- Around the world, environmental degradation and increased competition over scarce resources are exacerbating gender-based violence.
- Gender-based violence is used to assert control over natural resources and to diminish the efforts of those working towards a safe and healthy environment.
- Addressing gender-based violence and promoting gender equality are fundamental for environmental work that meaningfully contributes to the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
- Governments and environmental organisations need to better understand the links between gender-based violence and the environment, advance greater legal protections and take gender-specific risks into account in their policies and interventions.
Gender-based violence is a violation of human rights. Gender-based violence harms individuals and imposes direct and indirect costs on families, communities, economies, global public health and development. Individuals can suffer long-term effects as a result of gender-based violence, from the spread of infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS to psychological harm.
Gender-based violence also prevents victims and survivors from exercising their economic and political rights and limits their access to education and work opportunities. Social stigma against victims can likewise create barriers to justice, reinforcing a culture of impunity.
Gender-based violence is a barrier to conservation and sustainable development goals. Gender-based violence discourages women’s participation in protecting and sustainably managing natural resources. For example, a project in Nepal found that sexual exploitation was used to intimidate women and prevent them from engaging in ecosystem restoration activities (IUCN, 2020).
This is a lost opportunity, as evidence from around the world reaffirms that gender equality and women’s empowerment are key to meeting conservation and Sustainable Development Goals.