Ghana's peacebuilding playbook just got a major gender-focused upgrade, and the National Peace Council is making sure this one actually sticks beyond the launch event.
NPC drops a new Gender Policy for peacebuilding
NPC drops a new Gender Policy for peacebuilding
- The National Peace Council launched a Gender Policy backed by UNDP Ghana and the Canadian High Commission.
- Governing Board Member Susan Aryeetey framed it as a hands-on commitment to building inclusive peace operations across Ghana.
- Aryeetey pushed staff to move past talk and let gender considerations drive real, everyday decisions.
- Mainstreaming gender into all peacebuilding work is the core objective here, with equity built into every layer.
- Executive Secretary George Amoh called the policy a milestone for Ghana's peace architecture.
- Amoh stressed that the heavy lifting starts with figuring out how the document plays out in daily operations.
- Everything from planning and budgeting to field engagement falls under the scope of this policy's real-world application.
- A national training programme ran under the theme "Gender Mainstreaming towards Effective and Inclusive Peacebuilding for Sustainable Development."
- Participants got trained on weaving gender considerations into planning and budgeting workflows.
- Designing programs that actually reflect the lived realities of both women and men was a key focus area.
- Building a gender-friendly workplace and locking in stronger partnerships for gender equality were also on the training agenda.