New York - On 8 March 2026, International Women's Day, UN Women issues a global alert: Justice systems meant to uphold rights and the rule of law are failing women and girls everywhere. Women globally hold just 64 per cent of the legal rights of men, exposing them to discrimination, violence, and exclusion at every stage of their lives.
This is one of the findings of the new United Nations Secretary-General's report, "Ensuring and Strengthening Access to Justice for All Women and Girls". The same report reveals that in over half of the world's countries - 54 per cent - rape is still not defined on the basis of consent, meaning a woman can be raped and the law may not recognize it as a crime. A girl can still be forced to marry, by national law, in nearly 3 out of 4 countries. And in 44 per cent of countries, the law does not mandate equal remuneration for work of equal value, meaning women can still legally be paid less for the same work.
"When women and girls are denied justice, the damage goes far beyond any single case. Public trust erodes, institutions lose legitimacy, and the rule of law itself is weakened. A justice system that fails half the population cannot claim to uphold justice at all," said UN Women Executive Director Sima Bahous.
As backlash against longstanding commitments on gender equality intensifies, violations of the rights of women and girls are accelerating, fueled by a global culture of impunity, spanning from courts to online spaces to conflict. Laws are being rewritten to restrict the freedoms of women and girls, silence their voices, and enable abuse without consequence. As technology outpaces regulation, women and girls face growing digital violence in a climate of impunity where perpetrators are rarely held accountable. In conflicts, rape continues to be used as a weapon of war, with reported cases of sexual violence rising by 87 per cent in just two years.
The UN Secretary General's report also shows that progress is possible: 87 per cent of countries have enacted domestic violence legislation, and more than 40 countries have strengthened constitutional protections for women and girls over the past decade. But laws alone are not enough. Discriminatory social norms - stigma, victim-blaming, fear, and community pressure - continue to silence survivors and obstruct justice, allowing even the most extreme forms of violence, including femicide, to go unpunished. Women's access to justice is also prevented by everyday realities such as cost, time, language, and a deep lack of trust in the very institutions meant to protect them.
This International Women's Day 2026, under the theme "Rights. Justice. Action. For ALL Women and Girls," UN Women calls for urgent and decisive action: end impunity, defend the rule of law, and deliver equality - in law, in practice, and in every sphere of life - for all women and girls.
This year's 70th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) - the United Nations' highest-level intergovernmental body that sets global standards for women's rights and gender equality - is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reverse rollback of women's rights and ensure justice. "Now is the moment to stand up, show up, and speak up for rights, for justice, and for action - so that every woman and girl can live safely, speak freely, and live equally," stressed UN Women Executive Director, Sima Bahous.
International Women's Day Commemoration and the opening of CSW70 will take place this year on the same day, back to back, on March 9 2026 in the UN General Assembly, starting at 9:00 a.m. EST and online.