About IGED-Africa

Advancing Gender Equality, Human Rights, and Inclusive Development Across Africa

The Initiative for Gender Equality and Development in Africa (IGED-Africa) is a women-led, Ghanaian-registered non-governmental organization with a regional focus on advancing gender equality, human rights, and inclusive development across Africa.

Established by strong Ghanaian women, IGED-Africa was founded on the belief that sustainable development is only possible when women, girls, and marginalized groups are fully included in social, economic, political, and decision-making processes. Although nationally located in Ghana, the organization works with a pan-African outlook, connecting community-level realities with national, regional, and international human rights systems.

IGED-Africa promotes gender equality and women’s empowerment through advocacy, research, capacity building, policy engagement, public education, and strategic partnerships. Its work is rooted in the conviction that every person deserves equal rights, equal opportunities, and equal access to resources, protection, and participation.

Over the years, IGED-Africa has engaged regional and international human rights mechanisms to strengthen legal and policy protections for women and girls. The organization has worked closely with civil society actors, governments, advocates, and regional bodies to advance women’s rights, particularly in relation to property rights, family law, governance, and access to justice.

One of IGED-Africa’s major contributions has been its advocacy around General Comment No. 6 on Article 7(d) of the Maputo Protocol, adopted by the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights. This important regional instrument provides guidance to African states on the equitable distribution of property during separation, divorce, or annulment of marriage.

Through this work, IGED-Africa has helped advance recognition of both monetary and non-monetary contributions in marriage, including unpaid care work, domestic labour, childcare, farming, household management, and support for a spouse’s career or business. This advocacy is central to ensuring that women are not left economically vulnerable when marriages end simply because their contributions were not financial or their names were not listed on property documents.

IGED-Africa’s approach combines legal advocacy with public education and practical tools that make rights more accessible to the people most affected by inequality. The organization develops resources, convenes dialogues, supports awareness-raising, and builds the capacity of communities, advocates, and institutions to understand and apply human rights standards in everyday life.

At the heart of IGED-Africa’s work is a simple commitment: to build an Africa where women, men, girls, and boys enjoy equal dignity, equal opportunity, and equal access to the resources and protections needed for sustainable development.

Through partnerships, advocacy, and sustained engagement, IGED-Africa continues to contribute to a more inclusive, equitable, and rights-based future for Africa.

IGED-AFRICA PROFILE FOR WEBSITE – JUNE 2026(1).docx

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Yes, this profile is much richer. Here is the better About IGED-Africa page/article with the programme, history, regional, international, and General Comment context built in.

About IGED-Africa

Advancing Gender Equality, Human Rights, and Inclusive Development Across Africa

The Initiative for Gender Equality and Development in Africa (IGED-Africa) is a women-led, non-governmental, not-for-profit organization registered in Ghana with the Registrar General’s Department and the Department of Social Welfare since 2011.

Based in Accra, Ghana, IGED-Africa works at national, regional, and international levels to promote gender equality, human rights, women’s empowerment, social justice, and inclusive development. The organization exists to strengthen the voices, capacities, participation, and resilience of women, girls, and marginalized groups, enabling them to claim their rights and contribute fully to the development of their communities and societies.

IGED-Africa recognizes that sustainable development cannot be achieved where inequality, poverty, violence, insecurity, exclusion, and injustice continue to limit the lives and potential of women and girls. Its work is grounded in the belief that women, men, girls, and boys must have equal opportunities, equal access to resources, and equal protection under the law.

Although nationally located in Ghana, IGED-Africa has a strong pan-African outlook. The organization connects community-level realities with regional and international human rights frameworks, ensuring that policy commitments on gender equality are linked to practical issues affecting women and communities on the ground.

Over the years, IGED-Africa has worked with women’s groups, civil society organizations, governments, development partners, academic institutions, regional bodies, local authorities, and community actors across Africa. Its work has included engagement with women’s rights organizations and women’s groups in more than 40 African countries, linking grassroots experiences with advocacy at national, regional, and international levels.

