Other resources (non-core)
					
				Country Indexes
			
			UN Women in action: Strategic insights and achievements
View annual report narratives for the year
								Advancing SDGs: UN Women's impact and key achievements
			
			Almost three years after the start of the large scale aggression by the Russian Federation against Ukraine, and a massive United Nations (UN) humanitarian operation,UN Women increased awareness of the need for gender-responsive humanitarian and recovery operations and women’s participation in decision making, contributing to improved women and girls access to services and rights.
UN Women encouraged the UN system to more integrally meet the needs of women and girls, especially those facing multi forms of discrimination, in their humanitarian response through the work and advocacy of the Gender in Humanitarian Action (GiHA) Working Group and the visible contributions of UN multi-donor Women’s Peace and Humanitarian Fund (WPHF), which demonstrated that women’s rights organizations (WRO) and CSOs across Ukraine can effectively provide humanitarian assistance and that women and girls have specific needs that need to be accounted for. Both GiHA and WPHF grew significantly in 2024 under UN Women’s chairing of their respective secretariats. GIHA expanded in 2024 to over 300 members, including 40 Ukrainian WROs, securing its position as Ukraine’s main coordination body on gender mainstreaming in the humanitarian response. Through GiHA the CO regularly convenes partners, providing them capacity building and skills development, support to communication, advocacy and data collection. GIHA successfully contributed to the HNRP and other humanitarian planning documents to make them more responsive to the needs of women and girls. UN Women supported WPHF to become the largest feminist fund for gender-responsive and inclusive humanitarian assistance and recovery in Ukraine. Through $6.5 million allocated to 54 women’s CSOs in 2024, some 25,000 women and their families across Ukraine received vital support, including food, hygiene kits, medication, legal aid, information on humanitarian assistance and emergency protection referral pathways, evacuation services and economic empowerment initiatives. Through the WPHF efforts were also invested in enhancing the institutional capacities of WROs facing multiple forms of discrimination to strengthen their agency and voice.
The CO also increased awareness and commitment to address the needs of women and girls in the recovery process through numerous advocacy efforts including the launch with the Governments of Ukraine and Germany of the Alliance on Gender-Responsive and Inclusive Recovery. It aims to encourage the 60+ commitment makers to invest more financially in gender responsive recovery, to support women’s leadership in decision making on recovery and to help plan and implement projects and programs advancing gender equality during recovery. Commitment makers will be asked to demonstrate accountability to their commitments in a report to be published before the 2025 Ukraine Recovery Conference.
The result contributes to achieving the SDG 5, SDG 8 including nationalized SDG targets and indicators for Ukraine.
				
							UN Women encouraged the UN system to more integrally meet the needs of women and girls, especially those facing multi forms of discrimination, in their humanitarian response through the work and advocacy of the Gender in Humanitarian Action (GiHA) Working Group and the visible contributions of UN multi-donor Women’s Peace and Humanitarian Fund (WPHF), which demonstrated that women’s rights organizations (WRO) and CSOs across Ukraine can effectively provide humanitarian assistance and that women and girls have specific needs that need to be accounted for. Both GiHA and WPHF grew significantly in 2024 under UN Women’s chairing of their respective secretariats. GIHA expanded in 2024 to over 300 members, including 40 Ukrainian WROs, securing its position as Ukraine’s main coordination body on gender mainstreaming in the humanitarian response. Through GiHA the CO regularly convenes partners, providing them capacity building and skills development, support to communication, advocacy and data collection. GIHA successfully contributed to the HNRP and other humanitarian planning documents to make them more responsive to the needs of women and girls. UN Women supported WPHF to become the largest feminist fund for gender-responsive and inclusive humanitarian assistance and recovery in Ukraine. Through $6.5 million allocated to 54 women’s CSOs in 2024, some 25,000 women and their families across Ukraine received vital support, including food, hygiene kits, medication, legal aid, information on humanitarian assistance and emergency protection referral pathways, evacuation services and economic empowerment initiatives. Through the WPHF efforts were also invested in enhancing the institutional capacities of WROs facing multiple forms of discrimination to strengthen their agency and voice.
The CO also increased awareness and commitment to address the needs of women and girls in the recovery process through numerous advocacy efforts including the launch with the Governments of Ukraine and Germany of the Alliance on Gender-Responsive and Inclusive Recovery. It aims to encourage the 60+ commitment makers to invest more financially in gender responsive recovery, to support women’s leadership in decision making on recovery and to help plan and implement projects and programs advancing gender equality during recovery. Commitment makers will be asked to demonstrate accountability to their commitments in a report to be published before the 2025 Ukraine Recovery Conference.
The result contributes to achieving the SDG 5, SDG 8 including nationalized SDG targets and indicators for Ukraine.
								Advancing SDGs: UN Women's impact and key achievements
			
