Women and Girls in Sudan: What’s next?
Women and Girls in Sudan: What’s next? is a report based on unpublished research from the Sudanese Organization for Research and Development (SORD).
Women and Girls in Sudan: What’s next? is a report based on unpublished research from the Sudanese Organization for Research and Development (SORD).
In 2025, governments around the world slashed international aid budgets. These cuts devastated organizations doing important work—including some of the social justice organizations we work with in Guatemala, Sudan and Burma.
Inter Pares calls on Prime Minister Carney to uphold Canada’s global leadership on gender equality and human rights.
Your generosity is more than a donation—it’s a lifeline.
Inter Pares’ counterpart ROMI successfully advocates for a CAIMUS in Ixcán, Guatemala after ten years of advocacy.
“There is not much I can do, alone, and that is why I am so glad Inter Pares is there to do this important work—with a little help from friends like you and me.”
Canada must break its silence about the U.A.E.’s support to the RSF militia.
As civil war rages in Burma, people are laying the foundations for a future democracy.
For women in Ixcán, Guatemala, a remote, predominantly Mayan municipality, building a peacetime democracy that serves everyone is entwined with advocating for their rights.
Tim McSorley, ICLMG’s coordinator, spoke with us about how defending civil liberties is essential to protecting democracy.