Our Vision

To build an inclusive and equitable Africa where women, men, girls, and boys have equal opportunities, rights, and access to resources, enabling them to contribute fully to sustainable development, social justice, and economic prosperity.

Our Mission

IGED-Africa is committed to advancing gender equality, human rights, and the empowerment of marginalized groups, especially women and girls, through advocacy, education, capacity building, mentorship, research, and policy engagement.

The organization works with governments, civil society, private sector partners, regional and international institutions, and local communities to promote human rights, equal access to property, leadership, justice, economic opportunities, and sustainable development across Africa.

Our Story

IGED-Africa was founded by women who believed that gender equality is both necessary and possible. This conviction grew out of years of direct engagement with individuals and communities affected by gender inequality, human rights violations, violence against women, land and property rights abuses, housing and inheritance challenges, child rights violations, armed conflict, civil unrest, and other forms of injustice.

These experiences revealed how deeply inequality affects development outcomes across Africa. They also showed the importance of linking community realities with policy advocacy, legal reform, and regional human rights mechanisms.

From communities in Ghana to networks across Africa, IGED-Africa has worked to connect women’s lived experiences, local advocacy, and creative community initiatives with policymakers and institutions. This commitment to linking theory with practice continues to shape the organization’s approach.

Our Programmes

IGED-Africa’s work is organized around four major programme areas.

Gender and Development

This programme advances gender equality and women’s empowerment as drivers of sustainable development, social justice, and inclusive growth. It addresses systemic inequalities that limit the participation, opportunities, and rights of women, girls, and marginalized groups in education, healthcare, governance, economic participation, access to resources, and decision-making.

Women’s Property and Inheritance Rights

This flagship programme promotes and protects women’s rights to own, inherit, access, control, and benefit from land, housing, and other productive assets. It addresses legal, social, cultural, and economic barriers that prevent women from enjoying equal property and inheritance rights, while supporting awareness, legal assistance, advocacy, and engagement with traditional and community leaders.

Gender, Peace and Security

This programme advances the participation, protection, rights, and leadership of women and girls in conflict prevention, peacebuilding, conflict resolution, humanitarian response, and post-conflict recovery. It recognizes that sustainable peace cannot be achieved without the meaningful inclusion of women in peace and security processes.

Women’s Economic and Financial Inclusion

This programme promotes women’s economic empowerment, financial independence, and participation in economic development. It works to address barriers that limit women’s access to finance, productive assets, markets, technology, entrepreneurship support, and economic decision-making.

Regional and International Advocacy

A major part of IGED-Africa’s work has focused on using regional and international human rights mechanisms to advance women’s land, property, and inheritance rights.

Since 2013, IGED-Africa has worked closely with the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACHPR) in The Gambia, collaborating with partners from across Africa and beyond to advocate for women’s rights to land and productive resources under the Maputo Protocol.

One landmark result of this advocacy was the adoption of Resolution 262 of the ACHPR on the Rights of Women to Land and Productive Resources, a significant regional instrument supporting women’s land and property rights advocacy.

IGED-Africa has also played an important role in advocacy around General Comment No. 6 on Article 7(d) of the Maputo Protocol, which provides guidance to African states on the equitable distribution of property during separation, divorce, or annulment of marriage.

This work is especially important because women’s contributions within marriage are often overlooked when property is divided. General Comment No. 6 helps clarify that both monetary and non-monetary contributions should be recognized, including unpaid care work, domestic labour, childcare, farming, household management, and support for a spouse’s career or business.

At the international level, IGED-Africa has engaged mechanisms including CEDAW and the Human Rights Committee, contributing to advocacy on women’s land, property, and inheritance rights in Ghana and across Africa.

Our Values

IGED-Africa is guided by the values of equality, equity, empowerment, inclusion, integrity, collaboration, and sustainability.

These values shape its commitment to building societies where no one is left behind, where women and girls can fully exercise their rights, and where communities are supported to become more just, inclusive, and resilient.

Through advocacy, research, capacity building, mentorship, legal empowerment, and strategic partnerships, IGED-Africa continues to work toward an Africa where gender equality is not only promised in policy, but realized in the everyday lives of women, girls, families, and communities.

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