2026 King’s Birthday honours
178 people received honours in the King’s Birthday list. Again, as with the 2024 and 2025 King's Birthday lists, men received more awards than women: this year, 53% (95) compared with 47% (83). Another disappointing result for women who received 47% of the honours, again most noticeable in the higher awards where only 43% went to women. See the full list at https://www.dpmc.govt.nz/publications/kings-birthday-honours-list-2026.
Read moreUpdate on NCWNZ conference from Manukau and Hibiscus Coast branches
Manukau and Hibiscus Coast Branches are excitedly preparing to host everyone for this year’s Conference `Our Voices, Our Power, Our Future – 130 Years of National Council of Women’. We have an exciting programme for our day and a half together at the Jetpark Hotel and Conference Centre, 63 Westney Road, Auckland, 2022.
We are looking forward to seeing you on the 12th and 13th September this year to celebrate our 130th Anniversary together in person. Any questions regarding the conference, please contact Angela Dalton (President Manukau) on [email protected]
Read moreFunding cuts to RespectEd Condemned by Wellington NCW
Te Kaunihera Wāhine o Aotearoa/National Council of Women of New Zealand Wellington Branch (NCWNZ) is deeply concerned by the Government funding cuts that will force the closure of RespectEd Aotearoa, a specialist sexual violence prevention organisation that has spent more than a decade delivering education and prevention programmes across Aotearoa.
RespectEd has delivered consent, healthy relationships, and violence prevention education in schools, workplaces, prisons, and community settings throughout New Zealand. Their work has focused on addressing harmful attitudes and behaviours before violence occurs, which is a much needed mahi that stops harm before it happens and prevents trauma in our communities.
Read moreUN Special Rapporteur Consultation on Violence Against Older Women
On Thursday May 14th, I had the honour of attending one of three sessions moderated by the United Nations Special Rapporteur Reem Alsalem to consult on assessment, prevention and protection of violence against older women. The sessions were intended as a follow-up to the written submission process in April this year to the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) on Violence Against Older Women, in which NCWNZ participated.
Each session was three hours, involving different participants. At the session I attended, there were a total of seventeen women from Europe, Africa, India, South America, the Middle East, Australia and two of us from Aotearoa New Zealand. We were advised of the topics ahead of time.
Ms. Reem made clear in her preamble to the session that although sessions were recorded and transcribed, these materials would not be made available to participants. We introduced ourselves, said who we represented, then dived into the first question. I spoke first, making sure to highlight that I was presenting the contributions of our members. There were some very smart people on the call, and Reem guided everyone competently and efficiently, while also being approachable and warm.
Financial and economic abuse - a gendered web of complexity
The New Zealand (NZ) Salvation Army, State of the Nation Report 2026 makes sombre reading. One statistic, unfortunately, a recurring theme, is that gender-based violence (GBV), in particular intimate partner violence (IPV) against women by men was at its highest since at least 2018. Estimates suggest nearly one in three NZ women experience forms of intimate partner violence (IPV), family violence (FV), and/or sexual violence (SV) over their lifetimes and, at the extreme, femicide (death resulting from GBV). In a shadow report to the UN (August 2024) submitted by the Coalition for the Safety of Women and Children for CEDAW examination, our high rate of GBV, is identified as a violation of women’s human rights. As such, GBV is not simply a problem of a few individual errant men, states and institutions are also liable. It is evident that much of the global point-in-time survey data on GBV, IPV and SV tends to focus on and target strategies towards the 15–49 age range. This is also the case in NZ. But what are the possible effects and manifestations of IPV on the lives of older women 50+ years of age? Using our EIAH lens, we argue that financial and economic abuse and its cumulative effect is one such manifestation of gendered abuse. This often-invisible form of abuse has significant consequences for older women 50+ in Aotearoa New Zealand.
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