entry-1-1.jpg entry-1-2.jpgg entry-2-1.jpg entry-2-2.jpg entry-3-1.jpg entry-3-2.jpg entry-4-1.jpg entry-4-2.jpg entry-5-1.jpg entry-5-2.jpg entry-logo.png entry-pause.svg entry-play.svg entry-skip.svg intro-1-1.jpg intro-1-2.jpg intro-2-1.jpg intro-2-2.jpg intro-3-1.jpg intro-3-2.jpg intro-4-1.jpg intro-4-2.jpg intro-5-1.jpg intro-5-2.jpg intro-video.jpg icon-play.svg
 
           

Strategic Plan

2018 – 2021

 
© UNFPA/Bruno Feder

Our goal is to achieve

Universal Access to
sexual and reproductive health
and reproductive rights

with a vision to

 
© UNFPA

END

Unmet need for
family planning

 
© UNFPA/Dina Oganova

END

Preventable
maternal deaths

 
© UNFPA/Bill Ryan

END

Gender-based violence
and harmful practices

 
© UNFPA/Sima Diab

Imagine a world where
every pregnancy is wanted
every childbirth is safe and
every young person's potential is fulfilled

This is the world we are striving to realize. Our goal is to achieve universal access to sexual and reproductive health, realize reproductive rights, and reduce maternal mortality to accelerate progress on the agenda of the Programme of Action of the International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD), to improve the lives of women, adolescents and youth, enabled by population dynamics, human rights and gender equality. Our new strategic plan is designed to drive the ambitions and goals of the ICPD and 2030 agendas.

 

UNFPA is committed to key Agenda 2030 principles

  • Protect and promote human rights
    © Pepe mateos

    Protect and promote human rights

  • Leave no one behind and reach the furthest behind first
    © Sawiche Wamunza

    Leave no one behind and reach the furthest behind first

  • Strengthen cooperation and complementarity among development, humanitarian action and sustaining peace
    © UNFPA

    Strengthen link between development, humanitarian action & sustaining peace

  • Reduce risks and vulnerabilities and build resilience
    © UNFPA/Benny Manser

    Reduce risks and vulnerabilities and build resilience

  • Ensure gender-responsive approaches at all levels of programming
    © UNFPA

    Ensure gender-responsive approaches at all levels of programming

  • Improve accountability, transparency and efficiency
    © UNFPA/Ben Manser

    Improve accountability, transparency and efficiency

It is important that we act now. A bold agenda requires bold action. To achieve these objectives, we must work together to leave no one behind.

 
© UNFPA/Vincent Tremeau

Vision and Agenda 2030

Transforming our future

It is important that we act now. A bold agenda requires bold action. To achieve these objectives, we must work together to leave no one behind.

Play
Dr. Natalia Kanem
Executive Director
 

Achieving universal access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights of women and young people will transform our future.

Rooted in fundamental human rights and serving as a powerful development accelerator, sexual and reproductive health and rights benefits individuals, communities, and nations. Investing in women's sexual and reproductive health and rights is one of the best investments in international development. When a woman can plan her pregnancy, she can plan her future. Her prospects increase for completing education and securing an income. Her children are more likely to be healthy and educated, and poverty is less likely to be transferred to the next generation.

Access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights

  • Reduces poverty

    Reduces
    poverty

  • Saves lives

    Saves
    lives

  • Enables gender equality

    Enables
    gender equality

  • Stimulates economic growth

    Stimulates
    economic growth

  • Supports sustainable development

    Supports sustainable development

 

Ending Preventable Maternal Death

Everyone has the right to health, including women and mothers. Since 1990, maternal death has declined by 44 per cent. Still, some 830 women and adolescent girls die each day from preventable causes related to complications of pregnancy and childbirth, and 99 per cent of all maternal deaths occur in developing countries - more than half in fragile and humanitarian settings.

img-morality1.jpg
"I felt so afraid and uncertain this morning, but now I feel more at peace," said Sabekun, in a refugee camp for Rohingyas in Bangladesh. She received a prenatal check-up for her first child, and learned about family planning for the first time, after walking for seven days to flee violence back home.

