TRENDING NEWS
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The Criminal Justice System is Failing Survivors of Domestic Abuse and Male Violence
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Grievable Lives and Forgotten Children: Hind Rajab, Anne Frank, and the Politics of Whose Lives Matter
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Silenced Suffering: Gendered Human Rights Abuses in Palestine
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The ‘Silent’ Threat: An Analysis of Stalking as a Pervasive Form of Gender-Based Violence
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Rollback and Resistance: Women’s Rights in the Age of Trumpism
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The Intellectual Facade of Misogyny: How Figures like Jordan Peterson Fuel Ideological Hatred and Violence Against Women and Girls






Motherhood and Feminism in Giorgia Meloni's Italy
LGBTQ+
Empowerment or Objectification? Beauty Pageants in Limbo Between Gender Equality and Patriarchal Culture
Progress and Setbacks: The Olympic Inclusion-Exclusion Game
LGBTQ+
LGBTQ+
Upholding Human Rights Amidst New Developments…..
LGBTQ+
LGBTQ+
The Relationship Gap
LGBTQ+
Something is Rotten in the State of Europe: Femicide in the EU
Under the Surface: The Hidden Reality of Rape in Japan, Part 2
The previous article analyzed the situation inherent in rape in Japan through legislative shortcomings, and offered an in-depth reading of national statistics, and the example offered by Itō Shiori's Black Box. This sequel investigates the role of Japan's porn industry in more detail.
Misogyny and Femicide in Britain – Men’s Problem to Solve
Since the murder of Sarah Everard in March 2021 by a serving police officer, The Independent revealed that over the next three years over 350 women had been killed by men in the United Kingdom.
Under the Surface: The Hidden Reality of Rape in Japan, Part I
This socio-cultural context in which the rape and quasi-rape laws in Japan were created are analysed to show that the law, and its subsequent amendments, make it difficult to report assaults and bring rapists to trial. This analysis demonstrates the fallacy of data which promote Japan as a forerunner state in the guarantee of safety against sexual violence.
Whose Pain Matters? Part I: The Selective Outrage in India's Fight Against Sexual Violence
Selective outrage is more than just a societal oversight, it is a manifestation of deeply rooted biases and prejudices. It's not unusual that the cases that elicit the most empathy and agitation include victims who correspond to a specific profile-young, urban, educated, and frequently from upper-caste families.
Iraq’s Draft Child Marriage Law: A Step Backward for Women’s Rights
In a disturbing move that has shocked human rights advocates worldwide, Iraq’s parliament has proposed a law that would legalize child marriage, allowing girls as young as 9 to be wed.
Too Posh to Push?
Striking where it hurts most, at the class anxieties omnipresent British culture, ‘too posh to push’ insinuates that richer mothers seek to minimise their birthing experience to a relaxing day out by seeking a caesarean. The pejorative assumption that a 'natural' and non-medicalised birth is inherently 'better' than one requiring a large amount of medical intervention, but 'natural birth' above all else is one that has been widely disproved in the medical community.
Something is Rotten in the State of Europe: Femicide in the EU
The Italian government contextualised femicide as a violent expression of misogyny. This echoes the common acknowledgement amongst international organisations, including UN Women, that femicide is a fatal consequence of gendered discrimination. Despite this understanding actions to enact systematic change, beyond superficial promises of educational reform, have not been taken.
Generation Z and the Great Gender Divide
Young women are more liberal than ever, but the same cannot be said for young men. Why has this gap emerged, and is it too late to close it?
Street harassment in the UK: How far does new legislation go to protect women from harassment?
When public spaces, particularly late at night, are so deeply associated with fear for women, how far can legislation actually change our perception of public safety as women?
Motherhood and Feminism in Giorgia Meloni's Italy
In Meloni’s Italy, to be a woman is to be a mother, and the duty of motherhood is ensuring the continuation of a Christian, Italian nationhood through future generations. Immigrant or LGBTQ+ families are not part of this political imagination. They are instead treated as ideological threats to this unified identity.
Menstruation in Humanitarian Crises
Menstruation is certain. Therefore, support for women, girls and people who menstruate must be guaranteed in humanitarian response. Its continued omission is symptomatic of the continued stigmatisation around menstruation and the male stronghold over the humanitarian sector.
In Conversation with Hannah Smith: Erdoğan the ‘Original Modern-Populist’
Elections are just the tip of the iceberg, underneath all that there’s so much that you need, you need a healthy civil society, you need people who are educated enough to make the right decisions, you need a political culture which isn’t just about worshiping the strongest guy.
Female Genital Cutting in Kenya: How do you end a cultural practice?
