Home » Resource Hub

Global Fund for Women

Our Vision

We envision a world where movements for gender justice have transformed power and privilege for a few into equity and equality for all.

Our Mission

We fund bold, ambitious, and expansive gender justice movements to create meaningful change that will last beyond our lifetimes.

History

Global Fund for Women was founded in 1987 in Palo Alto, California, by four bold women: Anne Firth Murray, Frances Kissling, Laura Lederer, and Nita Barrow. They were convinced that women’s human rights were essential to social, economic, and political change around the world, for the benefit of us all. Frustrated by a lack of interest in funding women’s human rights, they founded an organization to fund grass-roots women-led movements directly. Our founders knew that trusting local partners to drive solutions in their own communities would lead to meaningful, lasting change. They were right.

Over the course of 30+ years, Global Fund for Women has supported feminist movements and grassroots organizers to end civil wars, get female Presidents elected, and secure laws giving new protection to millions. Today, building on historic wins and the latest research, we are doubling down on supporting movements. By shifting towards a movement-led approach, Global Fund for Women will harness and fuel rising people-power globally to increase their impact and accelerate change.

Resource Details

Organization: GFW
Date: NA
Resource Type: Organization, Resources
Topic: Economic Justice, Gender Justice, Policy

Related resources (by topic)

Amplify Girls

AMPLIFY Girls was imagined through a thought partnership by Komera and the Antelope Foundation about the importance of localized development and the urgent need to drive resources and power to community-driven organizations.

An Indigenous Approach to Community Wealth Building: A Lakota Translation

The Lakota Translation reflects the inspiration and new models that come from a group of visionary people and organizations working together to strategically build equitable, sustainable economic systems. It is rooted in the cultural and historical context of Native communities…

Anita Cameron Discusses Race, Disability, Sexuality, and Being a Woman

Dom Evans interviews a peer to explore the topics of life that are most important to Anita Cameron.

ASAN is Beating The Odds

Last week, ASAN sponsored Elly Wong, an incoming freshman at Syracuse University, to attend the First Lady’s Beating The Odds summit as part of the #ReachHigher initiative. Here is what Elly had to say about the experience:

Help us expand the Resource Hub

Share resources that you think would be a good addition to this tool and our team will review them for inclusion in future updates.