Maternal deaths per 100,000 live births

  • Actual
  • UNFPA vision
  • SDG Target
Assuming all the maternal deaths are preventable

Ending unmet need for family planning

Family planning is central to women’s empowerment and sustainable development. Women, adolescent and youth have the right to make their own informed choices about contraception. Today, more than 300 million women in developing countries are using contraception, but more than 214 million women who want to plan their births don’t have access to modern family planning.

img-fplanning.jpg
"I had very little knowledge about contraception," said Aminata Kabba from Sierra Leone who became pregnant at the age of 15. "My advice to my family members and friends is that family planning is the only thing that will keep us in school when we are sexually active".

Unmet need for family planning

Percentage of women with an unmet needfor family planning11.451121.519.818.116.514.913.512.512.111.811.5197019751980198519901995200020052010201520202025203002468101214161820
  • Actual
  • UNFPA vision
  • Projection
Women with unmet need are those, aged 15-49, who are married or in a union and want to stop or delay childbearing but are not using any method of contraception

Ending gender-based violence and harmful practices

As the struggle for gender equality continues, violence against women and girls remains a global pandemic. One in three women will experience physical or sexual violence in her lifetime. Around 2000, nearly one in three women between 20 and 24 years of age reported that they were married before 18 years of age. Around 2015, the ratio was just over one in four.

img-practices1.jpg
"When a girl gets an education and a diploma, she has a chance to get a good job instead of a husband who controls her," said 16 year old Saba, a Syrian refugee in Zaatari camp in Jordan. Through a programme at the camp, Saba and her mother Izdihar advocate against child marriage.

Ending Child Marriage

  • Actual
  • UNFPA vision
  • SDG Target
  • Actual
  • UNFPA vision
  • SDG Target

Realizing Global Goals by 2030

In 2015, world leaders agreed to 17 global goals to advance sustainable development. The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are integrated and indivisible, and provide a global framework for partnership and action.

The work of UNFPA contributes to the achievement of the SDGs. Realizing these goals by 2030 requires a strategic shift in how we design and implement programmes, and how we measure impact.

Our strategic plan 2018-21 is closely aligned with SDG 3 for good health and well-being, and SDG 5 for gender equality and women's and girls' empowerment. It is also aligned with goals 10, 16 and 17, and, of course, all of our work ultimately makes a strong contribution to goal 1 to end poverty.

SDG 3: Good Health and Well-Being

UNFPA focuses on universal access to sexual and reproductive health care services and reducing the global maternal mortality ratio. Priority is placed on strengthening capacities and health systems, and advancing policies and programmes to provide quality information and integrated services for sexual and reproductive health, including in humanitarian and fragile settings. Our efforts prioritize access for women, adolescents and youth, especially those furthest behind.

SDG 5: Gender Equality

UNFPA supports women's empowerment and the full exercise of sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights, free of coercion, discrimination and violence; addresses underlying social norms to advance women's and girl's rights; and works to end gender-based violence and harmful practices. Efforts also focus on strengthening policies, mobilizing civil society and communities, and engaging men and boys to advance gender equality and women's empowerment.

SDG 10: Reduced Inequalities

UNFPA focuses on protecting and promoting human rights, leaving no one behind and reaching the furthest behind first. By strengthening national population data systems, UNFPA maps and addresses inequalities, and supports gender equality and universal access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights.

SDG 16: Peace, Justice, and Strong Institutions

UNFPA focuses on strengthening health systems, national population data systems, capacities and multi-sectoral services for survivors of gender-based violence, and contributes to sustaining peace. UNFPA supports birth registration to provide legal identity for all. Efforts also focus on empowering young people as positive agents of change, including in humanitarian action and peacebuilding.

SDG 17: Partnerships for the Goals

The ability of UNFPA to collaborate through multi-stakeholder partnerships at all levels is key to success to achieve universal access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights. This includes supporting censuses, demographic and health surveys, and other large-scale data-gathering exercises to ensure that everyone is counted and accounted for in the pursuit of sustainable development.

 
© UNFPA/Ollivier Girard

How we work

Driving change

What will it take to realize universal access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights for women, adolescents and youth, even at the last mile?

UNFPA has identified four critical and interconnected conditions that are necessary to realize the goal of universal access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights. These are the 'Core Four' priority areas of UNFPAs work, carried out along with partners at the local and global level.

