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Feminist Foreign Policy in Latin America

Comparing Mexico, Chile and Colombia

SWP Research Paper 2026/RP 02, 29.01.2026, 36 Pages

doi:10.18449/2026RP02

Research Areas

Dr Claudia Zilla is a Senior Fellow in The Americas Research Division at SWP.
Until the end of 2025, Marie Peschke was a Research Assis­tant in the project “Success Criteria for a Feminist Development Policy (FDP) Specific to Latin America and the Carib­bean (LAC)”, which was co-financed by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit GmbH (GIZ) on behalf of the German Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ).
The study was conducted as part of this project.

  • In Latin America, Mexico (2020), Chile (2022) and Colombia (2022) have all officially committed to a feminist foreign policy (FFP). The introduction of a feminist approach to foreign policy should be seen in the context of a growing awareness of gender issues in international, regional and national politics.

  • In comparison with their European counterparts, the Latin American approaches to FFP exhibit a stronger focus on the domestic dimension, on internal problems. This is especially clear in the case of Mexico, while Chile’s FFP emphasises the feminist perspective in foreign trade and Colombia’s FFP defines itself as pacifist.

  • These countries’ FFPs have not brought about a fundamental political change, but they do inject new momentum into existing gender equality policies and gender mainstreaming. They expand women’s participation and representation and enhance the visibility of women’s contribution to foreign policy.

  • Mexico, Chile and Colombia are important partners for Germany and the EU in matters concerning the global gender and human rights agenda. As these Latin American countries are intensifying their cooperation in these areas, they are also worthwhile partners for the expansion of trilateral cooperation.

  • As the German Federal Foreign Office has dropped its FFP, while the Ger­man Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) is continuing its feminist development policy and the future of Chile’s FFP is uncertain due to the change of power, it will make sense to pursue cooperation on human rights, inclusion and gender issues through vari­able formats and terminological framing. Germany should also benefit from learning processes, and strengthen bi-regional dialogue and exchange, including between feminist and women’s organisations.

Issues and Conclusions

Since Sweden officially committed to a feminist for­eign policy (FFP) in 2014, about a dozen states have announced such a step. These include three Latin American states: Mexico (2020), Chile (2022) and Colombia (2022). But what actually followed the pub­lic declarations? The course of events turned out differently in each case, as there is no “one-size-fits-all” model for the conception and institutionalisation of a feminist approach in foreign policy.

The spread of FFP can be viewed as phenomenon of international norm diffusion. However, this does not mean that the governments in question are simply adopting a purely exogenous policy approach. On the one hand, processes of growing gender aware­ness are converging in international, regional and na­tional politics. On the other, the local context shapes the feminist approach’s interpretation and legal-bureaucratic anchoring. Research on FFP has to date largely ignored the political-institutional preconditions, even though they have come to be regarded as crucial for FFP’s effectiveness and sustainability. This aspect is all more relevant after Sweden dropped its FFP following a change of government in 2022, trig­gering a rollback since joined by other states.

Such forth and back movements are part of the broader trends affecting the human rights and inclu­sion agenda. Currently, a pushback is globally domi­nant in this area. Against this backdrop, the question of less visible human rights–oriented efforts and improvements is becoming increasingly relevant.

The impact and resilience of a feminist approach in foreign policy depend on the degree of internalisation. Here, internalisation refers to the process by which key actors decide to introduce the policy ap­proach and lend it their political backing. Then the approach must be legally and politically anchored, provided with resources. Finally, its content must be elaborated and implemented. The analysis of these aspects lies at the heart of the present research paper. Two central questions guide the investigation: What was the political and legal road to FFP in Mexico, Chile and Colombia? And how was the FFP subsequently internalised, i.e. institutionalised and conceptualised? Mexico, Chile and Colombia are the Latin American countries that have committed at the highest level to a meaningful FFP. A systematic evaluation of the im­ple­mentation and impact of FFP lies beyond the scope of the present contribution, and would demand a longer period of observation. Nonetheless initial pointers con­cerning the implementation process can be offered.

The central findings of this research paper include the following: In all three investigated countries the introduction of an FFP was preceded by a legal and political process that expanded and deepened the human rights agenda and anchored the gender per­spective in the state’s actions. In all three cases the FFP was introduced by a left-leaning (male) president who viewed their government as feminist and ob­served gender parity in cabinet appointments. At the same time, these governments saw FFP as a continu­ation of other domestic gender-orientated reforms. FFP does not represent a political rupture. Instead it lends momentum to existing gender equality policies and gender mainstreaming by increasing women’s participation and representation and enhancing the visibility of their contributions to foreign policy. While the three investigated cases exhibit commonalities with regard to the normative foundations and political justification of FFP, its legal and political anchoring differs among the cases. The thematic focus also varies in the framework of the conceptualisation. Mexico’s FFP is the most domestically ori­en­tated, while the external perspective is especially prominent in Chile’s; Colombia’s lies in-between and is explicitly defined as pacifist. Overall the Latin American FFP approaches are more inward-looking, more orientated on domestic problems than their European counterparts. They do not address questions concerning geopolitics, the international order, global asymmetries, international conflict management and colonial logics.

Mexico, Chile and Colombia are found to be relevant partners for promoting the gender and human rights agenda on a global level. Growing cooperation between them on these issues, as well as their respec­tive bilateral cooperation with other states, offer poten­tial to expand trilateral cooperation. Any en­gagement will need to accept variable formats and designations, and should only insist on FFP and femi­nist development policy (FDP) where that is possible. Cooperation with Latin America can be also instructive for Germany, so active participation in knowl­edge circulation is recommended (also on the receiv­ing side). The general pushback in this area makes it all the more important to support civil society organi­sations and encourage their bi-regional dialogue.

Growing Gender Awareness in Politics

Sweden was the first country to introduce a formal feminist approach in its foreign policy in 2014, coining the FFP concept. Since then governments or ministries of foreign affairs in several countries on different continents where left-wing, centre-left or progressive party alliances were in power have an­nounced a similar move:1 Canada in 2017; Luxembourg in 2018; France in 2019; Mexico in 2020; Ger­many, Scotland, Spain and Libya in 2021; Colombia, the Netherlands, Chile and Liberia in 2022; Mongolia, Argentina and Slovenia in 2023;2 and most recently Bolivia in 2024. In doing so, they have contributed to the associated norm diffusion in international politics.3

In certain cases the move amounted to little more than a declaration of intent, and there is debate over when a government counts as one that actually im­ple­ments a FFP. Nevertheless, Sweden, as the country with the longest-running and most firmly institutionalised FFP, made waves when it officially abandoned the policy in 2022 – followed by the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Argentina and the Federal Foreign Office in Germany.4 Each of these change in policy was pre­ceded by a change in power, meaning an ideological shift to the right within the governing parties, al­though the size of the swing varied from country to country.

Internationally, the FFP remains closely bound up with a particular ideological orientation. This linkage makes it harder to establish a broad political consen­sus around FFP and remove it from the arena of party-political contest, i.e. to transform it from a govern­ment policy to a so-called state policy.

Dropping FFP is part of a broader rollback that en­compasses a wide range of phenomena, from deprior­itisation of human rights and inclusion to deliberate policies of exclusion and reinforcing power asymmetries. Rights are being curtailed and mechanisms of compensatory justice dismantled in many states across the world. Solidarity in society is eroding and thus weakening social cohesion. In the worst cases, where patriarchal populism5 or variants of the global radical right hold sway, antifeminism is pro­moted and characterised (in their own terminology) as a “culture war” against “gender ideology”. Defunding and in some cases even institutional dismantling also affects civilian conflict management, humanitarian aid and development cooperation, while global mili­tary spending rises.6 Democratic erosion and auto­cratisation are the prevailing trends.7 Current global statistical data reveals rapid growth in the number of conflicts, the prevalence of (sexualised) violence and the numbers of deaths in conflict contexts.8 Feminist analyses suggest that these developments are closely interconnected.9

Despite the pushback, FFP is far from history. Coun­tries like Mexico, Chile and Colombia are an­choring the feminist approach institutionally in their foreign policy and developing it conceptually. Gender awareness may be under pressure but it has not been abandoned altogether. Latin America and the Carib­bean (LAC), for example, is pressing ahead with its regional gender agenda. Even in an era of global set­backs in the field of human rights, progressive devel­opments should not be overlooked. Closer examination of these not only provides insights into the indi­vidual case, but also into the connection between trend and resilience as well as opportunities for co­operation.

Growing gender awareness in governments and institutions does not simply appear out of nowhere. It is the outcome of civil society engagement and pressure, of activism, organisation and participation. Feminist and women’s organisations have been voic­ing their demands for a very long time, and have always stressed two aspects: gender equality as a uni­versal principle and social transformation in the sense of changing the patriarchal social, economic, political and legal structures that cement gender hierarchies. Variations in the importance attributed to these perspectives contributed to the differentiation of feminist currents.

Political developments and decisions have gender-specific effects.

Gender awareness implies empirical knowledge about the existence of gender regimes. In all societies these exert enormous influence on social roles, life experiences and access to rights, liberties, resources and positions of power. Consequently, political devel­opments and decisions have gender-specific effects. That means that they impact differently on people of different gender (in the sense of experienced or attri­buted gender identity). At the same time gender hier­archies are an important cause of social conflict and violence, and exacerbate problems of other origin.

Growing gender awareness gives rise to a gender agenda encompassing all the political, legal and insti­tutional measures required to reduce gender-related asymmetries. The term “gender” in the broader sense includes multiple dimensions: body, identity, expres­sion, attraction and role. One of the key components of a gender agenda is gender mainstreaming. This involves taking into account the different life situa­tions and interest of individuals with various gender identities when planning political, social and eco­nomic projects. Another central element is the tar­geted promotion of gender equality through policies. Both are usually included in FFPs, which should be understood in the historical context of increasingly critical reflection on gender (even if this has not been strictly linear and without setbacks) and build on cor­responding developments in the UN system, on the multilateral level in Latin America and at national level in many states in the region.

