Georgetown University Identifies the Best and Worst Countries for Women in 2025

Among 181 countries from around the world, Denmark is the best country for women, according to the 2025-2026 Women, Peace, and Security Index at Georgetown University’s Institute for Women, Peace, and Security.

Since 2017, scholars at Georgetown have tracked global progress and declines in women’s status biannually. For each country analyzed, the researchers examine 13 indicators of women’s status within three dimensions: inclusion (education, financial inclusion, employment, cellphone use, and parliamentary representation), justice (absence of legal discrimination, access to justice, maternal mortality, and son bias), and security (intimate partner violence, community safety, political violence targeting women, and proximity to conflict). Although many areas have experienced improvements, global progress on women’s status has stagnated since Georgetown’s 2017 index.

Denmark has remained the top country for women since the 2023 rankings, while Afghanistan ranked the lowest again. The United States moved up six spots from the prior report, now sitting at 31st place. This is largely due to the country’s first improvement in maternal mortality in nearly two decades. But, among developed countries, the U.S. still ranks last in maternal mortality.

Despite the overall high scores in developed countries, progress in women’s rights has stalled over the past decade. Countries in Central and Eastern Europe and Central Asia remain the second-best region for women, but have experienced declines since the 2021 index. In Latin America and the Caribbean, women’s status has also declined, primarily due to security indicators. However, two countries in the region – Costa Rica and Uruguay – cracked the top 20 percent of the index for the first time.

In East Asia and the Pacific, there has been a consistent upward trend in women’s status since 2019, despite many countries experiencing ongoing gaps in education, parliamentary representation, and maternal mortality, as well as a persistent preference for male children. While they still face ongoing challenges, countries in sub-Saharan Africa and those classified as fragile states have seen the largest gains in women’s status since 2017.

One of the primary drivers in the decline of women’s status is proximity to conflict. In 2024, 676 million women around the world were exposed to conflict – a 74 percent increase from 2010. Among countries where women live close to conflict, political violence towards women is three times worse than the global average in countries where women are far from conflict. However, some conflict-affected countries have seen major improvements in women’s well-being. Yemen has experienced large gains in inclusion scores, while the Republic of Congo has experienced the largest overall improvement in women’s status since 2017.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Related Articles

Latest News

Caroline Attardo Genco Named the First Woman President of the University at Buffalo

Dr. Geneco comes to her new role from Tufts University in Massachusetts, where she has served as provost for the past four years. She is slated become the University at Buffalo's first woman president on August 10.

Two Women Selected to Lead Technical Colleges in South Carolina

The new presidents are Laurie A. Boeding at the Technical College of the Lowcountry and Melissa Frank-Alston at Northeastern Technical College. Both women are expected to begin their presidencies on July 1.

Rhonda McEwen Appointed President of the University of Victoria

Dr. McEwen comes to her new appointment following four years as president and vice chancellor of Victoria University in the University of Toronto. Earlier, she served in several leadership roles at the University of Toronto Mississauga. She received some of her education in the United States.

Three Women Promoted to Provost Positions at Universities

The new provosts are Barbara Rodriguez at the University of New Mexico, Bridget Chalk at Manhattan University in New York, and Jaci Lederman at Vincennes University in Indiana. All three women had been serving as their university's interim provost.

Ayanna Howard Appointed the Twelfth President of Spelman College in Atlanta

Dr. Howard joins Spelman from Ohio State University, where she has been serving as dean of the College of Engineering. She is a nationally recognized expert in robotics, artificial intelligence, and human-centered technology.

President

The next president will lead one of the most successful and well-respected community colleges in the country.