  • Sexual and reproductive health
    services and reproductive rights

    Sexual and reproductive health services and reproductive rights

    “I'm lucky that my gynecologist did not try to dissuade me when I told her I was pregnant”, says Anya, from Belarus, who uses a wheelchair and has a right to sexual and reproductive health.

    © Dennis Zelenko, for Imena Magazine
  • Adolescent and
    youth empowerment

    Adolescent and youth empowerment

    “I want to be a doctor someday”, says Shaina, aged 16, from the Philippines, who spoke during a campaign addressing adolescent pregnancy. “It means a great deal to me and many other girls that our voices are heard and we're empowered”.

    © UNFPA
  • Gender equality and
    women's empowerment

    Gender equality and women's empowerment

    “My aim is to educate every boy and girl about the harmful and unnecessary effects of female genital mutilation”, said Shaimaa Ahmed Ali, of Egypt. “One day, they will become fathers and mothers, and I want them to have the information that will make them take the right decisions for their children: Girls should not be mutilated.”

    © UNFPA/Sima Diab
  • Population data
    for development

    Population data for development

    In 2017, Pakistan begun its first census in 19 years, with the support of UNFPA and other partners. The data will uncover important demographic trends and inequalities, which will inform policy-makers and leaders, as they chart the country's future.

    © UNFPA
 
 

Every woman and young person has utilised integrated sexual and reproductive health services and exercised reproductive rights, free of coercion, discrimination and violence

UNFPA will support governments to ensure that integrated sexual and reproductive health services and reproductive rights are available, accessible and utilized, with an increased focus on strengthening health systems, and making them more people-centered. Priority will be placed on quality of care, equity in access, strengthened health workforces, and social accountability for sexual and reproductive health services, including in humanitarian, fragile and public health emergency contexts. UNFPA will also advocate, in partnership, for policies that prioritize access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights for the most vulnerable groups.

According to the Guttmacher Institute, if all pregnant women and newborns received full care, and if all women who want to avoid a pregnancy used modern contraceptives:

  • maternal deaths would drop by 73 per cent
  • newborn deaths would drop by 80 per cent

Additionally, if all unmet need for modern contraception were satisfied in developing regions, there would be approximately a three-quarters decline in unintended pregnancies.

 

As many as 214 million women in developing countries lack access to contraceptives, resulting in 89 million unintended pregnancies and 48 million abortions every year, according to the Guttmacher Institute.

 

Every adolescent and youth, in particular adolescent girls, is empowered to have access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights, in all contexts

To ensure that young people are empowered to exercise choice and autonomy, UNFPA will prioritize:

  • strengthening skills and capabilities of young people, especially adolescent girls and boys, through comprehensive sexuality education
  • intensifying evidence-based advocacy and policy dialogue, to build a conducive environment for the health and wellbeing of youth
  • providing opportunities for young people to lead and participate in development, humanitarian action and sustaining peace, so that they play a vital role in decision-making that affects them, and their communities.

UNFPA will also expand partnerships to support youth livelihoods, and highlight the critical need to invest in adolescents and youth to reap the benefits of the demographic dividend.

 

Investments that empower
10-year-old girls can Triple a girl’s lifetime income, increase a nation’s economic growth and lead to a cycle of healthier, better educated children.

 

Gender equality, the empowerment of women and girls, and reproductive rights are advanced in development and humanitarian settings

Gender inequality has a significant role in constraining the ability of women and girls to exercise their sexual and reproductive health and rights. UNFPA will promote gender equality and women’s empowerment through a focus on preventing and responding to gender-based violence, and eliminating harmful practices, including female genital mutilation and child, early and forced marriage.

UNFPA will intensify work on priority issues across development and humanitarian settings, through:

  • strengthening policy, legal and accountability frameworks
  • leading the gender-based violence area of responsibility under the Global Protection Cluster of international humanitarian response
  • comprehensive programmes that address harmful social norms as a root barrier towards gender equality.

To realize these commitments, UNFPA will partner with key stakeholders, including men and boys, and local and global civil society.

 

Worldwide, 35 per cent
of women
have experienced physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence or non-partner sexual violence.

 

Everyone, everywhere, is counted, and accounted for, in the pursuit of sustainable development

Universal access to sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights cannot be achieved until everyone, everywhere, is counted, especially those furthest behind. It ensures better planning, better tracking and stronger accountability. UNFPA’s focus on generating and using population data is the foundation for all other areas of work. UNFPA supports governments and countries to generate and use data on vulnerable populations to inform plans, policies and programmes, so that targeted investments achieve sustainable development goals.