The gender agenda in the UN context

The explicit inclusion of a gender perspective within the framework of the United Nations (UN) dates back to its founding.10 In 1946 the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) established the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW)11 as most important global intergovernmental body (Resolution 11 (II) of 21 June) exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equali­ty, women’s rights and empowerment of women.12 In 1972 the UN General Assembly (UNGA) declared 1975 “International Women’s Year” (Reso­lution 3010 (XXVII) of 18 December).13 The first World Conference on Women was held in Mexico in 1975,14 and adopted a World Plan of Action. In December 1976 the UNGA declared 1976–1985 the “United Nations Decade for Women: Equality, Development and Peace” (Resolution 31/136).15 In 1979 the UNGA adopted the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Dis­crimination against Women (CEDAW), which came into force 1981.16 Two further World Conferences on Women were held in 1980 in Copenhagen and 1985 in Nairobi. The fourth World Conference on Women was held in 1995 in Beijing and adopted the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action.17

The gender perspective also found its way into the spheres of development and security. Gender equality was anchored in the Millennium Goals (MDGs, 2000–2015, Goal 3) and in subsequent Sustainable Develop­ment Goals (SDGs, 2016–2030, Goal 5). In 2000 the UN Security Council (UNSC) adopted Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security (WPS) at the initiative of the Namibian women’s affairs minister, Netumbo Nandi-Ndaitwah.18 Nine further resolutions on gen­der-specific topics followed. Bundled together as the WPS Agenda,19 they aim to strengthen women’s participation in peace processes, protect them from sexualised violence in armed conflicts and comprehensively anchor their rights in the field of peace and security. Since 2005 about 100 countries have pre­pared National Action Plans (NAPs) for the implementation of UNSCR 1325. After years of negotiations between member states, women’s organisations and civil society, the UNGA finally adopted Resolution 64/289 on 2 July 2010. This brought the organisation UN Women into being,20 by merging several UN agencies involved in women’s issues.21

The gender agenda in the Latin American context

States in LAC have traditionally been strongly com­mitted not only to the development of the United Nations Organisation (UNO), but also to the promotion of women’s rights within the UN system and in regional organisations. LAC is home to 20 of the UN’s 51 founding members.22 Although only four of the 160 signatories of the UN Charter were women, two of them were from LAC. These were Minerva Bernar­dino (Dominican Republic) and Bertha Lutz (Brazil) – alongside Virginia Gildersleeve (United States) and Wu Yi-Fang (China). It is thanks to Lutz and Bernardino that the preamble to the UN Charter explicitly mentions women.23

The Regional Conference on Women in Latin America and the Caribbean24 is the region’s most im­portant intergovernmental forum for women’s rights and gender equality. It is a subsidiary body of the Eco­nomic Commission for Latin America and the Carib­bean (ECLAC), which is responsible for the secretariat of the Regional Conference on Women and has been working in this area in coordination with UN Women since 2020. The Regional Conference on Women, founded in 1977 in Havana, Cuba, brings together governments and civil society groups – in particular feminist and women’s movements and organisations, academics, intergovernmental bodies, cooperation agencies and the UN system. Fifteen Regional Confer­ences on Women have been held to date and agree­ments reached under their auspices have significantly shaped the region’s gender agenda.

The 10th Regional Conference on Women held in 2007 in Quito, Ecuador, launched the Gender Equality Observatory of Latin America and the Caribbean (Observatorio para la Igualdad de Género de América Latina y el Caribe).25 Its purposes are to strengthen national mechanisms for promoting women’s rights, to disseminate official information from the countries in the region and to facilitate the monitoring of inter­national and regional agreements on women’s rights and gender equality.

The Inter-American Convention on the Prevention, Punishment and Eradication of Violence Against Women is one of most important agreements on gen­der issues in LAC. Also known as Convention of Belém do Para, it was adopted in 1994 by the General Assem­bly of the Organization of American States (OAS).26 As a legally binding international instrument within the Inter-American System of Human Rights, this was the world’s first to recognise violence against women as a human rights violation and a systemic problem, and to define the due diligence obligations of states with regard to prevention, investigation, assistance, and punishment.27 Effective implementation of the Con­vention requires continuous and independent evalu­ation and support, for which the Follow-up Mechanism to the Belém do Pará Convention (MESECVI) was estab­lished in 2004.

To this day, the CIM is the only continent-wide political forum in the Americas specifically for women’s rights and gender equality.

The Inter-American Commission of Women (Comi­sión Interamericana de Mujeres, CIM) was created in 1928 by the Pan-American Union (predecessor of the OAS). To this day, the CIM is the only continent-wide political forum in the Americas specifically for women’s rights and gender equality. In the interim, further regional bodies dedicated to the gender agenda have been created within the Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) and in subregional integration systems such as the Southern Common Market (MERCOSUR).

The gender agenda in national politics

Across the world, recent decades have seen growing efforts to promote gender justice at the national level. In LAC the trend is clearly towards stronger legal an­choring and codification of rights of women and of people who do not conform to the gender binary and heteronormativity.28 This has occurred at the consti­tutional and legislative levels, thanks to the engagement of human rights organisations and movements. The same applies to anti-discrimination, where many states have successively sharpened their norms and legis­lation. Additionally, states are held legally respon­sible for protecting and realising these rights and for taking the gender perspective into account in their activities. This makes rights actionable.

Awareness of the gap between legally enshrined rights and the realisation of substantive gender equality in LAC states has spurred programmes and measures to address structural disadvantage (affirmative action). One example of this is quotas for histori­cally marginalised groups such as minorities in edu­cational institutions or women in politics. Gender quotas29 have been introduced in many countries in the region,30 initially for electoral lists and parliamentary representation. Today they are commonplace for cabinet appointments31 and senior ministerial posi­tions. In many places gender parity in collective bodies has become standard political practice, whether formally or informally.

The growing prominence of the gender perspective is reflected institutionally in the establishment of state bodies (departments, agencies, institutes) with corresponding remits. These are frequently answer­able to a women’s ministry. In recent years, increasing numbers of Latin American states have prepared (and subsequently updated) an NAP for the implemen­tation of UNSCR 1325.32 The most recent innova­tions include the introduction of FFPs. Taken together, these legal, political and institutional developments can be seen as a trend. However, the underlying national processes should not be understood teleo­logically, as they are neither linear (in the sense of a fixed sequence of steps) nor irreversible.

Feminist Foreign Policy

FFP creates a political framework for a government’s foreign policy activities, and for its ministerial struc­tures and processes.33 The point of introducing such a framework is to bring about policy change. The degree of ambition varies from case to case, for exam­ple with respect to the number of foreign policy areas covered, the extent of linkage with other policy areas, the depth of change envisaged, and the breadth of target groups. The varieties of FFP actually instituted by states are diverse, but less ambitious than the FFP concepts discussed in feminist academic circles or civil society.34

There is no such thing as a “one-size-fits-all” FFP. A successful FFP will develop and change in the course of the implementation process, and will involve sig­nifi­cant change within the implementing instances. The internalisation process encompasses various aspects: Firstly, key actors must choose to take the step from expanding and deepening rights to intro­duction of an FFP, and must lend it their political backing. Secondly, the approach must be legally and politically anchored, in the sense of embedded in the institutional structures of the state and adequately funded. Thirdly, the FFP approach must be elaborated. Finally, and most importantly, the approach must be implemented.

Any critical analysis of FFP thus entails two prin­cipal challenges. Firstly, there is not always a clear distinction between the measures required to anchor an approach (preconditions) and those whose purpose is to implement it (consequences). The second chal­lenge is the question of causality, of whether particu­lar decisions and actions are attributable exclusively to the introduction of an FFP. Given the complexity of societies and the impossibility of counterfactual analysis, this cannot be answered definitively.

Mexico

The path to a feminist foreign policy

Equality of men and women has been anchored in the Mexican constitution since 1974.35 An amendment of 2001 also explicitly prohibits any form of dis­crimination on the basis of gender, sexual orientation or origin.36 These protections were further strengthened by the constitutional reform of 2011 (the “human rights reform”), which incorporated rights deriving from international treaties signed by Mexico into the constitution. Protection against discrimination is now legally enforceable and the state is required to actively promote it.37 National legislation concretises these constitutional principles, and also seeks to combat sexualised and gender-specific violence.

The General Law for Equality Between Women and Men of 2006 defines the institutional framework for realising substantive equality in the public and pri­vate spheres, and specifically promotes gender main­streaming in government activities.38 Finally, since 2011 development cooperation has been explicitly required to contribute to sustainable human develop­ment on the basis of human rights and gender jus­tice.39

In the course of this legislative process, the gender perspective has also found its way into government plans and programmes. For example, Mexico’s National Development Plan for 2019–2024 specifically includes references to non-discrimination and the aims of pro­moting gender equality and combatting gender-spe­cific violence.40

Concrete measures are laid out in national gender equality plans, which operationalise objectives set out in the National Development Plan. The National Gender Equality Programme for 2013–2018 explic­itly called for a gender perspective in the work of the ministries, including the Foreign Ministry (Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, SRE).41 The subsequent pro­gramme for 2020–2024 further strengthened gender mainstreaming and established it as a binding prin­ciple of government activity.42

An explicit gender perspective within the Foreign Ministry was introduced in April 2018, when a decree issued by President Enrique Peña Nieto (2012–2018) reformed the Mexican Foreign Service Law. The changes included flexibilisation of working conditions in For­eign Ministry, in order to enable career demands to be reconciled with family responsibilities.43 However at the point when Mexico launched its FFP in 2020, it had not yet prepared an NAP for the implementation of UNSCR 1325.

The election of President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) in 2018 brought a left coalition – Together We Make History (Juntos Haremos Historia), led by AMLO’s National Regeneration Movement (Movimiento de Regeneración Nacional, MORENA) – into government. In line with his campaign promises, AMLO’s first cabinet was roughly gender-balanced, although this was not upheld through subsequent reshuffles.44

Mexico was the first Latin American country to commit to an FFP – and the first country in the Global South.

