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CEO Insight: Law, Justice, and the Eradication of Poverty

A young boy in a classroom turn away from the blackboard smiling
A young boy in a classroom turn away from the blackboard smiling

“Poverty is a denial of human rights for every individual. Indeed, poverty is utterly appalling.”

When Kofi Annan spoke these words in 2002, he captured a truth that remains as urgent today as it was two decades ago. As we mark the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty today on 17 October, we are reminded that poverty is not only an economic condition it is a profound injustice that undermines human dignity and opportunity in every form.

Officially recognised by the United Nations in 1992, this day stands as a call to action: to stand in solidarity with those who continue to experience hardship, exclusion, and inequality. At A4ID, we believe that the law is one of the most powerful tools to address this injustice. Law shapes systems, enforces rights, and creates opportunities where once there were none.

Two decades of justice in action

Next year marks A4ID’s twentieth anniversary – two decades of partnership, perseverance, and purpose. Born from a simple but radical belief that the law can be a force for sustainable change, A4ID has brought together lawyers, development organisations, and innovators to tackle some of the world’s most complex challenges.

As we approach this milestone, one lesson stands out clearly for me: when people and purpose align, the law can transform lives.

After the 2014 Ebola outbreak, A4ID partnered with Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) to help establish the world’s first Centralised Ebola Platform. Through legal insight and innovation, we supported the development of an app designed to improve coordination and response during future health crises – a reminder that law, when applied creatively, strengthens the systems that safeguard life.

In Kenya, our collaboration with Still I Rise helped establish the world’s first free international school for refugee children. Through pro bono legal expertise, from navigating education regulations to preparing Ministry submissions – we helped turn a vision into reality. Those children now have access not just to education, but to hope, belonging, and a future.

Each of these milestones affirms a truth that continues to guide A4ID’s mission: the law, mobilised in service of humanity, is an engine of justice.

A blueprint for a fairer world

In 2015, 193 countries adopted the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) – an ambitious global framework for creating more equitable and sustainable societies. For many, they represent policy aspirations; for A4ID, they are a moral imperative.

Every one of the 17 Goals depends on the rule of law – from eradicating poverty and hunger, to advancing gender equality, climate action, and peace. The law provides the scaffolding that makes progress possible. Without it, implementation falters; with it, societies can create the enabling conditions for people and planet to thrive.

From eradicating poverty to building sustainable futures

As we move toward our twentieth year, A4ID’s mission continues to evolve in response to a rapidly changing world. Our commitment to justice remains constant, but our understanding of poverty has deepened. We now see it not only as a lack of income, but as a systemic and multidimensional deprivation – inseparable from questions of sustainability, equity, and governance.

Our ambition is clear: to inspire and enable lawyers to mobilise at scale, ensuring that those designing and delivering solutions to global sustainability challenges have the legal support they need.

In essence, A4ID’s work is shifting from the eradication of poverty to the cultivation of conditions where poverty cannot take root again.

Understanding multidimensional poverty

Poverty is not defined solely by material lack, but by the absence of choice, opportunity, and dignity. The Multidimensional Poverty Index (MPI), developed by the UN and Oxford’s Poverty and Human Development Initiative, captures this broader reality – encompassing deprivations in health, education, living standards, and access to services.

A child may go hungry, study by candlelight, and walk miles for water – each deprivation reinforcing the next. This is the essence of multidimensional poverty: overlapping disadvantages that trap individuals and communities in cycles of exclusion.

Today, these challenges are intensified by what many describe as a global polycrisis – the convergence of economic, environmental, social, and political disruptions. Climate change fuels displacement and hunger; conflict erodes education and healthcare; inequality corrodes trust and democracy. These are interconnected crises that demand interconnected solutions.

Law as a bridge for sustainable solutions

The SDGs offer that integrated framework. They link social progress, environmental protection, and economic resilience – reminding us that justice in one area depends on justice in all others.

For A4ID and our partners, this is where law finds its defining role. Sound legal systems underpin good governance, protect human rights, and create the enabling environment for sustainable development to take root. They turn good intentions into lasting frameworks for change.

Through partnerships across continents, A4ID continues to connect pro bono legal expertise with development needs – transforming the principle of solidarity into practice. In doing so, we help bridge the gap between policy ambition and tangible impact, demonstrating that law is not static regulation but a living force for possibility.

CEO INSIGHT: Women’s Rights Under Fire 

Women protesting
A woman holds up a sign saying equal

I recently came across the term “gender apartheid” for the first time. 

It was during a powerful discussion on Human Rights Day at the House of Commons. The talk was entitled: “Erasing Women in Afghanistan – how the Taliban violates all 30 Articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights”.  

The discussion hit me hard. It laid bare the brutal reality of life for Afghan women –  systematically silenced, erased from public life and stripped of their most basic freedoms. It was not just a chilling expose of the present – but it was, I fear, a prelude to how 2025 is looking for many women, if we do not act now.  

We like to tell ourselves the world has progressed – and in some ways it has. But then you hear terms like ‘Erasing Women’ or read that every 10 minutes, a woman is murdered by someone in her own family. You learn that in Afghanistan, women are banned from midwifery courses – preventing them from safely delivering their own babies, you realise just how far we still have to go. These are not stories from history books. This is happening right now – in the 21st Century, when in truth we should have evolved. 

That’s why the theme for International Women’s Day (IWD) this year is more than just a call to “#AccelerateAction”. It’s a stark reminder that action is not optional. It’s urgent. It’s essential. 

If we continue at today’s glacial pace, it will take five generations to achieve gender parity, according to data from the World Economic Forum. That’s the year 2158 and that’s simply unacceptable. 

What makes this even more alarming is that, rather than accelerating progress, we are seeing hard fought rights being rolled back. According to the recent UN report Women’s Rights in Review 30 Years After Beijing one in four governments worldwide reported a backlash against women’s rights just last year. 

At a time when gender equality should be a universal priority, António Guterres, the UN Secretary-General, warms us instead that we are witnessing “the mainstreaming of misogyny.” 

There “have” been advances. According to the report, 90% of states have reported introducing or strengthening violence against women and girls’ laws, while 79% have set up, updated or expanded national action plans to end violence. A total of 162 countries have banned workplace discrimination. These are certainly steps forward, but they are nowhere near enough.  

The same report tells us that women have only 64% of the legal rights of men – reducing their rights to protect their access to health, food and to assert autonomy in their lives.  

Even now, in 2025, millions of women continue to be systematically excluded from decision making, leadership roles and economic opportunity – their potential squandered because of systems built to exclude them. Gender discrimination is not confined to any one country or culture – it exists everywhere, in every sector, touching every aspect of life.   

We know that “law” has the power to drive change – to shape structures that either uphold injustice or dismantle it. Robust legal frameworks are not just important, they are foundational. They set standards that institutions and society at large must uphold. This will provide women and girls the tools to assert their rights, demand justice, and claim their power. 

Thirty years ago, world leaders committed to gender equality. That commitment was reaffirmed with the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), including SDG 5: Gender Equality – by 203O. 

At A4ID we harness the power of the law and the expertise of lawyers to advance the SDGs and fight global poverty. Gender equality is woven through our work because we know that without it, sustainable development is impossible.  

Together with our law firms and corporate partners we support projects that empower women – from advancing financial inclusion for women in Bangladesh to strengthening protections for garment workers in India, to championing the rights of women in countless other programmes across the globe.  

The legal community has a unique and critical role to play and there are many ways it can do so:  

Align pro bono work with SDG 5  
Law firms can align their pro bono efforts with the Sustainable Development Goals, either alone or with A4ID, tracking and demonstrating their impact towards gender equality. Partnering with NGOs and experts ensures those efforts are informed by on-the-ground realities.

Help draft legislation 
Legal frameworks are essential to women’s rights. Discriminatory laws still govern women’s lives – from inheritance rights to land ownership, from access to healthcare to protections against sexual violence. Pro bono legal expertise can support reform processes that eliminate sex-based inequalities and embed gender justice into national legal systems.  

Advise civil society organisations 
Legal advice and representation are critical to the effectiveness of organisations fighting for women’s rights. Pro bono legal services strength these organisations and amplify their impact.  

Capacity building policy advocacy 
Lawyers can work alongside governments, advocating for policies and legislation that advance gender equality and protect the rights of women and girls.  

Tackle systemic discrimination
Discrimination and violence against women persist even where laws exist to prevent them. Through pro bono representation, strategic litigation, and empowerment initiatives, lawyers can help women and girls fight for their rights and hold perpetrators to account. 

We are facing unprecedented times – with growing insecurity, escalating conflicts and democracy under siege – nearly three quarters of the world’s population are living under autocratic rule. In this climate, we cannot afford complacency. We must hold steadfast to our goals on gender equality, reinforce legal protections and push back hard against the ‘mainstreaming of misogyny’. 

Securing gender equality rights is not just a moral imperative. It is a prerequisite for a just, peaceful and sustainable future. The fight for women’s rights is a fight for humanity itself – and a fight we must never abandon. 

On this year’s International Women’s Day, let’s amplify the voices of the women of Afghanistan and from every corner of the globe where their rights are under threat. Let’s make sure they are not erased – from history, from public life, from our collective conscience. Their fight is our fight. 

The time for action is now. Let’s not wait another five generations. 

See A4ID’s guide to SDG 5 and find out more about Legal Pro bono
 
Read more about the UN report and the Beijing 30 Action Plan