Canada
Canada adopted its most recent National Action Plan (NAP) for the period 2023-2029. This is preceded by two other NAPs, adopted in 2017 for the period 2017-2022 and in 2010 for the period 2010-2016.
Compared to the 2017–2022 National Action Plan, the 2023–2029 Foundations for Peace introduces several changes that reflect both lessons learned and evolving global challenges. These include:
- Domestic Commitments: The 2023–2029 NAP includes more extensive domestic commitments than previous plans. These address emerging global issues that also have local impacts, such as the rise in climate emergencies and the increase in technology-facilitated gender-based violence. Notably, the plan specifically acknowledges threats targeting women peacebuilders and human rights defenders both in Canada and abroad.
- Deeper Engagement with Indigenous Communities: The NAP places greater emphasis on addressing gender-based discrimination, violence, oppression, and marginalization faced by women in Canada, particularly Indigenous women, girls, Two-Spirit, and gender-diverse people. It recognizes that leadership by Indigenous women and gender-diverse individuals is essential for achieving sustainable peace and security for all.
- Integration of an Intersectional Feminist Approach: Building on insights from previous plans, the 2023–2029 NAP further develops an intersectional feminist framework.
In 2017, Canada adopted a Feminist International Assistance Policy. The policy’s core priority is identified as gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls, with five additional supporting priorities: human dignity; growth that works for everyone; environment and climate action; inclusive governance; and peace and security.
Canada is also a contributor to humanitarian aid, including being a contributing donor to the Women’s Peace and Humanitarian Fund, a global partnership that works to empower women in conflict zones and humanitarian crises. Canada is also a partner of the Call to Action on Protection from Gender-Based Violence in Emergencies, a multi-stakeholder initiative that aims to mitigate and provide accountability for gender-based violence in humanitarian emergencies. In 2019, Canada was UN Women’s seventh-largest other resources contributor with USD 9.6 million and the tenth-largest total government contributor with USD 14.4 million.
At the multilateral level, Canada was most recently a candidate for a non-permanent position at the United Nations Security Council for the period 2021-2022, but was not elected.
Country Menu
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CEDAW
1981
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Global Gender Gap Index 2023
30 out of 146
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Arms Trade Treaty Ratified
2019
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Military expenditure (2022)
$26.9 billion USD
Explore Canada's National Action Plan
- Actors
- Timeframe
- Objectives
- Actions/Activities
- Indicators
- M&E
- Budget
- Disarmament
- 2017-2022
The 2023–2029 NAP was developed and will be implemented by 11 federal partners: the Canadian Armed Forces and Department of National Defence, Crown-Indigenous Relations and Northern Affairs Canada, Department of Justice Canada, Global Affairs Canada, Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada, Indigenous Services Canada, Public Safety Canada (including the Correctional Service of Canada), Royal Canadian Mounted Police, Veterans Affairs Canada, Women and Gender Equality Canada, and the Minister of Export Promotion, International Trade and Economic Development. Additionally, the Minister for Women and Gender Equality and Youth plays an important oversight role in ensuring effective implementation across government. Civil society organizations, including the Women, Peace and Security Network-Canada, co-chaired the advisory group and provided substantial input during the development process. The Government of Canada also engaged with Indigenous Peoples, women peacebuilders, human rights defenders, academics, and other civil society actors to shape a more inclusive and impactful action plan. |
The National Action Plan covers the years from 2023 to 2029.
Building and Sustaining Peace: Security, Justice, and Accountability: Gender-Responsive Crisis Response: Prevention and Response to Sexual and Gender-Based Violence (SGBV): Leadership and Capabilities: Inclusion: |
Key actions under the 2023–2029 National Action Plan on Women, Peace, and Security (NAP) include the establishment of a dedicated coordination hub at Global Affairs Canada to lead and oversee the implementation of the NAP across all partner departments and agencies. The plan prioritizes strengthening partnerships with civil society organizations, particularly Indigenous communities, women peacebuilders, and gender-diverse groups, to ensure their meaningful participation in peace and security decision-making at all levels. Additionally, the NAP commits to providing flexible and sustained funding to women’s rights organizations and feminist movements, both domestically and internationally, recognizing their critical role in advancing peace and security. The Government of Canada will further integrate gender perspectives into all aspects of military operations, security sector reforms, and crisis response planning, ensuring that interventions are inclusive and responsive to diverse needs. The action plan also emphasizes building institutional capacity to address emerging global threats—such as climate-related security risks, cybersecurity threats, and technology-facilitated gender-based violence—through gender-responsive policies and practices. |
Indicators for the NAP include a reduction in sexual and gender-based violence, increased participation of women and gender-diverse individuals in leadership roles, measurable improvements in the safety of peacebuilders and human rights defenders, and the implementation of flexible funding mechanisms for feminist movements.
More precisely:
- Building and Sustaining Peace
- % of total international assistance invested in fragile and conflict-affected situations to support women’s organizations, women’s networks, and advance women’s rights and gender equality for programming and/or institutional strengthening.
- Security, Justice, and Accountability
- Narrative examples of increased access to justice (e.g., through programs, initiatives, or policies) for women, girls, and gender-diverse people in Canada or abroad.
- Evidence of enhanced departmental capacity to improve access to justice for women, girls, and gender-diverse people in Canada or abroad.
- % of operations in which context-specific women, peace, and security issues were identified and integrated in planning and implementation.
- Crisis Response
- # of resettled refugee admissions to Canada, disaggregated by gender and type of refugee program.
- Sexual and Gender-Based Violence
- % of total humanitarian assistance projects that include sexual and/or gender-based violence or sexual and reproductive health and rights components.
- Leadership and Capabilities
- #/target of Canadian-led initiatives convening international partners on the WPS agenda.
- # of presentations by the GBA Plus team to women, peace, and security participating departments and agencies.
The Government of Canada will report annually to Parliament on the progress of the 2023–2029 National Action Plan on Women, Peace, and Security (NAP) to ensure transparency and accountability. The updated Monitoring, Evaluation, and Learning (MEL) framework focuses on fewer but more meaningful indicators, shifting from quantitative outputs to qualitative assessments that measure real impact and behavioral change.
This adaptive framework allows Canada to respond to emerging challenges and ensures that efforts are effectively supporting women, girls, and gender-diverse people in peace and security initiatives.
While specific budget details are not disclosed, the NAP emphasizes flexible funding models and resource commitments to support women’s rights organizations and peacebuilders. Funding will be channeled through established mechanisms, including the Peace and Stabilization Operations Program (PSOPs) at Global Affairs Canada, which provides targeted support for women, peace, and security initiatives in fragile and conflict-affected contexts. Additionally, the Government of Canada is dedicating specific resources for coordinating the action plan. This includes funding for interdepartmental coordination, strengthening partnerships with civil society and Indigenous organizations, and supporting the monitoring, evaluation, and learning (MEL) framework to ensure accountability and measure progress.
The NAP briefly references disarmament within its broader commitment to gender-sensitive security policies, specifically through approaches to arms control, mine action, and the inclusion of gender perspectives in security operations. However, disarmament is not a primary focus, appearing only once in the document. Recognizing the critical role security and justice actors play in protecting civilians and preventing conflict, the NAP emphasizes the need to reform these sectors to address both historical and ongoing systemic harm. Central to this reform is the meaningful participation of women and gender-diverse people at all levels of decision-making and operations. Their inclusion strengthens responses to global security challenges, from arms control and mine action to emerging threats like climate security, cyber warfare, and chemical, biological, radiological, and nuclear risks. |
Actors
NAP Process
The Canadian NAP states that the process was inclusive, participatory and included input from civil society organisations. In developing the 2017-2022 Action Plan, the Government of Canada has consulted with civil society, in particular, the Women, Peace and Security Network-Canada (WPSN-C).
