
Empowering women skills
Women’s empowerment can be defined to promoting women’s sense of self-worth, their ability to determine their own choices, and their right to influence social change for themselves and others.
It is closely aligned with female empowerment – a fundamental human right that’s also key to achieving a more peaceful, prosperous world.
In Western countries, female empowerment is often associated with specific phases of the women’s rights movement in history. This movement tends to be split into three waves, the first beginning in the 19th and early 20th century where suffrage was a key feature. The second wave of the 1960s included the sexual revolution and the role of women in society. Third wave feminism is often seen as beginning in the 1990s.
Women’s empowerment and promoting women’s rights have emerged as a part of a major global movement and is continuing to break new ground in recent years. Days like International Women’s Empowerment Day are also gaining momentum.
But despite a great deal of progress, women and girls continue to face discrimination and violence in every part of the world.
Topics on women’s empowerment:
750 million
women and girls alive today were married before the age of 18
1 in 5
women have experienced physical or sexual violence in the last 12 months
23.7 percent
representation of women in political offices
1. The Women’s Empowerment Principles
Created in a collaboration between the UN Global Compact and UN Women, the Women’s Empowerment Principles are used to empower women in the marketplace, workplace and community.
The seven Principles are:
- Principle 1: Create high-level corporate leadership for gender equality
- Principle 2: Treat all people fairly at work, respecting and supporting non-discrimination and human rights
- Principle 3: Ensure the health, wellbeing and safety of all workers, whether male or female
- Principle 4: Promote education, training and professional development for women
- Principle 5: Implement supply chain, marketing practices and enterprise development that empower women
- Principle 6: Champion equality through community initiatives and advocacy
- Principle 7: Measure and report publicly on progress to create gender equality
2. Quotes on women’s empowerment
By standing up for equality, women have helped other women speak up and empowered them. Here are some examples of prominent women who have spoken out about women’s equality.
It all started with one family choosing to sponsor one child. Helping that one girl, you don’t know how many other lives you can touch.
Women are always saying, ‘We can do anything that men can do’ but men should be saying, ‘We can do anything that women can do.’
I do not wish [women] to have power over men; but over themselves.
I raise up my voice—not so I can shout, but so that those without a voice can be heard…we cannot succeed when half of us are held back.
It all started with one family choosing to sponsor one child. Helping that one girl, you don’t know how many other lives you can touch.
Women are always saying, ‘We can do anything that men can do’ but men should be saying, ‘We can do anything that women can do.’
I do not wish [women] to have power over men; but over themselves.
I raise up my voice—not so I can shout, but so that those without a voice can be heard…we cannot succeed when half of us are held back.
It all started with one family choosing to sponsor one child. Helping that one girl, you don’t know how many other lives you can touch.
3. The global landscape of women’s empowerment
Gender equality is a basic human right, and it is also fundamental to having a peaceful, prosperous world.
But girls and women continue to face significant challenges all around the world. Women are typically underrepresented in power and decision-making roles. They receive unequal pay for equal work, and they often face legal and other barriers that affect their opportunities at work.
In the developing world, girls and women are often seen as less valuable than boys. Instead of being sent to school, they are often made to do domestic work at home or are married off for a dowry before they are adults. As many as 12 million underage girls are married every year.
While some progress is being made in various parts of the world, there is still a great deal left to be done to right the problems of gender inequality.
4. Why is empowering girls and women so important?
Empowering women is essential to the health and social development of families, communities and countries.
When women are living safe, fulfilled and productive lives, they can reach their full potential. contributing their skills to the workforce and can raise happier and healthier children. They are also able to help fuel sustainable economies and benefit societies and humanity at large.

A key part of this empowerment is through education. Girls who are educated can pursue meaningful work and contribute to their country’s economy later in life. They are also four times less likely to get married young when they have eight years of education, meaning that they and their families are healthier.