A Common Pledge to Increase Women’s Participation in Peace Processes

Politically Speaking
3 min read3 days ago

--

The UN Secretary-General’s Common Pledge asks Member States, regional organizations and other actors actively engaged in mediation to join the UN in taking concrete steps to boost women’s participation in peace processes.

24 October, New York — Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed launched today in the Security Council, the Secretary-General’s Common Pledge on Women’s Participation in Peace Processes, a new initiative to strengthen the role of women in making and building peace worldwide.

Speaking during the Council’s annual debate on Women, Peace and Security (WPS), the Deputy Secretary-General said, “Progress [on women’s participation] remains dishearteningly slow.”

“Peace and security decision-making remains overwhelmingly dominated by men,” she added, despite evidence that more inclusive peace processes lead to more sustainable and lasting peace agreements.

While women’s participation in peace processes is one of the tenets of the WPS Agenda, established by Security Council resolution 1325 in 2000, women remain starkly under-represented in — and often excluded from — peace negotiations and conflict resolution efforts. According to UN Women data for 2023, women, on average, made up less than 10 per cent of peace negotiators and 13.5 per cent of mediators.

This year’s Council debate on WPS took place under Switzerland’s Presidency with a focus on women building peace in a changing environment. It followed the release of the latest Secretary-General report on Women, Peace and Security.

The 2024 report notes that “All mediation actors can make a substantial impact by advocating for and supporting women’s equal right to participation and elevating the women, peace and security agenda in their peacemaking efforts and thus raise the prospects of peace efforts to both succeed and hold.”

A Common Pledge for Mediation Actors

As the current mediation landscape includes a variety of actors beyond the UN, the Common Pledge asks all mediating entities leading or co-leading peace processes, from Member States to regional organizations and other mediation actors, to commit to concrete steps to ensure the full, equal and meaningful participation of women.

In particular, by adopting the Common Pledge, informed by the work of the Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs (DPPA), mediating entities commit to appointing more women as lead mediators and ensuring women are an integral part of their mediation teams. They also agree to advocate with conflict parties for concrete targets and supporting measures to advance women’s direct and meaningful participation in peace processes, including as members of their negotiating delegations.

In addition, signatories to the Common Pledge undertake to consult a broad range of women leaders and women-led civil society in all stages of peace processes and to deploy gender experts in mediation teams to secure gender-responsive peace processes and agreements.

“By endorsing this Common Pledge Member States, regional organizations and other mediation actors commit to join the United Nations in taking concrete steps on women’s participation in all peace processes they are involved in,” said the Deputy Secretary-General, adding that “Together we can have an impact that is greater than the sum of our individual efforts.”

Member States, regional organizations and other mediation actors actively involved in mediation are invited to sign the Common Pledge. The next Security Council annual debate in October 2025 will provide an opportunity to take stock of progress made against the Common Pledge globally.

--

--

Politically Speaking

The online magazine of the United Nations Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs