WD2026 Program
The Women Deliver 2026 Conference program brings together advocates, policymakers, researchers, funders, and movement leaders from around the world to exchange ideas, strengthen partnerships, and drive collective action for gender equality.
Program Overview
Conference Pathways
Guided by four pathways below, the WD2026 program creates space to confront injustice, imagine bold feminist futures, forge alliances, and sustain momentum long after the Conference ends.
Disrupt the Now
Confront systemic injustices, uplift lived experiences, and reclaim power through resistance and healing.
Build the Vision
Imagine bold alternatives, redesign systems rooted in justice and care, and co-create feminist futures.
Align for Action
Forge alliances across movements and sectors and turn shared visions into collective strategies.
Sustain the Movement
Secure long-term momentum through resources, intergenerational leadership, and mutual accountability.
Program Structure
Across four days, the program features Pre-Conferences, Plenaries, Concurrent Sessions, partner-led Side Events, and cultural programming reflecting the leadership of feminist and First Nations communities across the Oceanic Pacific region.
Plenary Sessions
Across the Conference, plenaries follow the WD2026 pathways — Disrupt the Now, Build the Vision, Align for Action, and Sustain the Movement — highlighting community-led strategies, First Nations leadership, and bold ideas for building a more just and equitable future.
📍 All plenary sessions will be held in the Plenary Hall.
Plenary Program
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Change Calls Us Here: The Opening of the Women Deliver 2026 Conference
April 27, 4:00 – 5:30 pm
WD2026’s Opening Ceremony marks the beginning of the official Conference program.
▼ Click for detailsThe evening will set the tone for the days ahead, connect to our theme — Change Calls Us Here — and invite delegates to make the most of their time together.
Grounded in the local community and honoring the Original Owners of the land, it will begin the Conference with determination, defiance, and joy.
It will also reflect the high-level political commitment behind WD2026 and make clear that, even in this difficult global moment, many across our sector remain deeply committed to advancing justice.
Women Deliver will introduce the Declaration for the international development sector — a shared call to rebuild systems so that governments can better deliver for girls, women, and gender-diverse people, with international actors strengthening public systems rather than standing in for them.
Across the Conference, our plenaries will return to this core question: what must change so power, resources, and responsibility are better aligned to deliver justice.
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From Resistance to Renewal: Seizing the Moment to Build a Feminist Future
April 28, 9:30 – 11:00 am
This plenary will ground delegates in the realities of this moment: rising authoritarianism, growing attacks on rights, and shrinking resources.
▼ Click for detailsPeople and organizations across sectors are resisting, responding, and refusing to accept that the current trajectory is inevitable.
This session brings those realities into focus while setting out the broader challenge for WD2026: not only how to defend what is under threat, but how to move beyond approaches that are no longer fit for this moment.
It looks ahead to what it will take to build a feminist future through bold strategies, collaboration across sectors, and new possibilities that can emerge when systems that were never built with girls and women at the center begin to crack or fall apart.
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Decolonization and Self-Determination: Indigenous Feminist Leadership
April 28, 11:30 am – 1:00 pm
This plenary places Indigenous feminist leadership where it belongs — not as consultation, but as a source of authority, political direction, and accountability.
▼ Click for detailsColonization is not only part of the past; it remains an ongoing system that continues to shape land, law, development, climate responses, and governance.
This session asks what it would mean for institutions, movements, and global actors to take self-determination seriously in the new system we want to create. It will culminate in a shared commitment moment around the First Nations Indigenous Women’s Statement, developed during the First Nations Pre-Conference, and invite institutions, movements, and individuals to turn reflection into concrete action in solidarity with First Nations and Indigenous women around the world.
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Autonomy is Collective: Bodily Autonomy and Community Power
April 28, 2:00 – 3:30 pm
This session centers communities not as recipients of change, but as the people leading it. Grounded in struggles for sex work decriminalization, reproductive justice, and grassroots organizing, it makes the case that protecting autonomy requires collective responsibility across systems and sectors, and sustained, community-led action, rather than institutional goodwill alone.
▼ Click for detailsDifferent systems continue to deny people control over their own bodies, often using the language of safety, productivity, population control, or respectability. Bodily autonomy — including sexual and reproductive health and rights — cannot be defended in isolation from the wider political and social forces that seek to regulate whose bodies matter, whose choices count, and whose freedom is negotiable.
This session will also name uncomfortable truths within feminist spaces, where selective solidarity, silence, or opposition have at times reinforced the exclusion of some communities.