			Women’s leadership and participation in decision making on the UN’s humanitarian response increased during the second year of the full-fledged war in Ukraine. The result contributes to effective implementation of the UN in Ukraine Transitional Framework’s priority ‘Saving Lives’ with more women and girls receiving services that are better designed to meet their needs. It also contributes to achieving the SDG 5, SDG 8.
Women and LGBTIQ+ organizations had a more receptive environment in which to exercise their voice and leadership in the humanitarian response. GE advocates and CSOs accessed a number of dialogues and platforms created by the CO. This includes a dialogue mechanism with the UNCT and the RC/HC for women activists representing front line communities, Roma and disabled people to express their needs for goods, services, and protection from security risks and discrimination. This increased awareness among UN agencies and strengthened aid targeting. In 2023, key recommendations and inputs from women’s CSOs and technical gender experts were incorporated, in a dedicated chapter in the Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan on “Intersectionality, Gender, and Disability” and gender and age disaggregated data and analysis was in the 2023 Multi-Sector Needs Assessment.The UN system improved it’s capacity to include GE issues in the humanitarian response through the CO’s coordination efforts. For example, the Gender in Humanitarian Action (GiHA) working group (co-chaired by UN Women) successfully integrated gender dimensions into the HCT clusters’ work and cross-sector joint actions including through the provision of strategic and practical guidance via the introduction of UN Women’s gender-tip sheets. GiHA published a gender brief “Closing Gender Gap in Humanitarian Action in Ukraine” which recommended ways forward. After UN Women’s full-fledged membership in the Inter Agency Standing Committee, the CO transitioned from an observer to a full member of the HCT. UN Women’s co-chairing of the GiHA Working Group played a critical role in ensuring that women' needs and priorities were covered by humanitarian strategies and action plans. More than 45,000 women and girls received aid from UN Women and over 100,000 dependents were indirectly supported. Out of these 672 women received psychological and social support services through 4 UN Women’s multi-purpose centres (‘Safe Spaces’). Over 39,091 women and girls received food, hygiene kits, medication, legal aid, and information on humanitarian assistance and emergency protection referral pathways through the availability of more flexible and dedicated funding to women’s rights organizations to meet the specific needs of diverse categories of war affected communities. Serving as the Secretariat of the Women, Peace and Humanitarian Fund (WPHF) in Ukraine, the CO oversaw the availability of these funds, with 34 CSOs sharing USD 8.5 million in grants, making WPHF the biggest feminist fund in Ukraine.
				
							Women and LGBTIQ+ organizations had a more receptive environment in which to exercise their voice and leadership in the humanitarian response. GE advocates and CSOs accessed a number of dialogues and platforms created by the CO. This includes a dialogue mechanism with the UNCT and the RC/HC for women activists representing front line communities, Roma and disabled people to express their needs for goods, services, and protection from security risks and discrimination. This increased awareness among UN agencies and strengthened aid targeting. In 2023, key recommendations and inputs from women’s CSOs and technical gender experts were incorporated, in a dedicated chapter in the Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan on “Intersectionality, Gender, and Disability” and gender and age disaggregated data and analysis was in the 2023 Multi-Sector Needs Assessment.The UN system improved it’s capacity to include GE issues in the humanitarian response through the CO’s coordination efforts. For example, the Gender in Humanitarian Action (GiHA) working group (co-chaired by UN Women) successfully integrated gender dimensions into the HCT clusters’ work and cross-sector joint actions including through the provision of strategic and practical guidance via the introduction of UN Women’s gender-tip sheets. GiHA published a gender brief “Closing Gender Gap in Humanitarian Action in Ukraine” which recommended ways forward. After UN Women’s full-fledged membership in the Inter Agency Standing Committee, the CO transitioned from an observer to a full member of the HCT. UN Women’s co-chairing of the GiHA Working Group played a critical role in ensuring that women' needs and priorities were covered by humanitarian strategies and action plans. More than 45,000 women and girls received aid from UN Women and over 100,000 dependents were indirectly supported. Out of these 672 women received psychological and social support services through 4 UN Women’s multi-purpose centres (‘Safe Spaces’). Over 39,091 women and girls received food, hygiene kits, medication, legal aid, and information on humanitarian assistance and emergency protection referral pathways through the availability of more flexible and dedicated funding to women’s rights organizations to meet the specific needs of diverse categories of war affected communities. Serving as the Secretariat of the Women, Peace and Humanitarian Fund (WPHF) in Ukraine, the CO oversaw the availability of these funds, with 34 CSOs sharing USD 8.5 million in grants, making WPHF the biggest feminist fund in Ukraine.
Results and resources
- Results overview
- Total resources
- Development results and resources
- Organizational results and resources
Budget
	Expenses
				Outcome
				Result statement
				IATI identifier
												
							
			OutcomeUKR_D_1.1
						Outcome result statementHumanitarian
						IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-UKR_D_1.1
																		
											OutcomeUKR_D_1.2
						Outcome result statementWomen, Peace and Security/Conflict-related Sexual Violence
						IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-UKR_D_1.2
																		
											OutcomeUKR_D_1.3
						Outcome result statementGender-Responsive Governance & Recovery
						IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-UKR_D_1.3
																		
											Budget
	Expenses
				Outcome
				Result statement
				IATI identifier
												
							
			OutcomeUKR_O_1
						Outcome result statementAssuring an accountable organization through principled performance
						IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-UKR_O_1
																		
											OutcomeUKR_O_2
						Outcome result statementAdvancing partnerships &resourcing; Effectively influencing for impact & scale
						IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-UKR_O_2
																		
											OutcomeUKR_O_3
						Outcome result statementAdvancing business transformation
						IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-UKR_O_3
																		
											OutcomeUKR_O_4
						Outcome result statementNurturing an empowered workforce and advancing an inclusive UN-Women culture
						IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-UKR_O_4
																		
											OutcomeUKR_O_5
						Outcome result statementEffective normative, programmatic and coordination products, services and processes
						IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-UKR_O_5
																		
											Resources allocated towards SDGs
View SDG data for
Our funding partners contributions
- Chart
- Table
Regular resources (core)
				$0.00 in total
			Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry.
Other resources (non-core)
				$25.26 M in total
			Other resources (non-core)
            $25.26 M in total
        Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry.
| 2022 | 2021 | 2020 | 2019 | 2018 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canada | $1,120,000 2022 
                                        CanadaOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$1,120,000 Development:$1,120,000(100%) Humanitarian:$0(0%) | $1,011,837 2021 
                                        CanadaOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$1,011,837 Development:$1,011,837(100%) Humanitarian:$0(0%) | $720,638 2020 
                                        CanadaOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$720,638 Development:$720,638(100%) Humanitarian:$0(0%) | $464,101 2019 
                                        CanadaOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$464,101 Development:$464,101(100%) Humanitarian:$0(0%) | $258,645 2018 
                                        CanadaOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$258,645 Development:$258,645(100%) Humanitarian:$0(0%) | 
| Denmark | $667,569 2022 
                                        DenmarkOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$667,569 Development:$667,569(100%) Humanitarian:$0(0%) | $502,665 2021 
                                        DenmarkOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$502,665 Development:$502,665(100%) Humanitarian:$0(0%) | $456,562 2020 
                                        DenmarkOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$456,562 Development:$456,562(100%) Humanitarian:$0(0%) | $450,940 2019 
                                        DenmarkOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$450,940 Development:$450,940(100%) Humanitarian:$0(0%) | $282,861 2018 
                                        DenmarkOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$282,861 Development:$282,861(100%) Humanitarian:$0(0%) | 
| Norway | $1,189,796 2022 
                                        NorwayOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$1,189,796 Development:$0(0%) Humanitarian:$1,189,796(100%) | $970,302 2021 
                                        NorwayOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$970,302 Development:$84,981(9%) Humanitarian:$885,321(91%) | $943,690 2020 
                                        NorwayOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$943,690 Development:$393,806(42%) Humanitarian:$549,884(58%) | $1,235,359 2019 
                                        NorwayOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$1,235,359 Development:$405,597(33%) Humanitarian:$829,763(67%) | $662,577 2018 
                                        NorwayOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$662,577 Development:$130,178(20%) Humanitarian:$532,398(80%) | 
| Sweden | $834,212 2022 
                                        SwedenOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$834,212 Development:$834,212(100%) Humanitarian:$0(0%) | $844,867 2021 
                                        SwedenOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$844,867 Development:$604,221(72%) Humanitarian:$240,646(28%) | $847,486 2020 
                                        SwedenOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$847,486 Development:$599,289(71%) Humanitarian:$248,196(29%) | $1,505,723 2019 
                                        SwedenOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$1,505,723 Development:$1,155,566(77%) Humanitarian:$350,157(23%) | $1,695,079 2018 
                                        SwedenOECD-DAC donor
                                         Total contribution:$1,695,079 Development:$1,181,965(70%) Humanitarian:$513,114(30%) | 
| United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) | $900,732 2022 
                                        United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)United Nations organization
                                         Total contribution:$900,732 Development:$531,151(59%) Humanitarian:$369,581(41%) | $1,368,491 2021 
                                        United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)United Nations organization
                                         Total contribution:$1,368,491 Development:$1,112,401(81%) Humanitarian:$256,089(19%) | $842,903 2020 
                                        United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)United Nations organization