One early indication that Mexico was moving towards a FFP came on 28 September 2019, when Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard told the UNGA that Mexican government saw itself as feminist.45 The FFP was officially announced on 9 January 2020, at the annual meeting of Mexican ambassadors and consuls.46 This made Mexico the first Latin American country to commit to an FFP – and the first country in the Global South. Just three weeks later, on 28 January 2020, Martha Delgado Peralta, undersecretary for multilateral affairs and human rights (subsecretaria para asuntos multilaterales y derechos humanos), presented Mexico’s FFP in a multilateral context, at the 10th Regional Conference on Women in Santiago de Chile.47

Legal and political anchoring

The process of institutionalising Mexico’s FFP began hesitantly under AMLO, but accelerated under his suc­cessor Claudia Sheinbaum, whose polices and discourse exhibit a clear feminist slant. Sheinbaum, like AMLO a member of MORENA, became Mexico’s first female president on 1 October 2024. As an avowed feminist she was quick to declare gender equality a political priority.48 In October 2024 she tabled a series of reforms designed to anchor substantive equality, the gender perspective, the right of women to free­dom from violence, and equal pay for equal work in the constitution. These constitutional amendments were approved unanimously by both chambers of the Congress of the Union, and entered into force in November 2024 following their adoption by the 26 local parliaments.49 Institutional changes to upgrade the policy area followed, with a new Ministry of Women (Secretaría de las Mujeres) replacing the National Institute of Women (Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres, INMUJERES) on 1 January 2025.50 Presi­dent Sheinbaum also declared 2025 the Year of the Indigenous Woman.51

Given this background, and the fact that Sheinbaum argues in explicitly feminist terms, it is note­worthy that she does not actually use the term “femi­nist foreign policy”.52 Nor was FFP mentioned in her electoral programme “100 Steps for the Transforma­tion”53 or in the latest National Development Plan for 2025–2030, which foregrounds gender justice and highlights the role of women in economic and social change.54 The term is used by the Foreign Ministry under Juan Ramón de la Fuente, however, which reiterated its commitment to FFP on 27 June 2025, the International Day of Women in Diplomacy.55

To date Mexico’s FFP has no binding legal backing: there is no legislation and no decree. Nor is there any official strategy document, action plan or implementation report. Two Foreign Ministry PowerPoint pres­entations collated information that could be regarded as functionally equivalent but without legal or offi­cial status. The first was shown in January 2020 at the 14th Regional Conference on Women in Santiago de Chile,56 the second in August 2025 at the 15th Regional Conference on Women in Mexico City.57 Both included a rough “roadmap”, while the second also contained a rudimentary progress report.

Mexico’s FFP is anchored in the ministerial planning process. FFP gets a fleeting first mention in the Sec­toral Programme for External Relations 2020–2024,58 while the subsequent programme for 2025–203059 contains more concrete references to FFP. There, FFP is initially found under the first of three cross-cutting issues (ejes transversales) that deals with “substantive equality and women’s rights”.60 FFP is described as an important instrument for the Foreign Ministry, with the gender perspective representing a cross-cutting dimension strengthening all aspects of public policy. Certain vulnerable groups are also named as priorities for FFP. Finally, in various places FFP is discussed as a component of strategies and actions intended to serve the ministry’s six overarching goals.

Within the Foreign Ministry, FFP falls under the auspices of the undersecretary for multilateral affairs and human rights. Specifically, her director-general for human rights and democracy is responsible for FFP monitoring and evaluation. Internally, the direc­tor-general works with the embassies and consulates and various institutions run by the Foreign Ministry, including the Diplomatic Academy (Instituto Matías Romero, IMR); externally her partners are the govern­ment of Mexico City and the Senate of the Republic. The ministry also intends to establish a working group on gender mainstreaming and appoint special envoys for FFP (enviadas de política exterior feminista). The position of an FFP coordinator was created in the office of the foreign minister; she cooperates closely with the director of feminist foreign policy and inter­national cooperation in the Ministry of Women.

International development cooperation falls under the remit of the Foreign Ministry, and is thus part of Mexico’s FFP. The Mexican Agency for International Development Cooperation (Agencia Mexicana de Co­operación Internacional para el Desarrollo, AMEXCID) plays an important role, coordinating incoming and out­going development funding. AMEXCID’s programme for 2021–2024 defines gender equality as an overarching priority.61 As is the case for FFP, there is no strategy document or action plan for feminist development cooperation, although there are docu­ments providing orientation and instruments for gen­der mainstreaming, some of which predate the intro­duction of FFP. These include the Mexican Protocol on Mainstreaming the Gender Perspective in Devel­opment Programmes and Projects (2018),62 prepared jointly with the German development agency GIZ (Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammen­arbeit), and a guide on the same topic, published jointly with the UN Development Programme (UNDP) in 2023.63

There is no published or proposed budget for FFP measures, and little is known about reporting and accountability mechanisms. One slide in the 2020 FFP presentation – on the roadmap for 2020–2024 – did mention plans to develop outcome and impact indicators, but no details were given and there is no follow-up publication.64 More broadly, there is no publicly available information on the extent of civil society involvement in preparing Mexico’s FFP con­cept. The Foreign Ministry cannot show which actors were involved, which participation mechanisms were used, or whether submitted contributions were heeded. In response to an information request, the Foreign Ministry admitted having neglected its duty of docu­mentation.65

The concept

The 2025 PowerPoint presentation defines FFP as fol­lows: “The entirety of transformative measures con­tributing to the realisation of substantive equality in all areas of Mexico’s foreign policy and the associated institutional work, on the basis of human rights, pro­motion of women’s autonomy and integration of the perspectives of gender justice and intersectionality, with the objective of eliminating structural inequalities based on gender and thus contributing to the creation of a more just, peaceful, prosperous and sus­tainable society.” This version is more comprehensive than the earlier one from 2020,66 as it lays out the foundations of FFP. Sheinbaum’s foreign minister, de la Fuente, has said that Mexico’s FFP embodies the “humanistic vision” that traditionally characterises the country’s foreign policy.67 Earlier, AMLO’s foreign minister, Alicia Bárcena (2023–2024) had described humanism as an approach focussing on people’s needs and working towards a more just, stable and peaceful system.68

FFP is intended to enable Mexico to play a leading role internationally in this field.

According to the Foreign Ministry, FFP is a transformative approach that is both inward and outward orientated in order to promote political coherence. However, the definition focusses on effects within the Mexican society. The argumentation combines a normative dimension (value in its own right) and an instrumental one (contributing to specific developments). In this sense, FFP is also intended to enable Mexico to play a leading role internationally, espe­cially in Latin America, encouraging other states to introduce such an approach.69 The feminist approach is also intended to enhance the visibility of women in the realm of foreign policy and global politics.70

The 2020 presentation lists five areas of action (called “principles”) for FFP. Firstly, the human rights approach and the intersectional gender perspective are to be implemented as cross-cutting principles “in all areas of Mexican foreign policy”.71 The presentation explicitly names development cooperation, busi­ness promotion, culture, tourism, environment and climate.72 Secondly, gender equality is to be promoted within the ministry, for example through career development measures and equal pay. The third area is combatting gender-specific violence, both internally (for ministry staff) and externally (by offering sup­port for Mexican women living abroad). Fourthly, the visibility of women in foreign policy and on the global stage is to be improved. The fifth area is entitled “The Foreign Ministry is intersectionally feminist: Comple­mentarity with other global and national measures”. The discussion of mainstreaming (transversalidad) in this section suggests that the terms “intersectional” and “transversal” may have been confused here.73

Although no clear thematic focus can be identified in Mexico’s FFP concept, particular issues stand out in international comparison. These are closely bound up with the national and regional context, and in­clude preventing and combatting gender-specific vio­lence, which is a priority for the feminist movements in Mexico. The issue of care (cuidados) is a growing focus, with a dynamically developing regional agenda. The first references to this are found in the 2020 FFP presentation, which mentions support for diplomatic staff with care responsibilities.74 Care is also discussed in the guide to gender mainstreaming in development cooperation published in 2023 by AMEXCID and UNDP,75 and at national level in the 2025–2030 De­velopment Plan.76 Important momentum also came from the regional gender agenda and Mexico’s role as host of the 16th Regional Conference on Women in August 2025, which was dedicated to transformations to promote the “care society” (sociedad del cuidado).77

The Mexican government pursues an inclusive and intersectional approach in its FFP and speaks of women and “historically disadvantaged groups”78 as its target groups. The FFP and the gender perspective are characterised as intercultural with respect to the indigenous and Afro-Mexican communities. All in all, the focus is clearly on women, with measures to im­prove gender parity very prominent, for example in connection with career structures and the composition of delegations and conference panels.79 A publi­cation giving guidance on inclusive and non-sexist language was published in January 2023.80 It also in­dicates which historically disadvantaged groups the Foreign Ministry is seeking to address, with specific sec­tions on lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, transsexuals, transgender people, transvestites and intersexuals, people with disabilities, Afro-Mexicans, indigenous people, people with HIV/AIDS, migrants, members of religious minorities, and domestic staff.

Measures and activities

No official reports on the implementation of Mexico’s FFP have been published, so it is hard to discern how much action has followed its introduction.81 The 2025 presentation does include a section on “progress” that lists activities in the areas of gender parity, training, planning, instruments and alliances. Although many of these lack any publicly accessible documentation, there is evidence of implementation in individual cases.

At the institutional level, the Foreign Ministry has instituted internal changes that align with its FFP. For example, it is reported that the proportion of women in international delegations rose from 58 percent in 2019 to 72 percent in 2021.82 Seeking longer-term gen­der parity in the diplomatic service, the women’s quota for the 2025 diplomatic training intake at In­stituto Romero was increased to 66 percent. And in August 2025 LGBT+ activist Genaro Lozano was appointed ambassador to Italy. Measures to promote compatibility between work and care responsibilities, such as flexible working conditions and nursing rooms, have reportedly been introduced in certain embassies.83

The 2025 presentation indicates that training events – on gender justice and FFP and on positive masculinity – were offered that year, although the target groups are not specified. A comprehensive internal (i.e. unpublished) guide on deepening the FFP in the work of the Foreign Ministry and the Mexi­can missions abroad was also prepared in 2025. It is reported that the guide provides both conceptual and operational orientation for implementing the FFP.84 At the planning level, two (quantitative) FFP indicators were introduced.