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Shaping a New World Order: People-Driven Multilateralism
April 28, 4:00 – 5:30 pm
Today’s multilateral system is marked by deep contradictions. It continues to matter, yet too often fails to meet the urgency, inequality, and political realities of this moment.
▼ Click for detailsThis session names those failures, reclaiming moments when civil society helped push multilateralism forward, and asks what more people-driven models rooted in accountability, pluralism, and shared responsibility would require.
In doing so, it puts a wider challenge to governments, institutions, funders, and civil society alike: how to rebuild multilateralism not as an abstract system, but as a shared political project grounded in justice, participation, and humanity.
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Girls at the Center: Power, Voice, and Investment
April 29, 9:30 – 11:00 am
This plenary will call for global political and financial commitments to adolescent girls, while making clear that girls’ leadership is central to shaping a just future.
▼ Click for detailsAdolescent girls are not one group with one set of needs. They are diverse, and their needs can only be met when all girls have real power in the systems that shape decisions and control resources. Adolescence is a pivotal period: it is when opportunities can expand, but also when exclusion, violence, and unequal expectations can become more deeply entrenched. How systems respond at this stage shapes not only girls’ lives, but the future of communities and societies more broadly.
This plenary calls on policymakers, funders, institutions, and movement leaders to move beyond superficial inclusion toward shared power, real accountability, and sustained investment. In doing so, it makes clear that a serious commitment to adolescent girls is not only about visibility or representation, but about whether our political, social, and economic systems are willing to change in ways that deliver justice.
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Resourcing Feminist Futures: Power, Politics, and the Future of Funding
April 29, 11:30 am – 1:00 pm
This session invites movements, funders, governments, and allies to see themselves as active participants in building the funding infrastructure feminist work needs now and into the future.
▼ Click for detailsFunding for feminist work is entering a new reality, shaped by shrinking resources, political and economic shifts, and deepening global inequality. Meeting this moment will require those who control resources to recognize the importance of feminist movements, make serious long-term commitments, and rethink not only how much they fund, but the terms on which that funding is provided.
This session will spotlight collaborative models that are already responding and reshaping how feminist movements are funded across regions and sectors.
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Beyond Resilience: Climate Justice on the Road to COP31
April 29, 2:00 – 3:30 pm
This session asks how the international climate agenda can better respond to the realities facing women and communities living on the frontlines of climate change.
▼ Click for detailsClimate change is driving displacement, increasing care burdens, and deepening the risks of gender-based violence and economic exclusion. At the same time, women and Indigenous leaders are on the frontlines of climate action — protecting land and oceans, designing community-based responses, and pushing for climate justice on the global stage.
Holding the Women Deliver 2026 Conference in Australia, as the global climate agenda builds toward COP31, creates an important moment to connect gender equality and climate action more directly.
This plenary will focus on three urgent areas: strengthening community resilience, advancing meaningful support for loss and damage, and ensuring that gender action plans are carried out in global climate decision-making.
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Building Economies that Deliver: Care, Public Services, and Shared Prosperity
April 29, 4:00 – 5:30 pm
This plenary will highlight practical approaches that strengthen the systems people rely on and expand economic agency
▼ Click for detailsAcross regions, governments prioritize military spending, debt repayments, and the interests of the ultra-wealthy over long-term investment in public services and social systems. As funding for health, education, and community support disappears, girls and women disproportionately carry the burden of care work, limiting their ability to take part in education, paid work, and public life.
These are not inevitable outcomes, but the result of political and economic choices about whose well-being is valued, what gets funded, and which systems are allowed to fail.
This session looks at what it would take to make different choices. It highlights practical approaches that strengthen the systems people rely on and expand economic agency, reframes care and public services as core parts of a healthy economy, identifies actionable fiscal tools governments can use, and shares examples of regenerative economic models already in practice.
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Redefining Roles: States, Civil Society, and Global Actors
April 30, 9:30 – 11:00 am
A more just international development model begins with a clear principle: states have obligations to the people who live within their borders to uphold human rights and deliver essential services.
▼ Click for detailsTaking that seriously requires international organizations, including INGOs and multilateral institutions, to shift away from direct service delivery and instead focus on strengthening public systems, supporting locally defined priorities at the national and global level, and enabling strong, independent civil society to advocate and hold governments accountable.
At stake is not only what the sector believes, but how it works in practice — where power sits, what international actors are there to do, and how responsibility is shared.
This session focuses on what it would take to turn that vision into reality by clarifying roles, identifying strategies, and building cross-sector commitments rooted in accountability.