The lead partners in the Development of the Action Plan are Global Affairs Canada, the Department of National Defence (DND) and the Canadian Armed Forces (CAF), and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP).
NAP Implementation
The NAP addresses the role of civil society in its implementation. The Action Plan Advisory Group will advise the Peace and Stabilization Operations Program (PSOPs)—as coordinator of the Action Plan—as well as the PSOPs Advisory Board on the implementation of the Action Plan. The Group will comprise civil society experts and government officials and will be co-chaired by a PSOPs official and a representative of civil society through the Women, Peace and Security Network Canada (WPSN-C). The Group will be established within the first six months of the launch of this Action Plan. Together, the PSOPs Advisory Board and the Action Plan Advisory Group will ensure the Action Plan implementation is strategic, coordinated, and responsive to new challenges.
The Minister of Foreign Affairs is responsible for Canada’s implementation of the international WPS Agenda and for ensuring that implementation across government is aligned with the government’s foreign policy priorities. Global Affairs Canada, through PSOPs, coordinates the whole-of-government Action Plan efforts.
NAP Monitoring and Evaluation
Civil society is one of the entities listed as responsible for the monitoring of the plan. One of the entities responsible for monitoring and evaluating the NAP is The Action Plan Advisory Group. The Group will meet regularly throughout the Action Plan’s life cycle to exchange experiences and best practices, discuss challenges and develop innovative solutions related to the implementation of the Action Plan. The Group will also engage with staff from Canadian embassies abroad and women’s groups’ leaders to learn from experiences from the field. The Group will improve progress monitoring by means of a continuous dialogue between civil society experts and government officials who are responsible for implementing the Action Plan. WPS Champions will attend meetings as defined in the Group’s terms of reference. The terms of reference will be developed jointly by the government and the WPSN-C. Monitoring will involve continuous consultation with local women’s organisations that are beneficiaries of Canadian programming and advocacy.
The NAP assigns multiple bodies to monitor the implementation of the plan including the PSOPs Advisory Board, a whole-of-government forum at the Director General level, brings together departments and agencies involved in Canada’s peace operations and coordinates government policy on the Action Plan and Canada’s role in implementing the WPS Agenda.
WILPF's Contributions to Canada's NAP
WILPF's Disarmament Programme has submitted the Brief to the House of Commons Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Development on Canada’s National Action Plan on Women, Peace and Security.
Timeframe
The implementation period for the NAP is five years (2017-2022).
Objectives
The primary objectives of Canadian NAP include:
- Increase the meaningful participation of women, women’s organisations and networks in conflict prevention, conflict resolution, and post-conflict state-building.
- Prevent, respond to and end impunity for sexual and gender-based violence perpetrated in conflict and sexual exploitation and abuse by peacekeepers and other international personnel, including humanitarian and development staff.
- Promote and protect women’s and girls’ human rights, gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls in fragile, conflict and post-conflict settings.
- Meet the specific needs of women and girls in humanitarian settings, including the upholding of their sexual rights and access to sexual and reproductive health services.
- Strengthen the capacity of peace operations to advance the WPS Agenda, including by deploying more women and fully embedding the WPS Agenda into CAF operations and police deployments.
Actions/Activities
Each area of work has examples of different actions assigned. For example, Strategic Objective 2 “Prevent, respond to and end impunity for sexual and gender-based violence perpetrated in conflict and sexual exploitation and abuse by peacekeepers and other international personnel, including humanitarian and development staff ” includes the following actions:
- Strengthen gender and WPS training, including on gender-based violence, for government personnel.
Each supporting partner has its own objectives, actions, and indicators. For example, The Department of National Defence and Canadian Armed Forces first objective, “Further integration of a Gender-Based Analysis Plus (GBA+) perspective within National Defence. Baseline: Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) Chief of the Defence Staff (CDS) Directive for Integrating UNSCR 1325 and Related Resolutions into CAF Planning and Operations.” Include the following actions:
- Integrate the WPS Agenda along with gender perspectives into Memoranda to Cabinet, Treasury Board and associated Cabinet submissions, policy documents, appropriation directions, procurement requirements, project proposals, strategies, Operational Plans, Operational Orders, exercises and related peace and security activities.
