Latest
New NGO jobs posted daily — browse the latest vacancies NGO Pulse Plus: manage your organisation's profile, ads and funding Funding opportunities updated weekly for South African nonprofits Post a job in minutes — reach thousands of nonprofit professionals Find your next NGO role today — search our job board Advertise your organisation's opportunities to the sector Stay updated with the latest news and funding alerts Connect with NGOs and nonprofits across South Africa New NGO jobs posted daily — browse the latest vacancies NGO Pulse Plus: manage your organisation's profile, ads and funding Funding opportunities updated weekly for South African nonprofits Post a job in minutes — reach thousands of nonprofit professionals Find your next NGO role today — search our job board Advertise your organisation's opportunities to the sector Stay updated with the latest news and funding alerts Connect with NGOs and nonprofits across South Africa
Home / News / Articles / Updated realities on gender justice and...

Updated realities on gender justice and digital justice: Why international multilateral processes and spaces must align

09 Oct 2025 · 2 min read · 1,015 views
Updated realities on gender justice and digital justice: Why international multilateral processes and spaces must align

The recent revitalisation and reform of the UN multilateral agenda have created momentum to converge and reflect: After 30 years of feminist engagement at the intersection of international women’s rights and digital rights spaces, where so we stand on the advancement of gender justice in our digital age?

The recent revitalisation and reform of the UN multilateral agenda have created momentum to converge and reflect: After 30 years of feminist engagement at the intersection of international women’s rights and digital rights spaces, where so we stand on the advancement of gender justice in our digital age?

2025 marks 30 years since the adoption of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action (BPfA), 20 years since the second phase of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), and just one year since the adoption of the Pact for the Future. The 80th session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA80) and its renewed global commitment to multilateralism will become and opportunity to present how the Pact provides an overarching frame for multilateral action.

It is worth examining whether key elements from these processes have brought us closer to a just and feminist digital future. To begin with, it is important that we learn from past mistakes and make sure that the shaping of global commitments, firstly and most importantly, place human rights at the centre. Success requires careful and meaningful attention to how these processes interact and influence each other, along with sustained engagement and commitment from all actors, especially governments and the private sector, to ensure that commitments translate into effective actions, that accountability is enforced, that civil society is at the table and that gender equality remains a priority.
📬
Stay in the Loop
Get the latest NGO sector news, jobs and funding opportunities delivered weekly.
Subscribe to Newsletter