Voices from the Margins
Women in Afghanistan are facing an unprecedented crisis spanning humanitarian needs, development setbacks, and protection failures. Evidence from 802 surveys and 82 interviews across twelve rural provinces in the country’s east, southeast, and southwest reveals a rapidly deteriorating environment shaped by systemic restrictions, collapsing public services, and decades of underinvestment in essential infrastructure. The cumulative effect is a profound erosion of women’s rights, wellbeing, and access to public services. The findings outlined in this report present an urgent call to donors and the international community: without immediate, targeted, and sustained intervention, an entire generation of Afghan women risks being left behind.
Maternal and reproductive health systems have reached a point of critical failure. The findings of this report reveal half of births occur at home without medical assistance, and nearly one in four women cannot reach any health facility at all. Women report widespread untreated infections, complications during childbirth, psychological trauma, and chronic pain. Access to reproductive care, including family planning, has been minimal and remains severely restricted. These are not isolated service gaps; they signal a complete breakdown of health infrastructure and governance conditions that prevent women from accessing
lifesaving care.
The collapse of women’s education is equally alarming and represents one of the most urgent crises of human capital loss globally. Large numbers of women have been forced out of school before completing basic grades, and higher education attainment has nearly vanished. Across most assessed provinces, the proportion of women with higher education remains low, and older women particularly those above middle ages have had no access to formal schooling. The evidence reveals a long-term erosion of women’s rights, with cascading effects on families, economies, and communities.
Water and sanitation gaps disproportionately affect women, limiting their access to hygiene, increasing disease risk, and exposing them to protection concerns. Many households rely on contaminated or distant water sources, and women and girls are often required to walk long distances each day to fetch water. Unsafe sanitation remains widespread, increasing exposure to disease, reducing safety, and compounding already severe health burdens. These conditions reflect decades of infrastructure neglect and the absence of basic delivery systems.
Food insecurity is widespread and deepening. Women frequently reduce their own meals, rely on minimal diets, or go hungry altogether to ensure children can eat. The combination of economic collapse, restricted mobility, and limited livelihood opportunities drives chronic undernutrition, which disproportionately affects pregnant and breastfeeding women.
Economic participation for women has nearly disappeared. In many provinces, women report no viable work opportunities of any kind. Where work exists, it is limited to low-income, informal activities with no security or growth potential. Structural barriers including lack of capital, market exclusion, mobility restrictions, and social constraints trap women in cycles of dependency that undermine household resilience and local economic stability. This is not just a gender issue; it is a major driver of poverty, stagnation, and economic decline.
Safety and protection systems have collapsed, leaving women with no recourse to justice. The vast majority do not feel safe in their communities and have no mechanism to report violence. Child marriage remains widespread, and lack of legal identity documents prevents women from accessing services, moving freely, or exercising their rights. Impunity, patriarchal mediation systems, and the absence of formal protection structures leave women exposed to ongoing harm.
Restrictions on mobility and information access have created unprecedented isolation. Most women cannot leave their homes without male permission, and access to television, radio, and mobile phones is extremely limited. This isolation cuts women off from education, health information, humanitarian assistance, and economic opportunities and severely limits their ability to seek help in crisis.
Yet despite these overwhelming challenges, women’s voices demonstrate remarkable resilience and clarity. Their priority needs are unambiguous: food, healthcare, safety, clean water, livelihoods, education, legal identity, and mobility. These are foundational building blocks of survival, dignity, and long-term recovery. Women’s aspirations reflect a powerful and enduring determination to rebuild their lives and contribute meaningfully to their families and communities.
For donors and the international community, this report provides a roadmap for targeted, high-impact interventions. The urgency is unmistakable. Investment in maternal health, education, livelihoods, safe water, and protection systems is not only essential for saving lives – it is critical for preventing further destabilization, supporting recovery, and ensuring that Afghan women remain integral to the country’s future.
The moment to act is now. Every delay deepens the crisis, widens gender gaps, and pushes rural women further into invisibility. With strategic, coordinated, and adequately resourced interventions, the international community can help restore essential services, safeguard fundamental rights, and support women in rebuilding their lives with dignity and hope.
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