Albania – Facilitator of the Shared Commitments for 2023
Albania has partnered with fellow Security Council members to advance the implementation of the Women, Peace and Security (WPS) agenda in the work of the Council.
The “Statement of Shared Commitments on Women, Peace and Security” were launched in December 2021 and have been signed by 15 former and current Security Council Members: Albania, Brazil, Ecuador, France, Gabon, Ireland, Japan, Kenya, Malta, Mexico, Niger, Norway, Switzerland, the United Arab Emirates, and the United Kingdom.
Signatories have committed to prioritize WPS during our respective Presidencies of the Security Council in January, February, May, June, July, September, October, and December 2023.
Our shared goal is to ensure that the WPS agenda is fully and meaningfully integrated into all aspects of the Council’s work, including in country-specific discussions, and that the crucial work of women peacebuilders and human rights defenders in conflict prevention, peacebuilding and sustaining peace is supported and recognised.
The Commitments are open to all Presidencies to join, with the aim of making it a continuing initiative.
As the facilitator of the Shared Commitments for 2023, Albania will continue to work and coordinate with all Security Council Members who are part of this initiative to ensure the implementation of the WPS Agenda in concrete and tangible ways.
Read more about the concrete commitments in the document below.
Statement of Shared Commitments
Niger, Norway, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, Albania, Brazil, Ecuador, France, Gabon, Japan, Malta, and Switzerland during our respective Presidencies of the Security Council in December 2021, January, March, April, June, July, September, and October 2022, and January, February, May, June, July, September, October, and December 2023 are committed to making Women, Peace and Security a top priority, and to ensuring its implementation in concrete and tangible ways. These commitments build on the initiative launched in September 2021 by Ireland, Kenya, and Mexico.
We believe in the transformative power of the WPS agenda to enable the Security Council to fully realise its mandate to maintain international peace and security. We are determined to advance the implementation of the WPS agenda, and ensure the Council approaches WPS in a systematic way to help close the persistent gap between rhetoric and reality, especially on the ground.
Women and girls have the right to participate fully, equally and meaningfully in all matters of peace and security, including conflict prevention, and to protection in situations of armed conflict, including from sexual and gender-based violence, in accordance with United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolutions and international law, in particular international human rights law and international humanitarian law.
Our shared goal is to ensure that the WPS agenda is fully and meaningfully integrated into all aspects of the Council’s work, including in country-specific discussions, and that the crucial work of women peacebuilders and human rights defenders in conflict prevention, peacebuilding and sustaining peace is supported and recognised.
To drive forward implementation of the WPS normative framework, we commit to:
Women’s full, equal, and meaningful participation in Council meetings:
Including gender perspectives in Council meetings and products:
Transparency in advancing the WPS agenda in the Council: