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THE LAUNCH OF IWD RESEARCH STUDY REPORT 2005-2023

Failure to address widows’ plight entrenches poverty and gender disparity worldwide, new study finds

Development Minister Anneliese Dodds MP with Lord and Lady Loomba at the launch of the study, 5 September 2024, House of Lords

Nineteen years after the introduction of International Widows Day, and fourteen years after its adoption by the UN as an official day of action, millions of widows are not yet seeing an improvement in their desperate plight, a new study has found.

Commissioned by the Loomba Foundation, the UN-registered NGO specialising in widowhood issues, University of Cambridge researchers analysed the conditions of widows in 11 countries across South Asia (Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Sir Lanka), Latin America (Guatemala, Chile) and Sub-Saharan Africa (Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Malawi and South Africa), tracking advances in legislation and support programmes in the period since International Widows Day was introduced to bring the issue to the attention of the international community.

What they found was that while awareness has grown, discrimination against widows based on deeprooted cultural prejudices remains rife in many communities – manifested in degrading widowhood rituals, inheritance grabbing, social marginalisation and exploitation – and the extent of destitution affecting widows and their dependents represents an insurmountable obstacle to achieving the UN Goals for Sustainable Development unless significant progress can be made to improve the position.

The study, titled “Not Leaving Widows Behind”, finds that the lack of data on widowhood – first identified in 2002 by the UN which dubbed it “the sin of omission” – still persists today. It calls for research on widowhood to be scaled up substantially to provide a better understanding of the challenges faced and support required by widowed women. “Achieving significant improvement in their lives will require a methodical, evidence-based approach to policy formulation,” it concludes.

Launching the study at the House of Lords at an event attended by Development Minister Anneliese Dodds and the High Commissioners, Ambassadors and senior diplomats of the countries covered by the study, Lord Raj Loomba said:

The plain fact is that eradicating the scourge of discrimination requires detailed knowledge of what is happening, so that governments can deliver effective support, and so that the ignorance which feeds discrimination can be countered, to start changing the cultural attitudes that are so deeply rooted in many communities.

“Our own efforts, and those of the many other organisations listed in the report, can and do transform the lives of widows and their families. But looking at the scale of the challenge, we can only scratch the surface.
 
“It is time to tackle the sin of omission head on – to work with Governments and others to develop a structured programme of research to support our determined efforts to move the dial for widows.

This important new study adds significantly to the case for doing so.”

For more information please contact
Safdar Shah
Executive Assistant to Lord Loomba
E:[email protected]
M: 07946 581435

Information for editors

Lord Raj Loomba CBE is a Crossbench Peer in the House of Lords and Chairman Trustee of The Loomba Foundation, a UN-accredited specialist NGO established to alleviate the plight of widows and their dependents worldwide and to eradicate discrimination and injustice against widows.

The Loomba Foundation was established in 1997. In 2005 Lord Loomba proposed International Widows Day as a global day of action to eradicate injustice and discrimination against widows. In December 2010, after a five-year campaign, the proposal was adopted unanimously by the United Nations General Assembly and since then International Widows Day has focused worldwide attention on the cause each year on 23 June. In 2016 The Loomba Foundation published the World Widows Report – the first comprehensive global study with country by country information about the plight of widows, one of the most marginalised and unfairly disadvantaged groups of humanity.

Lord Loomba is Vice-Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on the UN Global Goals for Sustainable Development and Vice-President of Barnardo’s.

To find out more about the work of The Loomba Foundation, visit

www.theloombafoundation.org
@TheLoombaFndtn
facebook.com/loombafoundation
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