• About Us
    • Our Team
    • Careers
    • Financials
    • Donors
  • What We Do
    • Initiatives
    • Areas of Expertise
    • Coalitions
  • Our Impact
  • Resources
  • Advocacy
    • Amplify
Donate
  • About Us
    • Our Team
    • Careers
    • Financials
    • Donors
  • What We Do
    • Initiatives
    • Areas of Expertise
    • Coalitions
  • Our Impact
  • Resources
  • Advocacy
    • Amplify
  • Donate

Women's Environment and Development Organization

  • About Us
  • What We Do
  • Our Impact
  • Resources
  • Key Events & Gatherings
  • Financials
+1 212-973-0325[email protected]

DonateContact Us

Privacy Policy/WEDO Policies
Copyright © Women's Environment and Development Organization

Stay Informed

Receive updates on our progress, thinking, and strategies as we advocate for gender-just climate, environment, and economic policies around the world.

Resources
Toolkit
Nov 7, 2016
A Gender Analysis of Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (2016)
Global Policy
Share:Share on LinkedInShare on FacebookShare on Bluesky
Beyond Extractives banner 1

Intended nationally determined contributions (INDCs) are a critically important tool for the advancement of the ultimate objective of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, which is to stabilize greenhouse gas (GHG) concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that will prevent dangerous climate change. While the principal purpose of the INDCs is to encourage […]

Intended nationally determined contributions (INDCs) are a critically important tool for the advancement of the ultimate objective of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change, which is to stabilize greenhouse gas (GHG) concentrations in the atmosphere at a level that will prevent dangerous climate change. While the principal purpose of the INDCs is to encourage governments to increase the ambition of their commitments to mitigate GHG emissions, they have also served to clarify the overall scope of many national climate change plans and policies, including components such as adaptation and means of implementation.

The objective of this analysis is to evaluate the extent to which submitted INDCs address women’s human rights and the linkages between climate change and gender more broadly. The importance of explicitly addressing these linkages in national and international climate change policy-making is well-documented. In short, comprehensively addressing the intersection of gender and climate change is essential for both advancing the fulfillment of women’s human rights and gender equality, and effectively addressing the multiple challenges that climate change poses. The overall conclusion of this analysis is that the submitted INDCs fall far short of the necessary commitments.

Share:Share on LinkedInShare on FacebookShare on Bluesky

Stay Informed

Receive updates on our progress, thinking, and strategies as we advocate for gender-just climate, environment, and economic policies around the world.

Related Resources
Advocacy Brief
Nov 30, 2025
No Tax Justice Without Gender Justice
Advocacy in Action
Nov 22, 2025
Belém: Feminist Power Delivered — But the Process Failed to Meet the Moment
Advocacy Brief
Nov 19, 2025
Media Advisory: Delivering a Gender Action Plan at COP30 – Current State of Play

Resources

View All
a group of women smiling

Support Our Work

Your donation provides us with the stable foundation we need to build the feminist future we’re working to realize.

Donate Today
Interview with Katie Swan Nelson
Critical Conversation
Highlights on Multilateralism: An Interview With Katie Swan-NelsonRead
Advocacy Brief UN Framework Convention on Tax
Advocacy Brief
No Tax Justice Without Gender JusticeRead
COP30
Advocacy in Action
Belém: Feminist Power Delivered — But the Process Failed to Meet the MomentRead
Small Grant Recipients 2025 26
Impact Story
Announcing 2025-26 GEDA Small Grant RecipientsRead