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Women Are Not Negotiable: Conflict, Power, and Accountability
April 30, 11:30 am – 1:00 pm
At a time of escalating conflict, shrinking humanitarian access, and open challenges to international norms, this plenary asks not only what is happening to women in conflict, but what political choices, power structures, and systemic failures have made this crisis possible.
▼ Click for detailsThis session calls for a shift from symbolic protection to shared power, from legal promises to enforceable accountability, and from extractive aid models to women-led peacebuilding and recovery.
In doing so, it challenges governments, institutions, and humanitarian actors to reckon with whose lives are being treated as negotiable — and what it would take to respond differently.
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The Future Calls Us Here: Women Deliver 2026 Closing Ceremony
April 30, 2:30 – 3:30 pm
WD2026’s Closing Ceremony marks the end of the Conference, and the launch of the Declaration for the international development sector.
▼ Click for detailsWe will celebrate what we have built over four days together, while also marking the commitments that will carry this work forward.
Through the music and dance of our Oceanic Pacific and First Nations hosts, we will reflect on what WD2026 has made possible, which ideas we will now take into action, and which conversations and responsibilities we will continue long after the Conference ends.
Concurrent Sessions
Concurrent sessions provide space for deeper dialogue and collaboration through workshops, panels, and participatory discussions. Participants exchange strategies, share research, and learn from leaders working across sectors and regions.
Each session connects to the WD2026 pathways — Disrupt the Now, Build the Vision, Align for Action, and Sustain the Movement — helping participants move from reflection to shared strategies for change.
Explore the Concurrent Sessions on the ScheduleSide Events
Side Events provide an opportunity for partners to host discussions, launch initiatives, and showcase innovative work advancing gender equality. Organized by civil society, governments, and other institutions, these events expand the Conference dialogue.
Held alongside the core program, Side Events create space for deeper conversations, networking, and collaboration across movements, sectors, and regions.
Explore the Side Events on the ScheduleYouth Zone
The Youth Zone is a dedicated open space co-created with and for adolescent and youth delegates at the Conference. It is designed to support young advocates, organizers, and leaders to build practical skills, strengthen meaningful networks, and advance their work in advocacy, gender equality, and youth leadership.
This space reflects Women Deliver’s commitment to centering youth leadership and creating opportunities for connection, learning, and collective action across generations and movements.
From April 28–30, the Youth Zone will bring together a community of adolescent and youth delegates who are systems builders, joyful disruptors, and accountability champions. Across three days, participants can engage in skills-building sessions, youth-led initiative showcases, gaming and storytelling circles, arts for advocacy, high-level panels, plenaries, collective care, and fireside chats.
Hosted by the Women Deliver 2026 Conference Youth Planning Committee and Emerging Leaders, the Youth Zone is presented in collaboration with youth-focused partners, including the Solomon Islands Ministry of Women, Youth, Children and Family Affairs, Action Aid, AMREF Health, Pravah, Women Win, and World YWCA.
Pre-Conferences
Pre-Conferences take place before the official opening of the Women Deliver 2026 Conference. They offer a dedicated space for communities, networks, and partners to come together around shared priorities.
Important: Pre-Conferences are available exclusively to registered Women Deliver delegates. Submit your preferences via the link in your confirmation email. If you do not have access, contact womendeliver@arinexgroup.com.
Leading Our Own Liberation: A Pre-Conference for Feminist Disabled Changemakers
Sunday, April 26 | 9:00am – 5:00pm
Register via your confirmation email link Use the link included in your registration confirmation email.If you do not have access, contact womendeliver@arinexgroup.com. ▼ Click for details
Hosted by Women Enabled International, UNFPA and Women Deliver
Join a global community of feminist changemakers with disabilities for one powerful day of disability-led dialogues, collective strategizing for WD2026 and beyond, and movement building and celebration. Together, we will resist the systems that push us to the margins, reimagine feminist leadership centering our lived experiences, and strengthen our movements across oceans and generations.
This is not a side event. This is the movement. And it was made for you.
Interpretation will be available in English and Spanish.
Resourcing the Global Movement: A Strategy Day on Strengthening the Global Efforts to End Sexual and Gender Based Violence
Sunday, April 26 | 8:00am – 5:00pm
Register via your confirmation email link Use the link included in your registration confirmation email.If you do not have access, contact womendeliver@arinexgroup.com. ▼ Click for details
Hosted by The Accelerator for GBV Prevention, me too. International, Justice for Migrant Women, Free From, and The Equality Institute.
