News

The 2023 Women’s World Cup tournament begins this week to great fanfare and broadcasting revenues estimated at close to $200 million. This is great news for the sport’s global governing body ...
Legal equality for women could take centuries as the fight for gender equality is becoming an uphill struggle against widespread discrimination and gross human human rights abuses, the United Natio… ...
Australia still has a long road ahead when it comes to gender equality – but we’re all about celebrating the small wins. This year, we’ve climbed from 24th to 13th place in the World Economic Forum’s ...
Gender equality is a “fundamental and non-negotiable human right”, Justice Minister Marios Hartiotis said in his message to mark International Women’s Day on Saturday.He said the day ...
In this thought-provoking video titled "Dreaming of a Better World Where Everyone is Treated Equally," join us on a journey to envision a future where equality is not just a dream but a reality.
Global gender parity will take 132 years - World Economic Forum; Surging inflation hit women hard financially - BofA; Investors, regulators push for gender equality in companies ...
Take, for example, the backlash that immediately ensued when Hungarian President Katalin Novák — the first woman president of Hungary — was invited to address thousands of attendees at Women ...
Labor experts say that the working world excludes, underpays, overlooks and exploits around half of its available force – and as such, work systems - in their current structures - are failing women.
The 2023 FIFA Women's World Cup prize money purse is a record $152 million, a 300% jump from 2019. Still, it remains roughly a third of the men's purse. Women's World Cup payouts still far behind ...
Explore World Population Day 2025—its theme, significance, and global efforts to empower youth and promote sustainable development.
Dr. Geeta Rao Gupta will travel to Brazil this week for a "historic" G20 meeting to promote America's agenda on gender equality, the U.S. Department of State revealed.
The world’s best female footballers can achieve pay equality — if only they “convince us men” first, according to FIFA President Gianni Infantino, sparking a near-immediate backlash.