One notable bilateral achievement is the memoran­dum of understanding signed in 2020 by the Mexican embassy in Italy and the “pink telephone” organisation (Associazione Nazionale Volontarie del Telefono Rosa), concerning protection for Mexican women who experience gender-specific violence in Italy.85 A memo­randum of understanding with Spain on promoting FFP was signed in 2022.86

Multilateral initiatives include Mexico’s ratification of two ILO conventions: the Domestic Workers Con­vention (No. 189, ratified 3 July 2020) and the Vio­lence and Harassment Convention (No. 190, ratified 15 March 2022). Foreign Minister Ebrard and Under­secretary Delgado both underlined that this reflected Mexico’s commitment to FFP.87

In 2022 the Foreign Ministry published an action plan on gender and climate change,88 covering three central areas: strengthening women’s participation and leadership in international climate policy; build­ing national capacities for gender-sensitive climate policy; and providing gender-sensitive funding.89

In 2021 Mexico and France jointly hosted the Gen­eration Equality Forum in Mexico City and Paris. Generation Equality is coordinated by UN Women and is “the world’s leading initiative to accelerate in­vestment and implementation on gender equality”.90 The Global Alliance for Care (Alianza Global por los Cuidados) was founded at that meeting.91

Chile

The path to a feminist foreign policy

The legal foundations of the principle of equality in Chile go back to the constitution of 1980, which was adopted under military dictator Augusto Pinochet. It has witnessed numerous substantial amendments since the democratic transition. Article 1 states: “Per­sons are born free and equal, in dignity and rights.” The original version of 1980 used the Spanish generic masculine “hombres” (men) to describe all people. Law 19.611 of 1999 replaced the term with “persons” and specified the legal equality of men and women (Article 19 [2]).92 Although the constitution of 1980 also stated: “Neither the law nor any authority what­soever may establish arbitrary differences,”93 it did not explicitly prohibit discrimination. That was rec­tified through the adoption of Law 20.609 in 2012, which also regulated prevention, sanctions and compensation.94

Although Chile has no general gender equality legislation, Law 20.820 of 2015 created the Ministry of Women and Gender Equity to integrate gender per­spective in politics in general and in the policies of all the ministries and agencies.95 Further legislation protects specific rights of women and other disadvantaged groups.

As Chile has no tradition of comprehensive national development plans, gender-related plans and targets are laid out in multi-year national equality plans, which were introduced in the 1990s. The current Fourth National Plan for Equality of Women and Men 2018–203096 names anchoring the gender perspec­tive in all public institutions, state programmes and budget planning as a central strategic objective.97 This only tangentially affects foreign policy – for example in connection with the WPS Agenda.

Chile has been a pioneer regarding the WPS Agenda in Latin America. During Michelle Bachelet’s first presidency (2006–2010), it was the first Latin Ameri­can country to adopt an NAP (2009–2011) for the im­plementation of UNSCR 1325. Another NAP (2015–2018) was published during her second presidency (2014–2018). Although Chile had no current NAP when its FFP was introduced (2023), its third NAP (2025–2030) was unveiled in September 2025.98 It is to be implemented jointly by the foreign, interior, defence, security, environment and women’s minis­tries. The NAP discusses linkage with the FFP. Con­cretely, it proposes collating knowledge accumulated through the FFP, with a focus on peacebuilding.99

When he took office on 11 March 2022, Boric explicitly called his government feminist.

The left alliance Approve Dignity (Apruebo Dignidad), led by Gabriel Boric and his Broad Front (Frente Amplio), promised in its election programme to in­clude the gender perspective in all policy areas, includ­ing gender parity in cabinet appointments. The pro­gramme also explicitly proposed the development of an FFP using participatory methods, to anchor the human rights–based approach, the gender perspective and intersectional approaches in the government’s foreign policy.100 When he took office on 11 March 2022, Boric explicitly called his government feminist, and appointed a cabinet of 14 women and 10 men.101 He also included – for the first time in the country’s history – the Ministry of Women and Gender Equity in the political committee of the most important ministries.102 Barely a week later, on 22 March 2022, his first foreign minister, Antonia Urrejola (2022–2023), announced the preparation of an FFP strategy. Speaking in Berlin at an event staged by the German–Latin American women’s network Unidas, she declared that FFP would become a mark of distinction of Chilean diplomacy and reflect the country’s com­mitment to human rights.103 During an official visit to Madrid in July 2022, Urrejola and her Spanish counter­part José Manuel Albares signed a cooperation agree­ment on FFP (to which Spain committed in 2021).104

On 12 June 2023, Chile became the second Latin American country to adopt an FFP, when Foreign Min­ister Alberto van Klaveren (appointed 2023), Undersecretary of Foreign Affairs (Subsecretaria de Rela­ciones Exteriores) Gloria de la Fuente González and Undersecretary of International Economic Relations (Subsecretaria de Relaciones Económicas Internacionales) Claudia Sanhueza Riveros presented Chile’s FFP strategy in the capital Santiago. Chile’s first FFP Action Plan (2024–2025) followed on 8 March 2024 – International Women’s Day.105 The Chilean Foreign Ministry does not interpret FFP as a change in foreign policy, but as a continuation of the previous political course. Adopting a feminist approach, it says, aligns with Chiles international engagement for human rights during recent decades.106 Chile’s FFP was devel­oped in a participatory process, involving meetings with academics, civil society representatives and offi­cials from the Foreign Ministry.107 The ministry also reviewed existing gender-related commitments, ini­tiatives and instruments regarding gender issues, which can serve as a basis for the development of the FFP.108

Legal and political anchoring

Chile possesses a detailed FFP strategy, which is laid out in a 56-page document published in 2023,109 and an FFP action plan for 2024–2025.110 Although there is no specific law or decree explicitly requiring that an FFP be pursued,111 decree 207 of 27 August 2025 created a gender division in the Chilean Foreign Min­istry, which immediately took over from the tran­si­tion team.112 Its tasks include integrating the FFP vision into the broader foreign policy strategy and coordinating gender-related measures.113 In the inter­ests of cross-government coordination, the FFP strat­egy foresees the gender division joining the network of ministerial gender advisors (Red de Asesoras Minis­teriales de Género) and proposes creating a network of gender focal points in the Foreign Ministry and the missions abroad to expedite the process of disseminating, coordinating and implementing the FFP.114 The FFP action plan also proposes establishing gender working groups in the foreign affairs and international economic relations departments (subsecretarías). Addi­tionally all agencies of the Foreign Ministry – such as the Chilean Agency for International Develop­ment Cooperation (Agencia Chilena de Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo, AGCID) – should have gender advisors (encargada/o de género).115

The AGCID is a functionally decentralised agency that has been subordinate to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs since 2005. It is tasked with implementing measures in accordance with its guidelines in the area of (received and awarded) development cooperation. This includes the FFP, which is cited as one of the Foreign Ministry’s four guiding goals (ejes de acción) in AGCID’s strategy for 2023–2026.116 AGCID’s strat­egy names human rights and gender justice as one of four guiding criteria, and defines a series of priority cross-cutting issues: the fight against social inequality and discrimination, gender justice and women’s empowerment, and human rights and democracy pro­mo­tion.117 AGCID’s Executive Director Enrique O’Farrill has said publicly that proper consideration of the different needs of women and men is vital for improving the effectiveness of development initiatives.118

Although Chile’s FFP strategy announces a “gender-sensitive mainstreaming budget, neither the FFP action plan nor the 2025 FFP implementation report men­tion it. Nor does the FFP action plan refer to funding for specific initiatives – apart from project “Ellas+”, for which the Spanish government provided €300,000.119 The FFP implementation report mentions certain financial resources at project level. For example, in 2023 ten of the 95 projects run by Chilean diplomatic missions had gender components, which only amounted to US$28,667 in total. It is also reported that 28 projects in 2024 had FFP components – with­out naming their budgets.120 The foreword to the FFP action plan describes the document as a monitoring guide and mechanism. However – at least in the published version – timelines, responsibilities and fields to enter realised measures are lacking.121 The detailed FFP implementation report of 2025, by con­trast, exhibits solid documentation and great trans­parency, with 97 pages of figures and evaluations.122

The concept

Chilean Foreign Ministry defines FFP as “a paradigm under development that aims to change the way the global and regional agenda is constructed and addressed, and the power distribution among the actors”.123 That indicates transformative ambitions. The approach is described as participatory, inclusive, transversal, intersectional and human rights-based. Chile’s FFP is intended to establish equality and non-discrimination as guiding principles of the country’s foreign policy.124 Its institutional vision is that pro­moting gender equality at the international level leads to more stable societies, stronger democracies and more inclusive economies.125 In her foreword to the FFP strategy, Undersecretary de la Fuente writes that FFP strengthens and deepens “Chile’s engagement to promote democracy and human rights, which are also part of our foreign policy principles”.126 FAP is thus normatively linked to the principles of Chile’s political regime.

The Chilean Foreign Ministry also highlights the aspect of “trade and gender”, where Chile already saw itself as a pioneer before introduction of FFP.

The Chilean Foreign Ministry also highlights the aspect of “trade and gender”, where Chile already saw itself as a pioneer before introduction of FFP.127 It seeks broader inclusion of women in international trade in order to promote their economic independence, improve gender equality and secure economic growth.128

Under the AGCID strategy for 2023–2026 – and in line with Chile’s FFP – development cooperation pursues a two track approach in the area of gender, implementing targeted gender equality initiatives in key areas and promoting systematic gender main­streaming in development cooperation.129

The eight priority areas named in the FFP strategy underline the comprehensive nature of the approach. Firstly, the FFP emphasises gender equality in ini­tiatives promoting human rights and strengthening democracy. Secondly, the FFP addresses gender-specific violence, which is described as one of the greatest threats to peace and development. The third area is empowering women and increasing their represen­tation, especially in relevant foreign policy decision making and embassy leadership positions. Fourthly, the strategy references the WPS Agenda and the need to prepare a new NAP. Fifthly, the relevance of gender for international economic relations is emphasised. Sixthly, climate change and gender are mentioned, and seventhly, the digital agenda, science, technology and innovation. Eighthly, finally, the FFP strategy emphasises the need to create a comprehensive care system, with particular attention to the regional debates and conferences.130

The FFP strategy identifies women and girls in their full diversity as the core target group of the inclusive and intersectional approach. Here and there it also mentions LGBTIQA+ persons131 and – in the context of international economic relations – indigenous peoples (pueblos originarios).132 A similar focus is found in the FFP action plan, which speaks of groups requir­ing special human rights protection (grupos espe­ciales de protección en derechos humanos). While in­dividual passages mention LGBTIQA+133 and a youth support project,134 the document does not discuss the concerns of indigenous peoples. The FFP implementation report of 2025, on the other hand, goes into greater detail on trans and intersex persons and ad­dresses the rights of indigenous women (although here again this occurs principally in the context of trade policy).135

Measures and activities

A detailed report published in March 2025 assesses the implementation of Chile’s FFP action plan and demonstrates the breadth of instituted measures.