- Publish a Department of National Defence (DND) GBA + Directive to provide guidance to the L1s.
- Establish and hire a DND GBA + Director
Indicators
There are specific indicators for each objective and action. For example, Strategic Objective 2 “Prevent, respond to and end impunity for sexual and gender-based violence perpetrated in conflict and sexual exploitation and abuse by peacekeepers and other international personnel, including humanitarian and development staff. ” includes the following indicators:
- Gender-based Analysis Plus (GBA+) Integration: GBA+ is an analytical tool to assess the potential impacts of policies, programs, services and other initiatives on diverse groups of people, taking into account gender and a range of other identity factors. DND/CAF is fully committed to using GBA+ in the development and execution of defence operations, policies and programs and used GBA+ in the development of Canada’s defence policy Strong, Secure, Engaged. Recognising that conflict, natural disasters and humanitarian crises affect people differently, the Defence team is integrating GBA+ into the planning and execution of operations as a means to both improve operational effectiveness and meet the needs of those disproportionately affected by conflict and crisis.
- Women, Peace and Security (WPS) Champion: The CDS and the Deputy Minister (DM) named the first DND/CAF GBA+ and WPS Champion. The Champion is a General Officer who will lead efforts to achieve organisational culture change on these issues. Specifically, the Champion will advocate for and support efforts to ensure that respect and equality are the basis of institutional success and GBA+ is integrated into DND/CAF operations and institutions so that it becomes a routine part of all activities, policies and programs across DND/CAF.
- Gender Advisors: The CAF have established a Director for Integration of Gender Perspectives who will provide guidance and advice on the continued implementation of GBA +. The CAF have also established military gender advisor positions in the Strategic Joint Staff, the Canadian Joint Operations Command, and the Canadian Special Operations Forces Command. These individuals will advise on gender in operational planning and doctrine, as well as on inclusion and gender equality when working with other nations. The first CAF gender advisor is currently undergoing pre-deployment training and will be deployed to Task Force Europe in August 2017, and will work with partner nations to seek additional opportunities to deploy gender advisors (GENADS). In addition, each CAF operation now has at least one member fulfilling the role of a part-time “gender focal point”. Gender focal points are trained to advise the operational Commander on gender mainstreaming in a theatre of operations.
Monitoring and Evaluation
The Minister of Foreign Affairs is responsible for Canada’s implementation of the international WPS Agenda and for ensuring that implementation across government is aligned with the government’s foreign policy priorities. Global Affairs Canada, through PSOPs, coordinates the whole-of-government Action Plan efforts.
Budget
The plan considers gender-responsive budgeting. For each action, the plan identifies financial resources for implementation. For instance, to address objective number 2, Canada launched It’s Time: Canada’s Strategy to Prevent and Address Gender-Based Violence, a whole-of-government approach to prevent and address this form of violence nationally. Budget 2017 included $100.9 million over five years, and $20.7 million per year ongoing, to implement It’s Time.
Disarmament
The Canadian NAP does not offer any specific actions on disarmament. It mentions disarmament in passing in two contexts. The NAP states that at the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE), the Canadian mission will support the implementation of the OSCE Action Plan for the Promotion of Gender Equality and other OSCE decisions, notably in areas specific to Canada’s objectives for advancing WPS, such as disarmament, and the increased representation of women in managerial positions at the OSCE and in field missions. It also states that In Geneva, Global Affairs Canada will develop a systematic approach to its efforts to mainstream WPS throughout relevant Geneva-based institutions and processes covering security, human rights, humanitarian issues, migration, health, labour, and disarmament, as well as trade and development. Its priorities will include multilateral partnerships to advance WPS, and supporting women of all ages and women’s organisations from fragile and conflict-affected states to have their priorities heard.