Around the world, Female Genital Cutting remains a deeply entrenched tradition marking the transition to womanhood for young girls. Yet this practice inflicts severe physical and psychological harm and has rightfully been recognised as a violation of human rights.
OpEd: Perceptions of Period
"If I was on my period, I couldn’t outwardly say. I had to dance around the fact... Why? Because it was SHAMEFUL. It was a woman’s problem, not a man’s..."
Stop Sextortion for Water in Kenya!
Water is a precious and rare resource in Kenya, but women and girls are disproportionately affected by the lack of it. It’s time to speak up about sex-for-water exploitation and push for a law to make this abuse illegal.
Gambian Parliament Advances Bill to Reverse Ban on FGM
Politicians voted 42 to 4 in favour of the bill. This vote has sparked protests from both sides of the argument and brought strong criticism from activists, expressing deep concern about the future of women’s rights.
Part III - A Spectre is Haunting Europe: Consequences and Calamity
The third of a three-part series into the rise of right-wing youth in Europe.
Part II - A Spectre is Haunting Europe: Please Turn Right at the Junction
The second of a three-part series into the rise of right-wing youth in Europe.
Part I - A Spectre is Haunting Europe: The Rise of Right-Wing Youth
The first of a three-part series into the rise of right-wing youth in Europe.
Understanding Women's Poverty: Deprivation and Depletion
Women's poverty is a multifaceted issue that goes beyond mere lack of financial resources. It can be understood as a process of deprivation and depletion, where women are systematically denied access to essential resources and opportunities, thus preventing them from achieving a decent standard of living.
LGBTQ+ History Month
The teaching and celebration of LGBTQ+ history is integral to broadening people’s understanding of themselves, the people around them, and society as a whole.
OpEd: Javier Milei, Argentina’s Populist President and the Hypocrisy of Neo-Conservatism
Milei symbolises the opposition to a system which has genuinely disenchanted and disadvantaged millions of Argentines. Much like President Trump and Prime Minister Johnson, the mistake of mainstream media is to underestimate the intelligence and cynicism of these populist men. Such a mistake is dangerous for our rights and our democracies.
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Under the Surface: The Hidden Reality of Rape in Japan, Part 2
The previous article analyzed the situation inherent in rape in Japan through legislative shortcomings, and offered an in-depth reading of national statistics, and the example offered by Itō Shiori's Black Box. This sequel investigates the role of Japan's porn industry in more detail.
Under the Surface: The Hidden Reality of Rape in Japan, Part I
This socio-cultural context in which the rape and quasi-rape laws in Japan were created are analysed to show that the law, and its subsequent amendments, make it difficult to report assaults and bring rapists to trial. This analysis demonstrates the fallacy of data which promote Japan as a forerunner state in the guarantee of safety against sexual violence.
Whose Pain Matters? Part I: The Selective Outrage in India's Fight Against Sexual Violence
Selective outrage is more than just a societal oversight, it is a manifestation of deeply rooted biases and prejudices. It's not unusual that the cases that elicit the most empathy and agitation include victims who correspond to a specific profile-young, urban, educated, and frequently from upper-caste families.
Too Posh to Push?
Striking where it hurts most, at the class anxieties omnipresent British culture, ‘too posh to push’ insinuates that richer mothers seek to minimise their birthing experience to a relaxing day out by seeking a caesarean. The pejorative assumption that a 'natural' and non-medicalised birth is inherently 'better' than one requiring a large amount of medical intervention, but 'natural birth' above all else is one that has been widely disproved in the medical community.
Something is Rotten in the State of Europe: Femicide in the EU
The Italian government contextualised femicide as a violent expression of misogyny. This echoes the common acknowledgement amongst international organisations, including UN Women, that femicide is a fatal consequence of gendered discrimination. Despite this understanding actions to enact systematic change, beyond superficial promises of educational reform, have not been taken.
Motherhood and Feminism in Giorgia Meloni's Italy
In Meloni’s Italy, to be a woman is to be a mother, and the duty of motherhood is ensuring the continuation of a Christian, Italian nationhood through future generations. Immigrant or LGBTQ+ families are not part of this political imagination. They are instead treated as ideological threats to this unified identity.

ABOUT PROXY
We are Proxy by IWI - the journalist opinionated side of [The IWI: International Women’s Initiative][1], the leading women’s human rights, advocacy and policy centre. Finding information fuelled by facts can be difficult. That is why Aubrey Shayler created Proxy by IWI. Featuring hard-hitting original reporting as well as smart analysis, provocative argument, and first-person perspectives. Unapologetically opinionated but never partisan, we bring perspective, not more punditry. Proxy by IWI provokes and inspires with facts, and never bores or lectures. Stay feminist, stay woke - just like our founder.

The Silent Erosion of Afghan Women's Rights