In order to shine a light on sexual and gender-based violence, me too. International, Free From, Justice for Migrant Women, The Accelerator for GBV Prevention, and The Equality Institute will gather 350 activists, funders, and stakeholders for a day-long convening on resourcing and expanding the global movement to end sexual and gender-based violence. The convening will focus on breaking silos and creating connections, idea gathering, and discussion.
Interpretation will be available in English, French, and Spanish.
United for Action: Global Solidarity to End FGM/C
Sunday, April 26 | 8:30am – 5:00pm
Register here ▼ Click for detailsHosted by Global Platform for Action to End FGM/C, African Women Rights Advocates, ARROW, Asia Network to end FGM/C, COVAW, End FGC Singapore, End FGM Canada Network, End FGM/C Africa Network, End FGM European Network, Equality Now, Orchid Project, Sahiyo, The Girl Generation, US End FGM/C Network, and Women Deliver.
Building on the success of previous pre-conferences at Women Deliver 2019 and 2023, the Global Platform for Action to End FGM/C is organizing this pre-conference to ensure that ending FGM/C remains a paramount priority within global gender equality discourse. The objectives of the event are to collaborate and share learnings, mobilize political will, strengthen cross-sectoral partnerships and to co-create joint strategies.
Interpretation will be available in English, French, and Spanish.
Girls Deliver
Sunday, April 26 | 8:00am – 6:00pm
Register via your confirmation email link Use the link included in your registration confirmation email.If you do not have access, contact womendeliver@arinexgroup.com. ▼ Click for details
Hosted by Women Deliver and Population Council’s GIRL Center.
The Pre-Conference will serve as an activation and acceleration space, spotlighting where progress has been made, where gaps remain in fulfilling existing commitments, and what we must do as a collective to meet this moment, with and for girls.
By centering girls’ lived experiences and leadership, the Pre-Conference will influence collective action for girls across the ecosystem and contribute to the Girls Deliver community’s global call to action to fulfil commitments to adolescent girls and protect their rights.
Interpretation will be available in English, French, and Spanish.
Decolonizing Futures: First Nations Indigenous Women Advancing Treaty and Global Solidarity
Sunday, April 26 | 7:30am – 6:00pm
Register via your confirmation email link Use the link included in your registration confirmation email.If you do not have access, contact womendeliver@arinexgroup.com. ▼ Click for details
Hosted by the Women Deliver 2026 Regional Steering Committee, Oceanic Pacific; First Nations Governance Group, led by Wurundjeri Woi-wurrung and Djirra representatives; DIVA for Equality Fiji; and Wiyi Yani U Thangani Institute.
Through ceremony, keynote reflections, intergenerational dialogue, and action mapping, participants will collectively develop the First Nations Indigenous Women’s Statement.
Grounded in sovereignty, land and ocean justice, cultural resurgence, and intergenerational leadership, this gathering will shape Indigenous priorities for Women Deliver 2026 and strengthen global solidarity across movements.
Interpretation will be available in English, French, and Spanish.
From Training To #Trending: A hands-on day of inclusive data
Sunday, April 26 | 9:00am – 5:00pm
Register here ▼ Click for detailsHosted by Equality Insights, Equal Measure 2030, University of Technology Sydney Datagénero, Gender and Environment Data Alliance, and iCount Coalition
Participants will explore inclusive datasets, tools and methods, through EM2030’s data-driven advocacy basics; deep dive in breakout sessions to discuss inclusive data in relation to thematic areas; hear from a panellist of practitioners currently using inclusive data tools and create the own data-driven messages in a hands-on storytelling lab, facilitated by Equality Insights.
Interpretation will be available in English, French, and Spanish.
More details herePower in Partnership: Cross-Movement Resourcing for Gender Justice
(Invitation Only)
Sunday, April 26 | 9:00am – 5:00pm
Monday, April 27 | 9:00am – 2:00pm
▼ Click for detailsHosted by Global Philanthropy Project, Alliance for Feminist Movements.
This convening aims to thread gender justice with democracy, climate, and humanitarian funding—not as a separate sector, but as an essential and effective response to a global anti-rights agenda.
Through conversations with philanthropic leaders across sectors, this convening aims to break the funding siloes that limit impact.
Sessions will provide evidence and analysis about what works in disrupting the anti-rights agenda, and how to center gender justice movements to meet this moment. This convening will address global trends and deepen a focus on Asia, the Pacific, and Australia.
Invitation only; please reach out to info@globalphilanthropyproject.org if you have any questions.
Queers Deliver: Building the Future of Inclusive Global Feminist Gatherings
Monday, April 27 | 8:30am – 2:00pm
Register via your confirmation email link Use the link included in your registration confirmation email.If you do not have access, contact womendeliver@arinexgroup.com. ▼ Click for details
Hosted by ILGA World and ILGA.