The fact that the Chilean Ministry of Foreign Affairs has taken important internal steps towards gender equality is demonstrated by the fact that its foreign relations department (Subsecretaría de Rela­ciones Exteriores) has been awarded the 2025 UNDP Gender Equality Seal. This is a global certification pro­gramme for private and public institutions, assess­ing their actions on introducing equal pay, tackling work­place sexual harassment and increasing the proportion of women in leadership positions.136 The external relations department fulfilled 92.5 percent of the requirements and therefore received the Gold Seal.137

The report provides information about progress in the area of gender and international trade, in line with the focus of Chile's FFP. Since the introduction of the FFP, chapters on gender have been included in new trade agreements with Mexico, Paraguay and Saudi Arabia (all 2024), as well as the EU, Singapore and the Pacific Alliance (all 2025).138 Action has also been taken to support women-owned businesses. Their share of Chilean export firms, the report says, rose continuously between 2021 and 2024. By 2024 29.7 percent of Chilean export firms were female-owned.139

Progress has been made on gender mainstreaming in AGCID development projects. The number of gen­der-related projects increased from 26 in 2023 to 34 in 2024.140 The gender dimension was also taken into consideration in funding for training and specialisation. In 2024, 55 percent of grants went to women.141

Chile signed bilateral agreements on gender issues with Spain, France, the United States, Mexico, Brazil, Colombia and most recently Norway.142 Gender equality was also addressed in strategic agreements on sustainability and technological innovation signed with Germany, Canada and Australia, and gender issues were discussed in political dialogues, especially with Europe. For example, when Boric and van Klaveren visited France in July 2023, both sides declared their intention to increase the number of women in leader­ship positions in joint research projects and in the bilateral climate agenda.143 In the sphere of South-South cooperation, Chile offered knowledge transfer to assist Costa Rica in preparing its NAP.144

Chile’s multilateral engagement has been strong in the framework of the OAS. For example, it contributed paragraphs on gender parity and on strengthening the MESECVI evaluation mechanism for the resolution on “Promotion and Protection of Human Rights” that was adopted at the 54th OAS General Assembly in June 2024. At the United Nations in July 2023, Chile sponsored Resolution A/77/L.81, jointly with Spain and other states, declaring 29 October the Inter­national Day of Care and Support.

The Chilean government has also worked to achieve gender parity in the country’s representation in inter­national organisations. Three of the five successful Chilean candidates in 2023 and 2024 were women. Chile is engaged in international forums including the Women, Peace and Security Impact Group.

Colombia

The path to a feminist foreign policy

Article 13 of the Colombian constitution of 1991 codi­fies the principle of equality. All citizens “shall receive equal protection and treatment from the authorities, and shall enjoy the same rights, freedoms, and oppor­tunities without any discrimination on account of gender, race, national or family origin, language, religion, political opinion, or philosophy”. The article also lays down the responsibility of the state to create the conditions for equality and to take targeted measures in favour of discriminated or marginalised groups.145

These principles have been successively concretised in legislation. For example Law 823 of 2003 defines the institutional framework for political and govern­mental action to ensure equal rights and opportunities for women in the public and private spheres.146 This regulation introduced the requirement in Colom­bia to always take the gender perspective into account in government action.

Even before introduction of the FFP, women’s rights and equal opportunities featured prominently in Colombia’s national development plans. The question was elevated to special prominence in the Develop­ment Plan 2018–2022, which had a separate chapter on the Pact for Gender Equality.147 It proposed a mecha­nism to implement and coordinate gender equality policies at the national level (the Sistema Nacional de las Mujeres), which was established in 2019.148

Gustavo Petro was elected president on 19 June 2022, as the candidate of the Humane Colombia party (Colombia Humana) and of the Historic Pact for Co­lombia coalition (Pacto Histórico). He is first left-wing head of state in Colombia’s history, and his vice-presi­dent, Francia Márquez, is the first female Afro-Colom­bian and only the second woman to hold that posi­tion. Petro–Márquez’s electoral programme for 2022–2026 made no mention of FFP, but did have a section titled “Change occurs with women”. It em­phasises the importance of women’s participation and representation, the gender perspective, gender parity at the highest political levels, the role of women in the economy and their economic autonomy, their sexual and reproductive rights, combatting violence against women, and women’s contribution to peace.149

Petro’s first cabinet included ten women and nine men, and gender parity was largely upheld through numerous cabinet reshuffles. He promised that his appointments would reflect the country’s ethnic diversity. These changes also affected the Foreign Min­istry, which has been headed since 2022 by Álvaro Leyva (2022–2024), Luis Murillo (from Feb­ruary 2024), Laura Sarabia (from January 2025) and Rosa Yolanda Villavicencio (since July 2025).

Petro announced Colombia’s FFP at the United Nations on 20 September 2022, during an official meeting with the executive director of UN Women, Sima Bahous, along with a commitment to consultations with women’s organisations in order to prepare the NAP for the implementation of UNSCR 1325.150 While decades of armed conflict make peace and security key issues in Colombia, it did not yet have an NAP. On 5 October 2022, in a speech to the OAS General Assembly, Vice Minister for Multilateral Affairs Laura Gil (2022–2023) also announced the preparation of an FFP, emphasising that it would explicitly focus on women in all their diversity and underlining the centrality of promoting women’s and LGBTI rights if “total peace” was to be realised.151

The ministry’s name includes neither “women” nor “gender” and its remit covers an unusually broad spectrum.

A Ministry of Equality and Equity (Ministerio de Igualdad y Equidad) was established in January 2023, as promised in the electoral programme. It has five departments covering different target groups: women; youth; excluded populations and regions and over­coming poverty; diversity; and ethnic peoples and peasants.152 In April 2024 it replaced the Presidential Council for Women's Equity (Consejería Presidencial para la Equidad de la Mujer).153 Strikingly, the minis­try’s name includes neither “women” nor “gender” and its remit covers an unusually broad spectrum. For example it is also responsible for eliminating eco­nomic, political and social inequality through rights-based, gender-specific, differential, race-critical and intersectional approaches. Vice-President Márquez also headed the Equality and Equity Ministry until the cabinet reshuffle of February 2025.154

Colombia’s FFP was elaborated in a participatory process between June and December 2023. The work involved more than 20 meetings of 18 civil society women’s and LGBTIQ+ organisations, a group of female academics, various divisions of the Foreign Ministry and the Presidential Agency for International Cooperation (Agencia Presidencial de Cooperación Internacional, APC), the migration agency (Migración Colombia) and the National Planning Department (Departamento Nacional de Planeación, DNP). The process produced a joint plan of work naming prior­ity areas and measures, and a mechanism for further participation.155

As in the other two cases, Colombia’s FFP was launched at an international forum. Diana Parra, Advisor for Gender Affairs and Feminist Foreign Policy in Colombia, presented the FFP concept and FFP action plan on 15 March 2024 at a meeting held in parallel to the 68th session of the CSW.156

Colombia’s first NAP for the implementation of UNSCR 1325 was unveiled in November 2024 by Vice-President and Equality and Equity Minister Márquez and enacted by decree.157 It covers the period 2024–2034, pursues an intersectional approach and con­centrates on truth, justice, reparations and support for female victims of armed conflicts.158 As such, the NAP is more domestically orientated than the FFP.

Legal and political anchoring

The National Development Plan for 2022–2026 was adopted in May 2023. Entitled “Colombia, World Power of Life” (Colombia, Potencia Mundial de la Vida),159 it announces that the government will for­mu­late and implement “foreign policy with a gender perspective” under the auspices of the Foreign Minis­try.160 Colombia’s FFP was enacted by decree. The cor­responding draft was published in November 2024 and placed on the state’s online public consultation system SUCOP (Sistema Único de Consulta Pública) for two weeks. It was signed into force on 24 June 2025 – International Day of Women in Diplomacy – by then Foreign Minister Sarabia.161 The decree also in­cludes an FFP action plan for 2024–2029.

Responsibility for FFP is shared among several ministries. The Foreign Ministry is the central coordi­nating instance, while the Ministry of Equality and Equity, the Transport Ministry, the Ministry of Sci­ence, Technology and Innovation and the National Planning Department are also involved.162 In February 2024 the Foreign Ministry created a working group on FFP and gender issues and established two dedicated posts: an advisor (asesora, Diana Parra) and a travell­ing ambassador for gender issues and feminist foreign policy (embajadora itinerante, Arlene B. Tickner).163 There are also gender focal points in the relevant areas of the Foreign Ministry.164

APC Colombia (Agencia Presidencial de Cooperación) is responsible for managing incoming and out­going development cooperation.165 Although the APC is not mentioned in the FFP action plan, the FFP docu­ment appended to the decree explicitly mentions de­vel­opment cooperation as a field of action.166 Indeed, the APC’s strategy for 2023–2026 also mentions feminist development cooperation as an underlying approach and devotes a chapter to it.167

Although the FFP action plan makes no mention of financing, the FFP document annexed to the decree states that the resources for FFP are to be provided by the ministries and departments responsible for meas­ures laid out in the FFP action plan.168 Additionally, spending of 3,000 million Colombian pesos (equivalent to almost €700,000 at the time) was approved for an FFP investment project for 2024–2026,169 to devel­op foreign policy instruments to promote gender equality and strengthen an institutional culture of equality in the Foreign Ministry.170 However, neither document explains how the investment project relates to the FFP action plan.

Under the FFP decree and the associated documents, the Foreign Ministry is responsible for moni­toring and reporting on FFP, working in cooperation with civil society.171 A participation mechanism for women’s organisations and LGBTIQ+ groups is pro­posed, which will receive annual progress reports on implementation of the action plan.172

The concept

The National Development Plan speaks only of a “for­eign policy with a gender approach” (política exterior con enfoque de género), with no reference to the terms “feminist” or “women’s rights”. That might appear to signal a weak normative orientation.173 But the cor­responding decree explicitly treats FFP and “foreign policy with a gender approach” as synonyms and mentions the policy’s transformative character.174

The Colombian approach as characterised as “pacifist + participatory + intersectional = transformative”.

The Foreign Ministry defines the FFP as a “mechanism providing a series of principles and tools to ori­entate the state’s foreign policy in order to identify, reduce and transform social norms and practices that reproduce gender-specific inequality”.175 It characterises the Colombian approach as “pacifist + participatory + intersectional = transformative”. The Foreign Ministry understands the transformative claim of the approach as resulting from the combination of these three principles.176

Concrete goals of the Colombian FFP are explicitly formulated: The gender perspective is to be recognised as a fundamental instrument of foreign policy; diplo­macy and development cooperation should promote the rights of women in all their diversity, and of LGBTIQ+ persons; organisations of these groups should be encouraged to actively shape for­eign policy.177 The Colombian government also regards FFP as an oppor­tunity to burnish the country’s international reputa­tion, especially in the contexts of the gender agenda, women’s and LGBTIQ+ rights, and regional and global peacebuilding.178

The feminist perspective is also central to the strat­egy of APC Colombia. The presidential office describes it as a strategic focus intended to improve the effec­tiveness of international cooperation in eliminating inequality.179 The feminist approach thus rests on both normative and instrumental arguments (human rights and effectiveness, respectively).

