focusing on the problems girls and women face – we know them well – it focuses on solutions and benefits,” said Her Royal Highness Crown Princess Mary of Denmark, who spoke at the New York launch event.
“It breaks the silo mentality that has dominated global development for decades, and champions collaborative approaches and innovative solutions.”
To date, nearly 200 organisations have signed onto the campaign.
The founding partners joining Women Deliver in the launch include Business for Social Responsibility, FEMNET (The African Women’s Development and Communications Network), FHI 360, and Global Partnership for Education.
Others are the International Planned Parenthood Federation, Landesa, Plan International, Population Services International, Scaling Up Nutrition, and Every Woman Every Child.
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