What does it mean to be a member of the LGBTI community in feminist and SRHRJ spaces? How can we best leverage this opportunity to highlight the specific needs of our communities? What particular intersectional marginalizations do we face worldwide, and how can we best tackle it together in the context of anti-rights actors? What can we learn from the women’s movement and what can they learn from us?
Interpretation will be available in English, French, and Spanish.
Youth Pre-Conference
Monday, April 27 | 8:00am – 2:00pm
Register via your confirmation email link Use the link included in your registration confirmation email.If you do not have access, contact womendeliver@arinexgroup.com. ▼ Click for details
Hosted by Women Deliver.
Amid shrinking funding and increasing fragmentation, this Pre-Conference will create a youth-led space for shared analysis, cross-movement solidarity, and strategy-building.
Through interactive sessions and networking, participants will co-create priority advocacy messages and recommendations to shape Women Deliver and influence key global policy moments, ensuring that young people’s leadership and perspectives drive collective action toward a more just, feminist, and equitable future.
Open to all WD2026 delegates who are aged 30 years old and under, with specific invitations to young people within our networks, and 100 Women Deliver Youth Scholars.
Interpretation will be available in English, French, and Spanish.
Roots & Rising: Grounding the Feminist Climate Justice Movement
Monday, April 27 | 8:30am – 2:00pm
Register via your confirmation email link Use the link included in your registration confirmation email.If you do not have access, contact womendeliver@arinexgroup.com. ▼ Click for details
Hosted by Women Deliver
This gathering creates a rare opportunity to pause and ground ourselves as a movement. Through collective reflection, coalition sharing, and listening exercises, participants will situate themselves in the ecosystem, learn who is in the room, and strengthen trust, partnerships, and cross-regional solidarity. This space will focus on building connection, clarity, and feminist solidarity.
Interpretation will be available in English, French, and Spanish.
Convening Feminist Mobilization for Advancing Women’s Health, SRHR & GBV in Asia Pacific
Monday, April 27 | 8:30am – 1:30pm
Register via your confirmation email link Use the link included in your registration confirmation email.If you do not have access, contact womendeliver@arinexgroup.com. ▼ Click for details
Hosted by UNFPA with ARROW, Equality Fund, Fos Feminista, UNU-IIGH.
This Pre-Conference session will focus on strengthening movement resilience, countering anti-rights and the gender pushback, addressing demographic challenges, and defining pathways for sustainable, climate-resilient financing for women’s rights and women-led organizations.
Interpretation will be available in English, French, and Spanish.
MenCare Cities: Engaging Men in Care and Violence Prevention Through Urban Design and Care Infrastructure
(Invitation Only)
Monday, April 27 | 9:00am – 1:00pm
▼ Click for detailsHosted by Equimundo: Center for Masculinities and Social Justice and City Hub and Network for Gender Equity (CHANGE).
This session will bring together city leaders, urban planners, and gender experts to explore how to foster caring cities through policies, public space design, and care infrastructure that support men’s involvement in caregiving and violence prevention.
Drawing on experiences from CHANGE and Equimundo’s partner cities around the world, participants will share practical innovations and lessons from local initiatives.
The event will also introduce an exciting new resource to help cities strengthen care systems and advance more caring, safe, and gender-equitable urban environments.
Interpretation will be available in English, French, and Spanish.
High‑Level Parliamentary Forum: Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights, Driving Equality, Ensuring Justice
(Invitation Only)
Monday, April 27 | 10:00am – 3:00pm
▼ Click for detailsHosted by the Asian Forum of Parliamentarians on Population and Development (AFPPD) and the Australian Parliamentary Friends of Population and Development (APGPD).
This High‑Level Parliamentary Forum will convene parliamentarians and ministers from across the Asia‑Pacific region and beyond to advance a shared vision for sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) as a foundation for gender equality and development justice.
At a time of growing global pushback against gender equality and rights, the forum will focus on reclaiming and strengthening the political narrative on SRHR. Drawing on regional research, parliamentary leadership and Global South perspectives, participants will explore how legislative action, public financing and accountability can accelerate progress towards universal SRHR access and the Sustainable Development Goals.
The forum will provide a dedicated space for parliamentary debate, peer learning and coalition building, with a focus on strengthening democratic practice, meaningful representation and cross‑regional solidarity. It will also culminate in a collective Call to Action to support sustained political commitment, national implementation and accountability beyond Women Deliver 2026.