The Colombian FFP is linked to a clear commitment to pacifism. Official documents underline the centrality of women and LGBTQI+ persons to efforts to achieve “total peace” at home and abroad.180 The WPS Agenda also plays an important role in Colombia’s FFP. The prioritisation of peace and security reflects the country’s history and political situation.

FFP concept rests on five pillars, which are named in the decree. The first foregrounds social justice, defined as global engagement for equality and human security. The second pillar is environmental justice, in the sense of enabling individuals and groups to access mechanisms and instruments to protect their environmental rights. The third pillar is the agenda of “total peace”, aiming for lasting and inclusive peace foregrounding victims’ rights to truth, justice and reparations and emphasising the role of women and LGBTIQ+ persons in peace processes. The fourth is international promotion of equal access to education, knowledge and culture. The fifth pillar, finally, is institutional strengthening of the foreign relations sector, which is seen as a structural prerequisite for realising the other four pillars. This encompasses gender mainstreaming in the government planning process (Modelo Integrado de Planeación y Gestión), institutional reforms to promote gender equality, and a cultural shift towards the eradication of discrimination and violence in the working environment.181 Most of these priorities are also found in the chapter on feminist development cooperation in the APC strategy, which names climate protection and envi­ron­mental justice, inclusive and socially equitable development, and total peace.182

Diversity and intersectionality are very visible in Colombia’s FFP approach. The FFP decree and most other official documents use the phrase “women in their difference and diversity, and LGBTIQ+ persons”. The principle of intersectionality takes account of the overlapping dimensions of identity: gender, ethnicity (etnia, raza), age, phase of life, sexual orientation, disability, socioeconomic status, origin etc.183 Certain measures named in the FFP action plan address spe­cific groups. including young people, rural women, pregnant women in border areas, homeless children and Afro-Colombian women (“comunidad negra, afro­descendiente, raizal y palenquera”).184 Colombia’s feminist development cooperation also pursues inter­sectional approaches. According to the APC strategy it should take account of characteristics including gender, age, ethnicity and disability, as well as spe­cific groups like victims of armed conflict, former combatants and human rights and environmental activists.185

Measures and activities

Colombia’s FFP was announced for 2022 but only properly introduced in March 2024, so implementation is still in the early stages. The only progress report available to date is one on the FFP investment project. It indicates implementation of 88.75 percent of planned activities as of 31 December 2024.186 There is no information at all about implementation of the FFP action plan.

A survey on discriminatory attitudes and behaviour within the Foreign Ministry was conducted as part of a project on “changing the culture” run jointly with Canada (which has also committed to FFP).187 A workshop to enhance expertise for FFP implementation in Colombia’s Foreign Ministry was held in May 2025, again with Canadian support.188 The Foreign Ministry also asked staff to complete UN Women’s online courses “I Know Gender”,189 and in November 2024 introduced a protocol on preventing gender-specific violence and supporting victims.190

Several bilateral agreements in the field of FFP were concluded in 2024. In February 2024 a memorandum of understanding was signed with US State Department on jointly establishing the first women, peace and security centre of excellence in LAC. How­ever, its fate became unclear after Trump’s election, on account of the tensions between presidents Trump and Petro. In July 2024 Colombia and France signed a declaration of intent to promote exchange in the sphere of FFP.191

Colombia’s development cooperation focuses on South-South cooperation, especially with African countries. Colombia has been working with Kenya since 2023 to promote gender equality, for example in knowledge exchange projects seeking to improve the prevention, investigation and prosecution of gender-specific violence. On the Colombian side this involves APC Colombia, the Foreign Ministry, the Justice Ministry, the Ministry of Equality and Equity and the office of the vice-president.192 A string of joint initiatives for economic empowerment of women were agreed during Vice-President Márquez’s official visit to Ethiopia, Mozambique, Madagascar and Nigeria in August 2025.193

As well as advancing the WPS Agenda, Colombia also supports the Youth, Peace and Security Agenda (UNSC Resolution 2250).

Regarding the multilateral level, in January 2024 Colombia assumed the chair of the International Alliance on Preventing Sexual Violence in Conflict, whose current membership comprises 19 states, five civil society organisations, UN Women and the Inter­national Criminal Court. In this role Colombia organ­ised the Alliance’s conference on victim-centred approaches in peacebuilding.194 As well as advancing the WPS Agenda, Colombia also supports the Youth, Peace and Security Agenda (UNSC Resolution 2250); preparation of a corresponding NAP began in May 2025.195 Colombia joined the Equal Rights Coalition, an intergovernmental LGBTI organisation, in Decem­ber 2024, and took the position of joint chair together with Spain (which also pursues FFP). Colombia put feminist politics on the table in other international forums, too. Diana Parra presented Colombia’s FFP at the UN Biodiversity Conference in Cali (COP16, Octo­ber 2024),196 and the Colombian delegation at the 15th EU-LAC human rights dialogue advocated in par­ticular for the rights of women, LGBTIQ+ persons and indigenous peoples.197

Joint initiatives

Since introducing their FFPs, Mexico, Chile and Co­lom­bia have stepped up their engagement in joint activities and broader multilateral initiatives that align with feminist approach.

Exchange between the three is especially systematic in the CoPEF project (Strengthening Feminist Foreign Policy and Feminist International Cooperation), which was launched in 2024 at the Seventh Regional Con­ference on Trilateral Cooperation with Latin America and the Caribbean. The project, which is funded by the trilateral cooperation fund of the German Devel­opment Ministry BMZ and realised by the German development agency GIZ, brings together ECLAC with Mexico, Chile and Colombia. It sees itself as a commu­nity of practice to strengthen the capacity of foreign ministries and development cooperation agencies in­volved in designing and implementing FFP.198 In the area of development cooperation, Mexico and Chile have been operating a common fund (Fondo Conjunto de Cooperación México Chile) since 2006. Its gender perspective was strengthened in 2021 when gender was elevated to a thematic area in its own right for project funding.199

At the 8th CELAC Summit in early March 2025 in Kingston, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Chile, Mexico and Colombia tabled a declaration on FFP, which gained the support of Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador and the Dominican Republic. Its five points lay out a series of commitments concerning implementation of a feminist approach or gender agenda in foreign policy.200 In early July 2024 Mexico hosted the 3rd Ministerial Conference on FFP under the title “Solutions for a Better Tomorrow”. It was organised by the Mexican Foreign Ministry together with INMUJERES and UN Women, and produced a dec­la­ration that was signed by about 20 states including Chile and Colombia.201 The 16th Regional Conference on Women, also held in Mexico City, adopted the Tlatelolco Commitment, which acknowledges FFP’s potential to implement gender mainstreaming in foreign policy.202

There were also activities at the bi-regional level. The Bi-regional Pact on Care was adopted on 13 No­vember 2025 at the 4th EU-CELAC Summit, held in Santa Marta, Colombia. It is supported by all 27 EU member states and by 16 LAC states, including Chile, Colombia and Mexico. The Pact emerged in response to demands raised by civil society organisations, and is intended to expedite cooperation in the field of care on the basis of gender equality and social jus­tice.203

Mexico, Chile and Colombia are also involved in various international platforms and networks on FFP, such as the Feminist Foreign Policy Group (FFP+), which was founded in 2021. FFP+ works with the United Nations and civil society groups to promote feminist and gender-transformative approaches in multilateral and foreign policy contexts. It is chaired by pairs of nations representing the Global North and South: in 2023 Chile and Germany (at which point the German Federal Foreign Office was still pursuing its FFP), and in 2024 Mexico und Spain.204

Comparing the Cases

As the comparison of Mexico, Chile and Colombia demonstrates, the road to FFP is not straight and nar­row. The states that have introduced such a policy are not necessarily those that are most progressive on all aspects of gender equality. In addition to efforts to implement a gender agenda, a favourable party-politi­cal constellation is required. Moreover, the act of committing to an FFP frequently reflects elevated awareness of the problems around women’s equality at home and is understood as a strategy for addressing them. As a result, FFP in Latin America tends to have a strong domestic slant. That certainly applies – to differing degrees – to the three states examined in the present publication.

The introduction of a feminist approach to foreign policy was preceded by comprehensive legal, institutional and policy efforts to improve gender equality.

Mexico committed to an FFP in 2020 as the first Latin American state to do so, and the first in the Global South. Chile and Colombia followed two years later. In all three countries, the introduction of a feminist approach to foreign policy was preceded by comprehensive legal, institutional and policy efforts to improve gender equality, combat discrimination and gender-specific violence. In Mexico and Colombia the gender perspective is also legally anchored as a criterion for state activities.

These developments occurred under heads of state from different parties. But in all three cases the deci­sion to introduce an FFP was made under a (male) president from the left or centre-left. At the time of the respective announcement, the Mexican foreign minister was male; his Chilean and Colombian counterparts were woman. All three governments described themselves as feminist, and their cabinets were gender-balanced.

In all three countries, the implementing party’s electoral programme included a chapter on the role of women and the importance of gender equality. But only Boric in Chile made a campaign promise to im­plement an FFP. In all three cases the new government was very quick to commit to FFP or present an initial concept. And in all three cases the announcement was made in a multilateral context, as governments often strive for international leadership in this area.205 The ambition of playing a leading role inter­nationally in this area is especially clear in statements from Mexico and Colombia, both of which have ex­perienced criticism over internal conflicts and severe human rights violations.

Although Mexico was the first of the three to intro­duce an FFP, its institutionalisation has persistently lagged behind Chile’s and Colombia’s. This applies to all dimensions: preparation of the concept, formal involvement of civil society, legal-bureaucratic anchor­ing, and monitoring of implementation. One reason for the delay is that the approach was only properly institutionalised under Foreign Minister de la Fuente, after President Sheinbaum succeeded AMLO. AMLO’s term in office coincided with the Covid pandemic, and little progress was made on FFP. Feminist and women’s organisations criticised AMLO for patriarchal aspects in his opinions and policies and disre­spectful statements about feminist movements.206 His stance during his presidency was noticeably less pro­gressive than during his time as head of government of Mexico City (2006–2012).207

In Mexico and Chile the FFP operates without a binding legal basis. In Colombia it is enacted by decree and anchored in the National Development Plan. The decree also includes an FFP action plan.

