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In many ways, women have more power and opportunities than ever before. At the same time, in some parts of the world, gender-based issues, discrimination and violence are more pressing than ever.
So what is the purpose of IWD in 2025?
The history of International Women’s Day
“I think it’s really a moment for us to check in and look at our progress, see how far we have come and how far we haven’t come, and then put together some actions to try and accelerate our progress,” she says.

Simone Clarke, CEO of UN Women Australia, describes International Women’s Day as an opportunity to reflect on and evaluate progress in women’s rights. Source: Supplied / Irene Dowdy
Clarke says this year’s IWD has particular significance as the 30th anniversary of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action. The declaration is a policy framework adopted by the UN in 1995, which outlines a plan to achieve equal rights for all women and girls.
“In that declaration … there were 12 promises that were made to women, none of which we’ve been close to achieving,” she says.
So I think it’s another testament to the fact that we still have a long way to go.
“This is especially important this year in 2025 as we see women, the rights of women and girls to education, to health, and particularly reproductive care being rolled back in, not only in the US but in other parts of Eastern Europe and different places around the world.”
Progress and relevance in 2025
But despite this progress, many issues remain.
“And by that I mean facing into those indicators: they are facts, they are statistics that are still holding women back.”
“I think it needs a cultural revolution for us to start talking about why violence against women is an absolute non-negotiable, it cannot continue,” she says.
And yet nowhere in the world — nowhere, in no country — are the statistics on violence against women getting better. In fact, in most cases, they’re getting worse.
“So if you add economic disparity to social marginalisation to violence, it’s no wonder that the statistics around gender equality are not even close to being achieved.”
Corporate feminism and pink cupcakes
Some critics have expressed frustration with this evolution, saying it promotes a superficial ‘corporate feminism’ and trivialises the real inequalities faced by many women, particularly those who are less privileged.
“So while some might dismiss those International Women’s Days about cupcakes, when you have leadership teams sitting there talking about their staff and employee resource groups about female representation … those are things that weren’t even talked about 20 years ago, 15 years ago.”
Intersectionality and Indigenous exclusion

International Women’s Day is rooted in protest. Source: AAP / Francis R Malasig / EPA
Another key criticism of IWD, and modern feminism more broadly, is its lack of discussion about intersectionality.
These include access to education, voting rights, reproductive rights and care, working rights, and the ability to make their own choices about relationships and marriage.
“Those freedoms are not available everywhere, and I think it’s worth remembering in 2025 that many countries, especially those marked by conflict and crisis — places like Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Gaza — women and girls are vulnerable to poverty and hunger,” she says.
They can’t go to school and they’re not allowed to be employed, or they find it hard to be employed; reproductive care is completely absent.
“Because in this country, I know for certain that Aboriginal women certainly aren’t equal to white women in this country, let alone white men. So, therefore, it misses the mark.”

Ashlee Donohue believes International Women’s Day does not adequately address the additional barriers Indigenous women or women from other minorities face. Source: Supplied / Ashlee Donohue
Donohue says she has routinely seen Indigenous women left out of conversations about gender equality and not featured in events or panel discussions.