2026 International Women’s Day Celebration: Let’s Give Women More to Gain 

A Feature by The Ark Foundation, Ghana 

Accra, March 8, GNA – International Women’s Day (IWD) is both a celebration of progress and a renewed call to confront the unfinished struggles in the pursuit of gender equality. 

The global theme for the 2026 celebration, “Give to Gain”, with the accompanying topic “Boundaries, Enmeshment, and the Gendered Burden of Care,” reminds us that societies flourish when women thrive. 

At The Ark Foundation, the message “Give to Gain” resonates deeply. It reflects the truth that societies prosper not when women give endlessly, but when their contributions are met with recognition, reciprocity, and justice.  

For generations, women in Ghana and across the world have carried disproportionate burdens of care and emotional labour—the invisible work of maintaining relationships, soothing conflict, and anticipating the needs of others.  

They have given resilience and sacrifice, often without receiving dignity, equality, or opportunity in return. 

The theme insists that this cycle must change. When women are given space, equal representation, education, healthcare, and economic opportunity, families grow stronger, communities healthier, and nations more prosperous. “Give to Gain” is therefore not just a slogan—it is a principle of justice. It reframes caregiving as a shared human value rather than a silent, gendered burden. It calls on governments to enforce laws such as Ghana’s Affirmative Action Act, communities to dismantle harmful norms, and families to uphold care with healthy boundaries.  

Progress must be measured not only by what women give, but by what they gain: autonomy, recognition, and equality. 

This year’s theme also urges a rethinking of what it means to give. In many societies, caregiving is treated as the defining feature of womanhood. Girls are socialised to anticipate the needs of others, ease conflict, and prioritise harmony over autonomy. 

 By adulthood, many women measure their worth through how well they hold others together. But when giving becomes enmeshment—where love is confused with control—it erodes dignity and selfhood. 

Family systems theory teaches that healthy relationships require differentiation: staying connected while maintaining one’s identity. However, women are often rewarded for emotional fusion, dissolving boundaries between themselves and others. What appears to be devotion may conceal self-erasure. 

This relentless emotional labour becomes a gendered burden. Over time, women experience anxiety, exhaustion, and guilt. Rest feels indulgent, ambition feels threatening, and saying “no” evokes shame. Women give endlessly, yet society fails to recognise that true gain requires balance. 

The IWD theme therefore calls for dignifying care through clarity. Boundaries are not rejection—they are acts of love. They allow women to remain connected without being consumed. When society acknowledges women’s emotional labour, families gain stability, and women gain rest. When caregiving becomes a shared value rather than a gendered duty, Ghana gains stronger, healthier communities. 

Women who reclaim boundaries challenge generational expectations that equate sacrifice with virtue and exhaustion with love. They show that intimacy does not require erasing oneself. By granting themselves permission to breathe, women gain dignity, and families cultivate more authentic bonds. 

Reflecting on Ghana’s progress since the beginning of the Fourth Republic, The Ark Foundation notes steady advancement in women’s rights. Legal milestones such as the Domestic Violence Act of 2007, the National Gender Policy of 2015, and the landmark Affirmative Action Act of 2024 have strengthened frameworks for equality and women’s representation in national decision-making. Political breakthroughs have seen women rise to historic leadership roles—from Georgina Theodora Wood as the first female Chief Justice to Jane Naana Opoku-Agyemang as Vice-President. 

In the areas of education and health, girls’ enrolment has increased, maternal mortality has declined, and initiatives such as free maternal healthcare have improved outcomes. These gains reflect decades of advocacy and reform, showing that when Ghana gives women rights and opportunities, the nation gains resilience and equity. 

Yet significant structural and cultural barriers persist. Women remain underrepresented in leadership, constituting only 26 per cent of managerial positions in the public sector and a mere 4.1 per cent of district assembly seats. Gender-based violence, harmful norms, and period poverty continue to undermine women’s potential. 

 As The Ark Foundation points out, women are still socialised to carry the invisible burden of caregiving—often at the expense of autonomy and identity. Though women continue to give, society has not fully ensured that they gain dignity, equality, and justice. 

Path Forward: Give to Gain 

To ensure that this year’s theme translates into meaningful action, The Ark Foundation calls on government, law enforcement, women and girls, and the wider public to join in making “Give to Gain” a lived reality. This collective responsibility requires concrete steps: 

Government & Policymakers 

• Operationalise the Affirmative Action Act by urgently passing the Legislative Instrument to enforce representation targets. 

• Integrate recognition of emotional labour into national gender policies, ensuring caregiving is valued both socially and economically. 

Law Enforcement & Judiciary 

• Strengthen protection systems for survivors of domestic and gender-based violence through consistent referral pathways and survivor-centred policing. 

• Institutionalise training on gender sensitivity, boundaries, and the psychological impacts of enmeshment and coercion. 

Women & Girls 

• Reclaim boundaries as acts of love, understanding that saying “no” or choosing oneself is not rejection but dignity. 

• Engage actively in leadership at community and national levels, leveraging the Affirmative Action Act to demand representation. 

General Public & Communities 

• Challenge harmful norms that equate women’s sacrifice with virtue or silence with respect. 

• Share caregiving responsibilities within households to reduce the invisible burden on women. 

• Support survivors and women’s rights organisations, as such contributions save lives and strengthen communities. 

Conclusion 

International Women’s Day reminds us that care is not weakened by boundaries—it is dignified by them. “Give to Gain” calls for transforming caregiving from a hidden, gendered burden into a shared societal value, and ensuring that legal and policy gains translate into lived equality. When Ghana gives women space, recognition, and justice, the nation gains hope, resilience, and stronger futures. 

About The Ark Foundation, Ghana 

The Ark Foundation is a non-profit Christian organisation that has operated Ghana’s longest-standing Domestic Violence Shelter since 1999. For over two decades, it has provided lifesaving support and essential services to survivors of sexual and gender-based violence, domestic abuse, and human trafficking. Its work is carried out in close collaboration with key state institutions including DOVVSU, EOCO, the Anti-Human Trafficking Unit of the Ghana Police Service, the Courts, and the Department of Social Welfare, which regularly refer survivors to its shelter for protection, rehabilitation, and reintegration. 

GNA 

Edited by Lydia Kukua Asamoah