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The Women, Peace, and Security (WPS) Working Group for the Arab States convened its second meeting in Geneva from 30 September to 2 October 2024, as part of its commitment to establishing a regional mechanism to inform and shape WPS policies across the Arab region in anticipation of the 25th anniversary of the WPS agenda in 2025.
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UN Women Lebanon Office welcomes proposals for partnerships to achieve results under its Women’s Political Participation Programme, with a specific focus to increase women's participation in and impact on decision-making in political and civic spaces.
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UN Women seeks to engage a Responsible Party for the implementation of the Project "Increasing Resilience of Crisis Affected Women and Girls in Tyre (Sour) through comprehensive Livelihood and Protection Services"
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Hwaida Turk, PhD, is the first woman interim Mohafez (governor) in Lebanon. She was appointed on 17 July 2023 to the southern Governorate of Nabatieh.
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UN Women Lebanon Office welcomes proposals for partnerships to achieve results under the Women, Peace, and Security programme. Proposals should suggest interventions to achieve one or more of the following outcomes, outputs, activities, and indicators below, utilizing an approach recommended by the applicant.
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UN Women Lebanon Office welcomes proposals for partnerships to achieve results under the Women, Peace, and Security programme.
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UN Women is re-advertising this CFP to partner with an organization to conduct.
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During the Lebanese civil war, people's daily lives were shaped by an armed conflict that left long-lasting repercussions, unhealed traumas, and memories untold. Through art theatre, women and girls are embarking on a journey to seek the truth, foster collective remembrance, and ultimately, move towards reconciliation.  Performers set the scene of an old factory setting on the Sunflower Theatre stage in Beirut, Lebanon. Photo: UN Women/Dar Al Mussawir In Badaro, a neighbourhood in...
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Amal Barakeh was born in Tawergha, some 40 kilometers south of Misrata in Libya. After the separation of her parents, she lived with her father and his family in Misrata. Her mother also remarried and formed her own family in Tawergha. Having good relations with both families, she used to travel back and forth between the two cities which had been bound by marital and neighborly ties for decades, until the civil war broke out in 2011.