A vital part of this is taking censuses into the 21st century with geospatial mapping, handheld devices, and other innovative technologies. In times of rapid change and insecurities- this is more necessary than ever.

 

Of the 230 SDG indicators, 98 require population numbers and, of these, just over 40 per cent are regularly collected by most countries.

 

Census in the coming years

A census is among the most complex and massive peacetime exercises that a nation undertakes. During the years 2018-2021, more than 150 countries and territories are scheduled to conduct a census. UNFPA provides technical support to developing countries during all stages of a national census to ensure that everyone is counted and accounted for in the pursuit of sustainable development​.​

2018 2019 2020 2021
2018: 20 countries scheduled for census
  • The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations.
  • A dispute exists between the Governments of Argentina and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland concerning sovereignty over the Falkland Islands (Malvinas).
  •  

    In 2018, more than 135 million people across the world will need humanitarian assistance and protection*

    With more and more people needing humanitarian assistance and protection, including women and young people, UNFPA is placing an increased emphasis on ensuring the core four priority areas are strengthened across humanitarian and development contexts, to reach the furthest left behind. Humanitarian intervention strategies will shift from reacting to disasters and conflicts to applying a resilience approach by linking prevention, preparedness and response with national capacity-building. This will ensure that systems, communities and societies are better equipped to respond to and recover from emergencies.

    * OCHA Global Humanitarian Overview 2018
     
    • Ways We Work

      © UNFPA
      slide-1.jpg
    • Advocacy and Policy Dialogue

      Developing, improving and reforming legislation, policies and strategies.

      © Lurie Foca
    • Capacity Development

      Strengthening people skills, systems and resources and providing tailored technical expertise to deliver on the ICPD and 2030 agendas.

      © UNFPA
      slide-3.jpg
    • Knowledge Management

      Improving programmes through data analysis, the timely delivery of high-quality knowledge products and innovative solutions.

      © UNFPA
      slide-4.jpg
    • Partnerships and Coordination

      Strengthening partnership and South-South and triangular cooperation, and conducting inter-agency humanitarian coordination, that reinforces collective accountability to achieve results.

      © UNFPA
      slide-5.jpg
    • Service Delivery

      Procuring and delivering quality sexual and reproductive health services and supplies, and services for preventing and responding to gender-based violence.

      © UNFPA/Santosh Chhetri
      slide-6.jpg
     

    We firmly believe the only way to deliver on our goal to achieve universal access to sexual and reproductive health is to work together.

    By joining forces to advance the health and rights of women and young people, we can fulfill our collective promise to leave no one behind. UNFPA works in 155 countries, territories and other areas. Our presence and strategy in each country is responsive to national needs around our core mandate issues, as well as their ability to finance development. Our approach has evolved to better capture inequalities within and between countries - critical to ensuring that we leave no one behind, and reach the furthest behind first, in our journey to a more equitable and secure future.

     

    UNFPA Programme Countries

    Country classification is based on country's relevant development indicators (the need) and ability to finance their own development. In general, red countries have the high(est) need and the lowest ability to finance. Pink countries on the other hand have the lowest needs and some ability to finance.​

    Map legend
    Besides above mentioned countries, UNFPA has multi-country programmes in Pacific Islands (yellow countries) and the Caribbean (pink countries).
    Note: The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations.

    A dispute exists between the Governments of Argentina and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland concerning sovereignty over the Falkland Islands (Malvinas).
    The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations.

     
    © UNFPA

    Operational excellence

    Delivering results

    To achieve our goal and three transformative results, we will expand collective efforts to reach the furthest behind.

    • goal-1.jpg
      © UNFPA/Vincent Tremeau

      Our strategies are evidence-based and take into account the lessons learned from previous plans. With a strong focus on performance, transparency, and accountability, our strategies are designed to further enhance effectiveness and efficiency of UNFPA by:

      • Improving programming for results
      • Optimizing management of resources
      • Strengthening United Nations system-wide results, coordination and coherence
      • Enhancing communication, resource mobilization and partnerships for impact
      goal-1.jpg
      © UNFPA/Vincent Tremeau
    • goal-2.jpg
      © Lynsey Addario, for Time Magazine
      goal-2.jpg
      © Lynsey Addario, for Time Magazine

      WORK TOGETHER

      By partnering with national governments, the private sector, civil society (including faith-based organizations), and academia, cutting-edge solutions can be found to overcome development and humanitarian challenges. When we co-create a solution, we can accelerate progress. Most important is working side-by-side with women and young people.