Table 1 Comparison of FFP approaches

Mexico

Chile

Colombia

President

Andrés Manuel López Obra­dor; Claudia Sheinbaum

Gabriel Boric

Gustavo Petro

FAP announcement

Speech by Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard to the UNGA, 28 September 2019

Boric’s 2021 electoral pro­gramme; speech by Foreign Minister Antonia Urrejola at Unidas meeting in Berlin, 22 March 2022

Petro’s official meeting with executive director of Women, United Nations, 20 September 2022

Start of institution­alisation

Presentation at annual mee­ting of Mexican ambassadors and consuls, 9 January 2020

Presentation of FFP strategy in Santiago de Chile, 12 June 2023

Presentation of FFP concept and action plan at CSW, 15 March 2024

Civil society involve­ment

Not documented

Meetings with academics and civil society

More than 20 meetings with academics and civil society, including design of a partici­pation mechanism

Legal and political anchoring

Sectoral Programme for External Relations 2020–2024 and 2025–2030

Strategy and action plan; decree creating gender division

National Development Plan 2022–2026; FFP decree

Specific positions and units

FFP coordinator in office of foreign minister; director for FFP and international co­operation in Women’s Ministry

Transition team, then gender department in Foreign Ministry

Advisor and special envoy for gender issues and FFP

Budget

Not foreseen

Gender-sensitive budget, but little information on implementation

Almost €700,000 for FFP investment project

Policy areas covered (within foreign policy and development cooperation)

all

all

all

Self-characterisation of FFP approach

Intersectional, human rights-based, transformative

Participatory, inclusive, transversal, intersectional

Pacifist, participatory, inter­sectional, transformative

Link to domestic policy

Very strong

Weak

Strong

Thematic focus

Preventing and combatting gender-specific violence; care society

Trade and gender

Peace

Target groups

Primarily women, but also “historically disadvantaged groups”

“women and girls in their entire diversity”; occasional mention of other groups

“women in their difference and diversity, and LGBTIQ+ persons”; frequent mention of other groups

Mexico has no FFP strategy, FFP action plan or FFP implementation report; Chile possesses all three in very detailed form. Mexico’s FFP is bureaucratically anchored at ministerial level through the Sectoral Programme for External Relations 2025–2030, which includes copious references to FFP. In Mexico and Chile the development cooperation agency is part of the Foreign Ministry; in Colombia it falls under the office of the president. In all three it is included in the FFP concept. Both AGCID (Chile) and APC (Colom­bia) refer to FFP in their strategy documents. AMEXCID (Mexico) does not do so, although it does define gen­der equality as a cross-cutting priority.

In all three cases, introducing an FFP had institutional and organisational consequences. The Foreign Ministry is responsible for coordinating FFP, normally through the departments or divisions concerned with human rights (and democracy). A new division for FFP was created in Chile, and FFP working groups were established in Mexico and Colombia. In Mexico there is now also a FFP coordinator in the office of the for­eign minister. In Colombia two new high-profile posts were created in the Foreign Ministry: an FFP advisor and a travelling ambassador for gender issues and FFP. There is also intra- and inter-ministerial coordi­nation. In Chile this involves networking gender advisors in the Foreign Ministry, the missions abroad and various other ministries. In Mexico and Chile the foreign and women’s affairs ministries collaborate especially closely, with an official responsible for FFP based in the Women’s Affairs Ministry. Appointees to these new positions are generally highly qualified women with a record feminist engagement.

Funding is the Achilles’ heel of FFP planning. Mexico has no specific budget for FFP. Chile’s FFP strategy does announce a gender-sensitive budget, but the country’s FFP action plan and implementation report make only vague mention of a handful of funding measures. Colombia has approved an FFP investment fund, although it is not mentioned in the FFP action plan.

Accountability and participation mechanisms are institutionalised to different degrees; in all three cases there is room for improvement. Chile has a comprehensive implementation report. In Colombia women’s organisations and LGBTIQ+ groups were involved in the establishment of a participation mechanism that allows them to contribute to the discussion and exercise their control function. Civil society involvement tends to be greatest in the early phases of FFP development. In Chile and Colombia – but not Mexico – information on this is publicly available.

Conceptualising FFP is an ongoing process, and drafting the first FFP documents is only the start. The understanding of FFP develops over time, on basis of discourses, texts, activities and omissions. Chile, which has the least disruptive approach and em­pha­sises continuity in its foreign policy activities,208 char­acterises FFP explicitly as a paradigm under construction. While Mexico and Colombia’s initial definitions of FFP are strongly policy-driven and focus on goals, Chile’s first definition of FFP addresses the foundations of politics, the logic of political action. All three governments see the human rights approach and the gender perspective as central to FFP. They regard the realisation of gender equality and gender justice as both a value in its own right and a factor conducive to prosperity, social justice and peace. In Chile, there are also clear references to the democratic regime.

None of the three refer to the 3Rs (more rights, representation and resources for women), the formula coined by Sweden and also adopted by Germany. All three do however pursue internal improvements with­in their foreign ministry, as Sweden and Ger­many did. The Latin American FFPs are altogether more inward-looking than those of European states: domestic issues and a change in the country’s own foreign policy overshadow questions of international order and global governance.

Of the three, Chile’s FFP concept is most outward-looking in terms of the locus of intended change. Mexico’s is the most slanted towards the domestic political sphere, while Colombia’s occupies a middle position. The variations correspond with the status of foreign policy in each country. AMLO’s stated view that “the best foreign policy is a good domestic policy” is illuminating in this connection.209

The link between FAP and a domestic perspective in Mexico, Chile and Colombia, i.e. in societies with strong structural asymmetries, is underpinned by two institutional factors: firstly, close coordination between the foreign and women’s ministries, with a post for FFP established in the latter; and secondly, the dual role of their development agencies, which are responsible for managing both incoming and outgoing project funding.

In all three cases the FFP encompasses all the For­eign Ministry’s fields of activity, including develop­ment cooperation, but they each foreground different themes. For example, only Colombia’s FFP is explicitly defined as pacifist, which is unsurprising in light of the country’s history of armed conflict and President Petro’s programme of “total peace”. Combatting gen­der-specific violence is a high priority in Colombia and even more so in Mexico. The rate of femicide in both these countries (1.3 and 0.7 per 100,000 women per year respectively in 2024) is significantly higher than in Chile (0.4).210 Mexico emphasises the rele­vance of “climate and gender”, while Chile stresses “trade and gender”. Chile stands out for its large number of free trade agreements and its pioneering role in introducing gender perspective in that sphere. Inter­est in the care approach is backed by a regional agenda and plays a significant role, especially in Mexico. Research shows that women in Mexico spend 24.2 percent of their time doing unpaid work, while men devote just 8.8 percent. The figures for Chile are 20.7 and 11.5 percent, for Colombia 18.9 and 5.9 percent.211

All three countries characterise their own feminist approach as intersectional. In the first place this accounts for the diversity of women, as the principal target group. But it also brings in other historically disadvantaged groups, above all those who do not conform with gender binarity, heteronormativity or assigned gender. In the cases of Mexico and Colombia, indigenous and Afro communities are also mentioned as target groups, while Chile lacks an intercultural in­clusion agenda. This is notable given that indigenous people represent 13 percent of the Chilean popula­tion and the Mapuche conflict is highly securitised.

FFP represents a policy approach that requires nor­mative and institutional preparation, so institutionalisation is often treated as part and parcel of implementation. In all three cases, the progress reports list organisational reforms and innovations, preparation of handbooks and protocols, sensitisation seminars and training events, and conclusion of bilateral and multilateral cooperation agreements.

Conclusion and Outlook

None of the three investigated countries describe the introduction of FFP as a paradigm shift in their for­eign policy. Instead it is understood as a synonym for (or expansion of) gender equality policies and gender mainstreaming. All three governments (especially the Chilean) see FFP in the context of a succession of gender justice reforms in recent years. In each case FFP was introduced after a change of power, with the new government stressing the special importance of clear feminist priorities in its domestic and foreign policies. This ambivalence of continuity and change characterises the framing of FFP. It has also created a situation where FFP is closely bound up with a par­ticular ideological orientation and therefore remains strongly dependent on election results, although it has never been understood as a fundamental shift. Consequently, those responsible for developing and implementing FFP in these countries are generally unable to name examples of effects of FFP at the level of “high politics”. They describe it above all as a policy instrument to strengthen the gender perspective in government activities. In other words, the trans­formative impact can therefore only consist in the longer-term effects that might arise from reforms driven by FFP.

The immediate visible benefits are restricted largely to gender equality policies and gender main­streaming. However, if FFP is to be understood pri­marily as an approach promoting those aspects with­in the national foreign policy, then Mexico, Chile and Colombia need better-defined targets, proper budgets, improved monitoring and evaluation mechanisms, and institutionalised instances for civil society input and oversight.

In all three countries, FFP is implemented in a con­text where patriarchal structures remain dominant and practices of exclusion continue, for example through militarisation of public security212 and securitised treatment of migrants.213 However, it is precisely this environment that makes a feminist approach all the more necessary – and implementation all the more difficult.214 Despite the strongly domestic orientation of these FFPs, feminist civil society organisations criti­cise the lack of spill-over effects in other areas such as security and migration policy, where certain prob­le­matic developments have occurred in parallel to institutionalisation of the FFP. But the point of FFP is not to serve as damage limitation for a fundamentally unchanged policy. Its principles also need to be applied to other policy areas.

Against this backdrop, instrumentalisation of FFP cannot be excluded. It has been criticised as “purple-washing”, lending governments an undeserved femi­nist sheen.215 FFP certainly confers status in large parts of the international community, opens up addi­tional sphere of bilateral and multilateral cooperation, and enables access to project funding.

The FFPs in Mexico, Chile and Colombia skirt around questions of geopolitics, international order, global asymmetries and international conflict management. Colonial logics that create inequality are not problem­atised. Substantial parts of civil society feel that the governments FFPs lack a critical perspective grounded in feminist theory and practice. One example of such a critique is the regional manifesto on FFP in LAC issued in May 2025 by four organisations from Mexico, Chile, Colombia and Brazil.216 It is based on feminist, decolonial and anti-racist epistemic perspectives, and calls for power structures to be transformed, human security to be prioritised, the right to mobility to be rethought, the climate crisis to be addressed appropri­ately, human rights mechanisms to be strengthen­ed, and sustainable financing to be provided.

