
What we do
We are enhancing access to reparations for survivors of conflict-related sexual violence
Global Survivors Fund (GSF) does this through three core pillars:
Our work is carried out so that:
Survivors are agents of their own change
We act with survivors. Through the co-creation of interim reparative measure projects, survivors are a part of the decision-making process from the very beginning. Only survivors can identify what form of reparations they need, so they actively participate in project design and implementation. The co-creation process itself is reparative for survivors because they are heard and supported.
Survivors improve their social lives
A significant impact of interim reparative measures projects is that survivors improve their social status within their families and communities. They even report a decrease in stigmatisation.
Duty bearers take responsibility for their obligation to implement survivor-centric national reparation programmes
Survivors have tools to advance their rights
Our Global Reparations Study is designed to be a critical advocacy tool that can be used by survivors. In being produced through a multistakeholder collaboration involving the voices of survivors and local partners, it is an authoritative document that frames their experiences, expectations, and vision to realise their right to reparation. There is enhanced knowledge and capacity to implement survivor-centric reparations and redress programmes.
There is international acceptance of the moral and legal imperative to provide survivors with holistic reparations
Ensuring that the voice and insights of people who have lived through CRSV are heard at international conferences and roundtables is fundamental in making sure that policymakers begin to understand and consider the actual needs and perspectives of survivors in developing reparation programmes. We want the involvement of survivors to be a norm – rather than an exception in advocacy.
“What I am most happy about is that normally we are invited only in the middle [of projects], but with this programme, we are invited from the beginning until the end. I feel this is justice.”
Survivor from Nepal