Why is digital abuse so hard to stop?
- Weak regulation of the technology sector or lack of legal recognition of digital violence in countries.
- Lack of accountability from tech platforms and social networking sites.
- Normalization of violence in manosphere spaces.
- Artificial Intelligence creating new forms of abuse and amplifying digital violence.
- Growing backlash against gender equality.
- Anonymity of perpetrators and cross-border abuse make it harder to get justice.
- Limited support systems for survivors of cyberbullying or personal data leaks.
Growing momentum for action by governments, the UN, and regional organizations
Thanks to years of advocacy by feminist and digital rights movements, major progress has been made:
- The 2024 Global Digital Compact set the first UN-wide standards for digital safety and AI governance.
- In December 2024, Member States adopted the UN Cybercrime Convention – the first legally binding international instrument with implications for addressing digital violence.
- The UN General Assembly adopted a resolution on Violence Against Women in Digital Environments in 2024, urging states to take immediate, effective action to prevent and eliminate digital violence and to strengthen regulation and accountability of platforms.
- In 2024, the UN Statistical Commission called for the development of global methods to measure technology-facilitated gender-based violence, with work now underway.
- Regional bodies also acted – from the African Union’s Convention on Ending Violence against Women and Girls to the EU’s Digital Services Act.
What does the 2025 UNiTE campaign call for?
We must all act to stop digital abuse. To mark the 16 Days of Activism, the campaign calls on:
- Governments to pass and enforce laws that criminalize digital violence, protect personal information and strengthen tech sector accountability.
- Tech companies to ensure platform safety, remove harmful content, enforce codes of conduct and publish transparent reports.
- Donors to invest in feminist organizations working to end violence against women and digital rights advocates.
- Individuals to speak out, support survivors, and challenge harmful online norms.
How can you take action?
From 25 November to 10 December, organize visible and bold activities to promote safety and justice online. Partners can include:
- Civil society
- Youth-led groups
- Academia
- Local governments and community leaders
- Private sector, and more
You can take action in many ways – learn and share information from this year’s campaign, support local services that support survivors of gender-based violence, host or participate in digital safety sessions, support male allyship campaigns that reject and prevent digital violence against women and girls, and encourage governments and companies to adopt better laws and policies.
Don’t forget to wear or display the colour orange – a symbol of hope and a future free from violence.
Join the 16 Days conversation on social media: use #NoExcuse and #ACTtoEndViolence.