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Alaa Murabit.png

Recipient of the WIN WIN Award 2026

Alaa
Murabit

Alaa Murabit is awarded the 2026 WIN WIN Award for her bridge-building leadership that places gender equality at the heart of peace, resilience and sustainable development. Murabit moves with equal ease between local community organising and the UN Security Council, and it is precisely this ability that has made her one of the most influential voices for gender equality of our time. She has demonstrated how gender equality can be translated into concrete action, policy and financing — and made into a tool for stability and societal resilience.

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Recipient of the WIN WIN Youth Award 2025 

Julieta
Martínez

Julieta Martínez, 22, is awarded the 2026 WIN WIN Youth Award for her visionary leadership that places young women at the heart of gender equality, climate resilience and sustainable change. What sets Martínez apart is not only her own achievements, but what her work makes possible for others — building capacity, connecting young people across borders and opening doors for women to lead on the issues that shape our societies. She has shown that lasting change happens when more people are given the power to lead together.

Alaa Murabit and Julieta Martínez will join us in Gothenburg for WIN WIN Week, October 12-16

FINALISTS OF WIN WIN AWARD 2026

MALALA YOUSAFZAI

Pakistan

ANU KUMAR

USA

BINETA DIOP

Senegel

VANDANA SHIVA

India

This year's finalists represent extraordinary leadership, courage and vision. From advancing women’s rights and health to protecting democracy, peace and our planet, they challenge systems that exclude and inspire new paths toward justice and sustainability. Together, they remind us that lasting change is driven by people who dare to speak up, organize and reimagine what a more equal world can look like. Their work shows that gender equality is not only a human right—it is a foundation for sustainable societies.

 

- Annie Hohlfält, Chair of WIN WIN Award Jury

FINALISTS OF WIN WIN YOUTH AWARD 2026

JOAN KEMBABAZI

Uganda

ARTEMIS AKBARY

Czechia

ISHAAN SHAH

India/UK

PASHTANA DURRANI

Afghanistan

This year's youth finalists demonstrate courage and determination in their contributions to more equal and sustainable societies during challenging times. Together, they show that this work takes many different forms, yet is united by the same fundamental ambition: to strengthen people's ability to live, grow, and shape their own lives and futures.

 

- Johan Holmén, Chair of WIN WIN Youth Award Jury

GENDER-EQUAL SOCIETIES

THEME 2026

As the world faces climate crises, armed conflicts, and democratic backsliding, it is crucial to focus on the forces that build long-term resilience, peace, and sustainable development. One of the most vital — yet often overlooked — is gender equality.

Equality is not only about representation or formal rights but about creating real opportunities for women to participate in society on equal terms with men — economically, socially, and politically. It’s about the right to own land, access education, gain financial independence, and live in societies where social systems enable life choices beyond traditional gender roles. For women to contribute to and lead societal development, structures must exist that free up time, resources, and space for action.

In many parts of the world, gender equality is a direct prerequisite for achieving other development goals. When girls no longer have to walk long distances to fetch water — thanks to a nearby well — they gain the opportunity to attend school. When women access microfinance or secure land ownership, household welfare improves, children's education levels rise, and entire communities become more resilient.

Despite this, progress on gender equality is under threat from a global backlash, where women’s bodies, voices, and rights once again become battlegrounds for authoritarian forces. This is not an isolated development, but part of a larger, interconnected system of inequality, polarization, and control.

The way forward requires that we recognize and support the individuals and movements creating systemic change — those who challenge power structures, shift norms, and build societies where equality is not only a goal, but a strategy for sustainable peace, democracy, and planetary resilience.

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