                                         Total contribution:$842,903 Development:$615,712(73%) Humanitarian:$227,191(27%) | $722,939 2019 
                                        United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)United Nations organization
                                         Total contribution:$722,939 Development:$566,379(78%) Humanitarian:$156,560(22%) | $949,693 2018 
                                        United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)United Nations organization
                                         Total contribution:$949,693 Development:$914,671(96%) Humanitarian:$35,022(4%) | 
| United Nations Multi-Partner Trust Fund Office | $3,813,169 2022 
                                        United Nations Multi-Partner Trust Fund OfficeUnited Nations pooled fund
                                         Total contribution:$3,813,169 Development:$0(0%) Humanitarian:$3,813,169(100%) | -- 2021 No data available  | -- 2020 No data available  | -- 2019 No data available  | -- 2018 No data available  | 
2022
                    Canada$1,120,000
                        Total contribution$1,120,000
                            Development$1,120,000(100%)
                            Humanitarian$0(0%)
                        Denmark$667,569
                        Total contribution$667,569
                            Development$667,569(100%)
                            Humanitarian$0(0%)
                        Norway$1,189,796
                        Total contribution$1,189,796
                            Development$0(0%)
                            Humanitarian$1,189,796(100%)
                        Sweden$834,212
                        Total contribution$834,212
                            Development$834,212(100%)
                            Humanitarian$0(0%)
                        United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)$900,732
                        Total contribution$900,732
                            Development$531,151(59%)
                            Humanitarian$369,581(41%)
                        United Nations Multi-Partner Trust Fund Office$3,813,169
                        Total contribution$3,813,169
                            Development$0(0%)
                            Humanitarian$3,813,169(100%)
                        2021
                    Canada$1,011,837
                        Total contribution$1,011,837
                            Development$1,011,837(100%)
                            Humanitarian$0(0%)
                        Denmark$502,665
                        Total contribution$502,665
                            Development$502,665(100%)
                            Humanitarian$0(0%)
                        Norway$970,302
                        Total contribution$970,302
                            Development$84,981(9%)
                            Humanitarian$885,321(91%)
                        Sweden$844,867
                        Total contribution$844,867
                            Development$604,221(72%)
                            Humanitarian$240,646(28%)
                        United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)$1,368,491
                        Total contribution$1,368,491
                            Development$1,112,401(81%)
                            Humanitarian$256,089(19%)
                        2020
                    Canada$720,638
                        Total contribution$720,638
                            Development$720,638(100%)
                            Humanitarian$0(0%)
                        Denmark$456,562
                        Total contribution$456,562
                            Development$456,562(100%)
                            Humanitarian$0(0%)
                        Norway$943,690
                        Total contribution$943,690
                            Development$393,806(42%)
                            Humanitarian$549,884(58%)
                        Sweden$847,486
                        Total contribution$847,486
                            Development$599,289(71%)
                            Humanitarian$248,196(29%)
                        United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)$842,903
                        Total contribution$842,903
                            Development$615,712(73%)
                            Humanitarian$227,191(27%)
                        2019
                    Canada$464,101
                        Total contribution$464,101
                            Development$464,101(100%)
                            Humanitarian$0(0%)
                        Denmark$450,940
                        Total contribution$450,940
                            Development$450,940(100%)
                            Humanitarian$0(0%)
                        Norway$1,235,359
                        Total contribution$1,235,359
                            Development$405,597(33%)
                            Humanitarian$829,763(67%)
                        Sweden$1,505,723
                        Total contribution$1,505,723
                            Development$1,155,566(77%)
                            Humanitarian$350,157(23%)
                        United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)$722,939
                        Total contribution$722,939
                            Development$566,379(78%)
                            Humanitarian$156,560(22%)
                        2018
                    Canada$258,645
                        Total contribution$258,645
                            Development$258,645(100%)
                            Humanitarian$0(0%)
                        Denmark$282,861
                        Total contribution$282,861
                            Development$282,861(100%)
                            Humanitarian$0(0%)
                        Norway$662,577
                        Total contribution$662,577
                            Development$130,178(20%)
                            Humanitarian$532,398(80%)
                        Sweden$1,695,079
                        Total contribution$1,695,079
                            Development$1,181,965(70%)
                            Humanitarian$513,114(30%)
                        United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)$949,693
                        Total contribution$949,693
                            Development$914,671(96%)
                            Humanitarian$35,022(4%)