      UNFPA works with many UN partners and our new strategic direction strengthens how we work together with UNDP, UNICEF and UN-Women, to better support countries to achieve sustainable development.

    • goal-3.jpg
      © UNICEF

      Collaborate Across Sectors

      In today's complex and interconnected world, an intervention in one area can have an impact in another. Humanitarian action can be undertaken in a way that contributes to achieving longer-term development. This new way of working acknowledges that whether you are an aid worker or humanitarian responder, we all need to analyse, plan and work together to achieve sustainable results.

      goal-3.jpg
      © UNICEF
    • goal-4.jpg
      © Reach a Hand Uganda
      goal-4.jpg
      © Reach a Hand Uganda

      Innovate

      UNFPA is committed to:

      • Creating innovative solutions with partners to address development bottlenecks
      • Scaling-up innovations that have proven to be successful
      • Partnering with innovators from the public and private sectors
      • Institutionalizing a culture of innovation in UNFPA
    • goal-5.jpg
      © UNFPA/José Antonio Guayasamín

      Bold, Vocal And Visible

      We stand up for human rights, deliver to the people we serve, and communicate our results and impact.

      goal-5.jpg
      © UNFPA/José Antonio Guayasamín
     

    Resources

    The UNFPA Integrated Budget 2018-2021 presents the resources that will contribute to the achievement of results.

    • Available resources, 2018 - 2021

      Total $4 billion

      Available resources 2018 - 2021

        Regular resources
        Other resources

      UNFPA estimates that the total resources available during 2018-2021 will be $4 billion, a decrease of $283.6 million, or 6.6 per cent, compared to the previous cycle.

    • Planned use of resources for programmes, by location, 2018 - 2021

      Total 100%

      Planned use of resources for programmes, by location, 2018 - 2021

       Country
        Headquarters
        Regional
        Corporate

      UNFPA continues to commit the majority of its resources at country level to help programme country governments achieve their set results.

    • Resources by area of work, 2018 - 2021

      Total 100%

      Resources by area of work, 2018 - 2021

        Sexual and reproductive health and reproductive rights
        Adolescent and youth empowerment
        Gender equality and women's empowerment
        Population data for development
        Programming for results
        Resource management
        Delivering as one
        Communication, resource mobilization and partnerships
     
    © UNFPA

    Make a difference

    Get involved

    There are many ways you can make a difference.

    Share and Connect

    • sharecard-1_1.jpg

      #DidYouKnow: Every 2 minutes, a woman dies from causes related to pregnancy and childbirth? See how UNFPA is working to end maternal death: unfpa.org #GlobalGoals

    • sharecard-2_1.jpg

      214 million women still lack access to #familyplanning. See how UNFPA, the UN reproductive health and rights agency, is working to bring this number down to ZERO: unfpa.org #SRHR

    • sharecard-3_2.jpg

      1-in-3 women will experience physical or sexual abuse in her lifetime. See how UNFPA works to #ENDviolence against women and girls: unfpa.org #GlobalGoals

     

    You can help change the lives of women and young people.

    • card-1.jpg © UNFPA
      Sign up to receive stories on women and young people reached by UNFPA, our latest news from emergencies, recent job vacancies, and​ updates about our work around the world.
      Subscribe
    • card-2.jpg © UNFPA/Arvind Jodna
      Do something great today. By supporting UNFPA, you are making a difference for women and young people. Thank you for your generosity. ​Just press the button below.
      Doe
    • card-3.jpg © Reach a Hand Uganda
      Join us as a partner to support UNFPA in achieving results for and with women and young people​. Please contact UNFPA's Strategic Partnerships Branch at spb.office@unfpa.org
      Partner
     
    © UNFPA/Y-PEER Kyrgyzstan

    Download

    Click below for the UNFPA Strategic Plan 2018-2021

    We use cookies and other identifiers to help improve your online experience. By using our website you agree to this, see our cookie policy

    X