UN Women
27 Jun 2025, 23:23 GMT+10
1.8 million women and girls remain displaced within Ukraine, that’s 57 per cent of Ukraine's 3.75 million internally displaced persons
Women earned 41% less than men in 2023, doubling the pay gap since 2021
More than 430 cases of conflict-related sexual violence were recorded, the majority women and girls
Three years into the invasion of Ukraine, there is ample evidence that the effects of war are deeply gendered. Since the war abruptly upended people’s lives, women and girls have been shaken by displacement and are dealing with devastating income loss and a shocking surge in violence.
As the war grinds on, gender-blind aid continues to overlook women’s specific needs, putting their safety and livelihoods in direct jeopardy.
Support from donors – governments, organizations, and individuals – has allowed UN Women to deliver urgently needed support that saves lives and unlocks opportunities for Ukraine’s war-torn women.
Women are powering Ukraine’s wartime economy and have launched more than half (59 per cent) of all new sole businesses in 2024 (up from 51 per cent in 2021). Over three years, the share of women entrepreneurs has grown from 40 per cent to 61 per cent, keeping the economy, businesses and families afloat.
Since the war began in 2022:
We don’t just show up – UN Women helps shift power into women’s hands. 74,000 women received mentoring support connected to decent jobs through Women for the Future initiative led by the Happy Monday NGO.
“However, I later realized that participating in the programme is not only about business but also about support, which I found to be very valuable.” Aliona Demchenko, who fled Zaporizhzhia, now runs her own online business and has doubled her earnings with help from Dream and Achieve.Read five stories of Ukrainian women entrepreneurs who transformed the challenges of war into opportunities.
swipe left swipe rightIn times of war, when laws and budgets do not pay attention to women’s needs and realities, equality suffers setbacks that take decades – or generations – to reverse. UN Women advises the Government of Ukraine and lawmakers on legal and policy changes that protect women and girls and safeguard their rights. Since 2022, more than 15 laws, policies and strategies have been passed in Ukraine which advance women’s access to rights and services, and to support their full and equal participation in decision-making.
While international aid is critical for Ukraine, out of the USD 19.2 billion allocable aid in 2023, only USD 3.6 billion included any gender equality objectives, according to the OECD. Within the aid given to Ukraine that year, less than half a per cent was dedicated to gender equality as the principal objective.
As Ukraine rebuilds from war, how money is spent matters more than ever, especially for women and girls. That’s why UN Women, together with its partners, has been working closely with the Ukrainian Government to make sure national budgets support gender equality. UN Women is also supporting the Alliance for Gender Responsive and Inclusive Recovery – a multistakeholder international forum of over 80 members advocating for better financing for gender equality – in Ukraine’s recovery and women’s leadership in decision-making.
As a result – in a major win in 2025 – Ukraine passed a law that requires “gender-responsive budgeting” by all government institutions. In simple terms, it means making sure public funds go to things that truly meet all people’s needs, including women and girls – like healthcare, education, jobs and safety. This law, along with Ukraine’s Gender Equality Strategy for 2022–2030, puts women and girls front and centre of the country’s recovery efforts.
Since the war began, UN Women’s Peace and Humanitarian Fund (WPHF) has backed over 65 women-led organizations across 20 regions in Ukraine. These women are delivering aid, offering mental health support, and leading recovery efforts in places still being regularly attacked by missiles and drones.
More than 70,000 women have joined the Armed Forces of Ukraine – an unprecedented shift in the country’s military. Of those, at least 5,500 are serving in active combat zones. As war rumbles on, Ukrainian women are not only defending their country, they are taking their safety and dignity into their own hands, refusing to be passive victims of war.
From the battlefield to community frontlines, women are asserting their power, protecting their rights, breaking into previously male-dominated professions, and demanding a future shaped on their terms. UN Women is supporting them with training, including as municipal bus drivers and deminers.
1“We are strong. We can do it all!” says Tetiana Rubanka, who began her career in humanitarian demining to support Ukraine’s recovery.
swipe left swipe rightIn a world reeling from geopolitical conflicts and rising inequality, it is women and girls who are paying the highest price. Many have lost paid work and education opportunities, while caregiving has intensified and their voices are still missing from the rooms where decisions about their lives are being made.
As rights are rolled back, a movement to silence feminism and its potential is creeping into the mainstream – threatening women’s safety, freedom and hope for an equal future. In Ukraine, women are pushing back, claiming leadership to decide about the kind of future they want. They will not be victimized.
And yet, women’s organizations, the torchbearers of women’s rights worldwide and in Ukraine, are being “stretched to the brink” amid global aid cuts.
Without sustained support, life-saving services could vanish and access to security and rights could further crumble. Livelihoods could collapse. Women could be silenced and made powerless.
For 15 years, UN Women has worked with all women and girls, for women’s rights and gender equality. We will never give up. Now is the time to stand with us. You have the power to protect progress, sustain local women leaders, and deliver true change.
We are experienced enough to deliver. We are bold enough to transform.
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