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What Works in Gender and Health in the United Nations ¨C Case Study Series

Explore gender mainstreaming in health across five UN agencies, detailing 14 case studies of programmatic and institutional achievements.

Date Published
6 Jun 2024

Welcome to the What Works in Gender and Health in the United Nations Case Study Series page. The ²ÝÁñÊÓƵ International Institute for Global Health (²ÝÁñÊÓƵ-IIGH) co-produced with partners a report documenting practice-based lessons across five UN agencies working in global health analyzing what has worked, where, for whom, why and how, to promote gender equality in health. The research involved in-depth analyses of 14 case studies that were considered examples of successful programmatic and institutional gender mainstreaming across five UN agencies (UNAIDS, UNDP, UNFPA, UNICEF, WHO). Each brief presents further details about each case study, including the successful outcomes achieved, the pre-existing contextual factors that enabled success, the factors that triggered positive change, and the mechanisms that sustained these changes over time.  

Additionally, a complimentary Compendium detailing the history of gender mainstreaming across the five UN institutes, and an executive summary giving an overview of the findings are found below. For case study details, this page outlines the key takeaways and recommendations based on this project's findings.

Download the 14 Case studies.

Download the Compendium .

Download the Executive Summary .

Case Reports

This Case Study Series consists of individual briefs for each of the 14 successful cases analyzed as part of the ¡°What Works in Gender and Health in the UN¡± report.  The case studies categorized into three groups based on the types of successful outcomes achieved, reflecting the different levels that UN agencies work on and illustrating the capabilities and strengths of the UN system, namely those that:  

  • empowered women and girls to resist harmful gender norms and practices and advocate for their own health needs;
  • put gender and health issues on the global agenda;  
  • embedded gender equality issues in institutional processes and structures that supported gender equality in health programming.

Key Takeaways

Cases that empowered women and girls to resist harmful gender norms and practices and advocate for their own health needs:

  • : Empowering girls and women to challenge harmful gender norms to improve menstrual health and hygiene, implemented as part of a WASH programme (UNICEF)
  • : Empowering women and girls to resist gender and social norms that encourage female genital mutilation, promote positive masculinities, and strive for more equal gender power relations (Phase 3 of UNFPA-UNICEF Joint Programme on the Abandonment of FGM)
  • : Empowering women and marginalised groups living with HIV in MENA (UNAIDS Secretariat, regional team).

Cases that put gender and health issues on the global agenda:

  • : HIV reduction and the empowerment of adolescent girls and young women in decision-making through the adoption and implementation of comprehensive HIV programmes in South Africa (UNAIDS Secretariat country office)
  • : Violence against women acknowledged as a global public health priority through sustained strategic leveraging of opportunities by WHO gender experts
  • : GBV in humanitarian settings prioritised in the global agenda through UNFPA¡¯s leadership and advocacy.

Cases that embedded gender equality issues in institutional processes and structures that supported gender equality in health programming:

  • : Enabling the rights of women and girls through enhanced legal, policy and regulatory environments in the context of HIV (supported by the UNDP HIV, Health and Development group)
  • : Institutional integration of gender across all technical programmes, Member State health programmes, and the Pan American Health Organization
  • : Institutional integration of gender at global, regional and country levels, including in health (UNICEF)
  • : Member State implementation of gender-responsive programmes, including in the health sector, through the strategic use of Gender Programmatic Reviews Central (UNICEF regional and country offices, Europe and Central Asia)
  • : Changes in institutional culture within UNAIDS Secretariat to support gender equality brought about by the Independent Expert Panel
  • : Adequate financial allocations for programmes advancing gender equality and women¡¯s empowerment through effective use of the Gender Equality Marker (UNFPA)
  • : Integration of gender into the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (WHO)
  • : Improved institutional and programmatic gender mainstreaming through increased participation in the Gender Equality Seal (UNDP)

 

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