Why disability inclusion, women’s rights, and equality are inseparable

Discover how intersectional advocacy – uniting gender equality and disability rights – creates better outcomes for women and girls, especially those living with disabilities.

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The movements for gender equality and disability inclusion are interconnected. We have not achieved equal voting rights if women with mobility issues cannot cast their votes. We cannot achieve freedom from gender-based violence if women with visual or hearing impairments are unable to access the justice system. We cannot turn the tide of digital abuse without also ensuring women and girls with disabilities have safe access to the technology they need to live with dignity.

Yet so many efforts to expand the rights and protections of women and girls fail to account for those with disabilities, facing sexism and ableism.

This International Day of Persons with Disabilities (3 December), read some of the different ways UN Women is advocating for women and girls with disabilities – and why disability rights and gender equality rise together.

1 in 5 women live with a disability

That represents 20 per cent of all women, compared to 12 per cent of men.

Intersectionality: Rights, equality, and empowerment for ALL women and girls

Many of the challenges faced by women and girls around the world are, to some extent, shared. Whether they face bias or violence because of their gender, disproportionate care responsibilities, digital abuse, or lack of access to decision-making spaces – many women know these challenges personally.

And yet every woman and girl comes face to face with challenges in ways that are unique to them and what rights they have access to. Appreciating that uniqueness is what intersectionality is all about. Just as we commonly acknowledge individual strengths, we each face individual challenges – and those challenges have their own ways of interacting with one another. In the case of inequality – racism, sexism, ageism, ableism, classism – these injustices can often exacerbate each other.

This is why UN Women proudly fights for all women and girls. To promote rights and equality for the collective, we must understand the ways in which people are uniquely and systemically affected.

Disability rights and care work

Every day, women do 16 billion hours of unpaid care work: Cleaning, cooking, fetching water, and looking after people— including those with disabilities. Without this unpaid labour, society would collapse – and yet it is rarely given the value that it deserves.

The absence of equitable care and support systems does not just devalue women’s work. It puts people with disabilities at risk of human rights violations, including inadequate physical and emotional care, forced institutionalization, and forced medical treatments.

Women and girls with disabilities also shoulder significant unpaid care responsibilities within their families and communities, while often facing stigma and limited access to economic opportunities.

Well-functioning care systems, on the other hand, support carers with recognition, resources, and responsibility-sharing. They do not rely solely on unpaid labour to provide quality, disability-inclusive services that allow everyone to live and age with dignity. They include community-based models that support parents learning to care for children with special needs – and support for women with disabilities caring for others.

UN Women is calling for a care revolution to improve the well-being of unpaid caregivers and ensure the best support and opportunities for those being cared for.

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Juliet Mbambu, Executive Director of the Bwera United Women with Disabilities Association. Photo: UN Women/Solomon Tumwesigye

I grew up in a very difficult situation [living with polio]. This is why I formed a group of women with disabilities – to amplify the voice, to create awareness, to advocate for rights – so that at least people should learn from us.

Juliet Mbambu, Executive Director, BUWDA

Disability rights and technology

Assistive technology (AT) and digital technologies have the potential to fundamentally change the experiences of all women and girls, including those with disabilities – promoting autonomy, communication, and access to essential services. In partnership with ATscale, UN Women has conducted global surveys and consultations on AT to discover and expand technologies that could potentially advance inclusion throughout women’s lives.

But just as technology has been expanding and benefiting society, technology-facilitated violence has been intensifying in parallel – with studies showing 16 to 58 per cent of women impacted. This technology includes powerful, largely unregulated AI tools.

Artificial intelligence (AI) is not only amplifying existing forms of inequality – including discrimination, digital abuse, and lack of job opportunities – but creating new ones. AI systems are often designed without the meaningful participation of people with disabilities and frequently rely on datasets that exclude or misrepresent them, especially women. As a result, algorithms fail to account for diverse communication needs, accessibility requirements, and lived experiences. This can lead to harmful outcomes, from employment screening to education to healthcare access.

UN Women calls for shifting AI development to include universal design principles, robust protection measures, and diverse development teams. AI systems should expand – rather than restrict – opportunities for women and girls with disabilities.

Disability rights, accountability, and justice

Around the world, the fight for women’s rights and empowerment continues. But in key legal reforms and protections, gender and disability are often addressed separately, if they are addressed at all.

UN Women continues to expand the way we practice intersectional approaches, including within the UN system itself, with lessons learned on disability inclusion across critical areas of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action. These include recommendations for the UN’s Disability Inclusion Strategy (UNDIS) to strengthen capacity, collaboration, and coherence in its accountability framework.

Accountability also means access to justice. Women and girls with disabilities often require assistance to reach or communicate with law enforcement and courts. This can sometimes be a major barrier and an infringement of their legal rights, such as women and girls who must rely on family members who are physically, emotionally, or economically abusive; the lack of available sign-language interpreters for deaf people outside of major cities; and the perception or false assumption that women with intellectual and psychosocial disabilities are not credible enough to represent themselves in court.

Access to justice is essential for an equitable world. For justice to be served, policymakers and law enforcement must take gender and disability into account – and ensure discrimination does not create impossible barriers for any woman or girl.

Ending gender-based violence for all women and girls

Here are 5 ways to ensure women with disabilities lead the push to end gender-based discrimination and violence.