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Explainer: The Commission on the Status of Women and why it matters

9th March 2025
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The annual UN Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) meets to address the widespread inequalities, violence and discrimination women continue to face around the world.

This year, the commission will gather at UN Headquarters in New York from 10 to 21 March.

Here are five things you need to know:

1. 80 years of changemakers

Days after the UN General Assembly’s inaugural meetings in 1946 heard Ms. Roosevelt read an open letter addressed to “the women of the world”, the work of the Commission began.

Ms. Roosevelt had called “on the Governments of the world to encourage women everywhere to take a more active part in national and international affairs and on women who are conscious of their opportunities to come forward and share in the work of peace and reconstruction as they did in war and resistance”.

The UN’s Economic and Social Affairs Commission (ECOSOC) promptly established a sub-commission. Its six members – China, Denmark, Dominican Republic, France, India, Lebanon and Poland – were tasked with assessing “problems relating to the status of women” to advise the UN Commission on Human Rights, a precursor to the UN Human Rights Council.

From the beginning there were calls for action, including prioritising political rights, “since little progress could be made without them”, alongside recommendations for improvements in civil educational, social and economic fields, according to the sub-commission’s first report, which also called for a UN women’s conference “to further the programme”.

By June 1946, it formally became the Commission on the Status of Women, one of ECOSOC’s subsidiary bodies. From 1947 to 1962, CSW focused on setting standards and formulating international conventions to change discriminatory legislation and foster global awareness of women’s issues.

Members of the UN Sub-Commission on the Status of Women meet at Hunter College in New York in 1946. (file)

Members of the UN Sub-Commission on the Status of Women meet at Hunter College in New York in 1946. (file)

2. Landmark international agreements struck

Dating back to the commission’s early days, its growing membership contributed to some of the most widely agreed upon international conventions in UN history.

Here are just a few.

Learn about more CSW sessions past and present here.

A woman in Kenya receives training at an engineering workshop.

A woman in Kenya receives training at an engineering workshop.

3. More countries, more needs

With a growing UN membership and mounting evidence in the 1960s that women were disproportionately affected by poverty, CSW focused on needs in community and rural development, agricultural work, family planning and scientific and technological advances. It also encouraged the UN system to expand technical assistance to further the advancement of women, especially in developing countries.

The UN declared 1975 the International Year of Women and convened the First World Conference on Women, held in Mexico. In 1977, the UN formally recognised International Women’s Day, observed annually on 8 March.

In 2010, after years of negotiations, the General Assembly adopted a resolution consolidating the Organization’s related sections and departments into the UN Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women), which continues to collaborate closely with CSW.

A woman sells forest produce at a local market in India.

A woman sells forest produce at a local market in India.

4. Tackling new challenges

Annual CSW sessions address and assess emerging issues along with progress and gaps in implementing the Beijing Platform for Action. Member States then agree on further steps to speed progress.

The commission has addressed such challenges as climate change, gender-based violence and ensuring women’s full participating in decision making and in sustainable development strategies.

Each year, CSW sends its negotiated agreed conclusions to ECOSOC for action.

With a view to reaching all women and leaving no one behind, CSW also contributes to the follow-up to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development to accelerate the realisation of gender equality and the empowerment of women.

A woman mends a laptop at her phone and computer maintenance shop in Taiz, Yemen.

© ILO/Ahmad Al-Basha/Gabreez

A woman mends a laptop at her phone and computer maintenance shop in Taiz, Yemen.

5. Walking the talk

Solutions to end women’s poverty are widely recognised, from investing in policies and programmes that address gender inequalities and boosting women’s agency and leadership to closing gender gaps in employment.

Doing so would lift more than 100 million women and girls out of poverty, create 300 million jobs and boost the per capita gross domestic product (GDP) by 20 per cent across all regions.

The 2025 session (#CSW69) will convene at UN Headquarters from 10 to 21 March, with its 45 members and thousands of participants from around the world.

The main focus will be on the review and appraisal of the implementation of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, which will include an assessment of current challenges that affect its implementation and the achievement of gender equality and the empowerment of women and its contribution towards the full realisation of the 2030 Agenda.

Find out more about #CSW69 here.

Watch #CSW69 live at 10am New York in UN Web TV here.

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