FFP has promoted exchange between state institutions, civil society and academia, and cooperation between states. Abandoning the FFP approach – which has to date only occurred after conservative and right-wing election victories – lead to a narrow­ing or even closing of those communication channels. Upcoming political developments may presage change: elections will be held in Colombia in 2026, and Antonio Kast will take office as Chile’s new president on 11 March 2026. Kast, founder of the radical right Republican Party, is known for his traditional conser­vative views and his opposition to rights for women and minorities. His current proposals include replac­ing the Ministry of Women and Gender Equality with an institution “for the family”. A hard line on security and migration remains central to his discourse, which makes no mention of FFP.217

If Germany and the EU wish to defend and deepen a gender and human rights agenda at the multilateral level, Mexico, Chile and Colombia will be important partners. They are strongly engaged in the UN system and members of the OECD. Mexico is also a member of the G20. They have taken initiative at the global and regional levels, intensifying their cooperation and increasingly supporting third states, and thus offer openings for expanding trilateral cooperation projects.

In a situation where the German Federal Foreign Office has dropped its FFP (while the German develop­ment ministry BMZ continues its feminist development policy) and the fate of Chile’s FFP hangs in the balance, it will make sense to pursue cooperation on human rights, inclusion and feminist interests through vari­able formats and flexible terminologies, without necessarily insisting explicitly on FFP (and feminist development policy). But exchange specifically on FFP remains profitable, on account of the heterogeneity of conceptualisation and institutionalisation in Europe and Latin America.

Germany could also learn from Latin America here, and its role should not be restricted to funding knowl­edge circulation within the Global South. Germany’s promotion of feminist civil society should be trans­national, strengthening horizontal bi-regional dia­logues and promoting vertical integration with the ministries. Given the present retrograde trends in human rights and inclusion questions, the educational and advocacy work of civil society organisations is more important than ever.

Abbreviations

3R

Rights, representation, resources

AGCID

Agencia Chilena de Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo (Chilean Agency for Inter­national Development Cooperation)

AMEXCID

Agencia Mexicana de Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo (Mexican Agency for Inter­national Development Cooperation)

AMLO

Andrés Manuel López Obrador

APC

Agencia Presidencial de Cooperación Inter­nacional (Presidential Agency for International Cooperation, Colombia)

BMZ

Bundesministerium für wirtschaftliche Zusam­menarbeit und Entwicklung (Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development, Germany)

CEDAW

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women

CEPAL

Comisión Económica para América Latina y el Caribe (Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean)

CIM

Comisión Interamericana de Mujeres (Inter-American Commission of Women)

COP

Conference of the Parties

CoPEF

Strengthening Feminist Foreign Policy and Feminist International Cooperation

CPAC

Conservative Political Action Coalition

CSW

Commission on the Status of Women

DAW

Division for the Advancement of Women

DNP

Departamento Nacional de Planeación
(National Planning Department; Colombia)

ECLAC

Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (United Nations)

ECOSOC

Economic and Social Council (United Nations)

FFP

Feminist foreign policy

FFP+

Feminist Foreign Policy Group

GIZ

Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusam­menarbeit

INMUJERES

Instituto Nacional de las Mujeres (National Insti­tute of Women, Mexico)

INSTRAW

International Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women

LAC

Latin America and the Caribbean

LGBT+

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and others

LGBTIQA+

Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, queer, asexual and others

MDG

Millennium Development Goals

MERCOSUR

Mercado Común del Sur
(Southern Common Market)

MORENA

Movimiento de Regeneración Nacional
(National Regeneration Movement, Mexico)

OAS

Organisation of American States

OECD

Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

OSAGI

Office of the Special Adviser to the Secretary-General on Gender Issues and Advancement of Women

PEF

Política Exterior Feminista
(feminist foreign policy)

PND

Plan Nacional de Desarrollo
(National Development Plan)

SDG

Sustainable Development Goals

SRE

Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores
(Foreign Ministry, Mexico)

SUCOP

Sistema Único de Consulta Pública
(online public consultation system, Colombia)

UNDP

United Nations Development Programme

UNGA

United Nations General Assembly

UNIFEM

UN Development Fund for Women

WILPF

Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom

WPS

Women, Peace and Security

Endnotes

1

 Various terms are used, including feminist foreign policy, feminist diplomacy, feminist development cooperation, de­patriarchalised foreign policy and decolonial foreign policy. Furthermore, there is no consensus as to when a government is actually considered to be pursuing FFP, which is why vari­ous lists of states circulate in the context of policy research on FFP.

2

 Lyric Thompson et al., Defining Feminist Foreign Policy: The 2023 Edition, The Feminist Foreign Policy Collaborative, 2023, https://tinyurl.com/ye244de4 (this and all other links accessed 16 November 2025).

3

 Karin Aggestam and Annika B. Rosamond, “Feminist Foreign Policy 3.0: Advancing Ethics and Gender Equality in Global Politics”, SAIS Review of International Affairs 39, no. 1 (2019): 37–48.

4

 The new German foreign minister, Johann Wadephul (CDU), announced before taking office that he would be dis­continuing the feminist approach in foreign policy, and the Federal Foreign Office removed all references to FFP from its websites. At the same time Germany’s feminist development policy (FDP) has been quietly retained. The relevant docu­ments remain available on the websites of the Federal Minis­try for Economic Cooperation and Development, although Development Minister Reem Alabali-Radovan (SPD) has not committed publicly to the policy. Barbara Mittelhammer, Ein Schritt vor, zwei zurück? Geschlechtergerechtigkeit in der deut­schen Außenpolitik nach der Abschaffung der Feministischen Leit­linien (Bonn: Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, 2025), https://tinyurl. com/3su3uv99.

5

 Rebecca Sanders and Laura D. Jenkins, “Patriarchal Popu­lism: The Conservative Political Action Coalition (CPAC) and the Transnational Politics of Authoritarian Anti-Feminism”, The International Spectator 58, no. 3 (2023): 1–19.

6

 SIPRI Military Expenditure Database (Solna: Stockholm International Peace Research Institute [SIPRI], 2024), doi: 10.55163/CQGC9685.

7

 V-DEM Institute, V-DEM Democracy Report 2025. 25 Years of Autocratization – Democracy Trumped? (University of Gothenbur, March 2025), https://tinyurl.com/2ra4j726.

8

 UN Security Council, Women and Peace and Security. Report of the Secretary-General (New York, 5 September 2025), https://tinyurl.com/2tfst7jp.

9

 For example, Sabine Hark and Paula-Irene Villa, eds., Anti-Genderismus: Sexualität und Geschlecht als Schauplätze poli­tischer Auseinandersetzungen (Bielefeld, 2017); Ines Kappert, Das »Recht des Stärkeren« ist keine Lösung (Berlin: Rosa-Luxem­burg-Stiftung, 28 July 2025) (Hintergrund), https://tinyurl. com/5f4dpc7c.

10

 A similar historical timeline was first published in: Claudia Zilla, “Feminist Foreign Policy in Latin America: The Approaches of Mexico, Chile and Colombia”, in Trends in Latin American International Relations. Shifting Alliances in the New World (Dis)Order, ed. Peter Birle and Claudia Zilla, Europa Regional Perspectives Series (Oxford: Taylor & Francis, 2025).

11

 UN Women – Headquarters, “Commission on the Status of Women” (24 September 2025), https://tinyurl.com/vjxwz48c.

12

 In Resolution 1996/6 of 1996, the Economic and Social Council expanded the Commission’s remit and gave it a lead­ing role in monitoring the implementation of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action and in mainstreaming a gender perspective in the activities of the United Nations.

13

 UN General Assembly Resolution, A/RES/3010 (XXVII), International Women’s Year (New York, 18 December 1972), https://tinyurl.com/8skhw7tn.

14

 UN Women – Headquarters, “World Conferences on Women” (25 September 2025), https://tinyurl.com/3jumpx2n.

15

 UN General Assembly Resolution 31/136 – 1976, United Nations Decade for Women (New York, 1977), https://tinyurl. com/4vkh8d5f.

16

 UN Women, “CEDAW: Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women” (12 June 2009), https://tinyurl.com/49p25vd3.

17

 UN Women – Headquarters, “Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, Beijing +5 Political Declaration and Out­come”, https://tinyurl.com/49896u7n.

18

 UN Security Council, Resolution 1325, “Landmark Resolution on Women, Peace and Security” (3 June 2005), https://tinyurl.com/mrx7xu4d.

19

 “Women, Peace and Security and the UN Security Coun­cil. Global Study on the Implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 1325” (26 December 2023), https:// tinyurl.com/4yvm2ne7.

20

 UN Women – Headquarters, “About Us” (25 September 2025), https://tinyurl.com/2bchkt9v; UN Women – Head­quarters, “Commission on the Status of Women” (see note 11).

21

 The following units were merged into UN Women: the Division for the Advancement of Women (DAW), the International Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of Women (INSTRAW, founded in 1976), the Office of the Special Adviser on Gender Issues and Advancement of Women (OSAGI, founded in 1997), and the UN Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM, founded in 1976).

22

 The timeline laid out in the section was previously pub­lished in similar form in Zilla, “Feminist Foreign Policy in Latin America” (see note 10).

23

 From the preamble to the Charter of the United Nations: “… to reaffirm faith in fundamental human rights, in the dignity and worth of the human person, in the equal rights of men and women and of nations large and small”, United Nations, “UN Charter”, 1945, https://www.un.org/en/about-us/un-charter/preamble.

24

 Economic Commission for Latin America and the Carib­bean (ECLAC), “Regional Conference on Women in Latin America and the Caribbean | ECLAC” (25 September 2025), https://tinyurl.com/wz2we2t5.

25

 ECLAC, “Gender Equality Observatory”, 25 September 2025, https://oig.cepal.org/en.

26

 Organization of American States, “Belém do Pará, Status of Signatures and Ratifications”, https://tinyurl.com/ mvnnzawb. The Convention has been ratified by 32 of the 34 full members of the OAS, the exceptions being Canada and the United States.

27

 Katherine Payne, “The Belém do Pará Convention at 30: Five Things You Should Know”, Equality Now (online), 7 June 2024, https://tinyurl.com/3myhwbak.

28

 Javier Corrales, The Politics of LGBTQ Rights Expansion in Latin America and the Caribbean, Cambridge Elements. Elements in Politics and Society in Latin America (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2021), doi: 10.1017/9781108993609.

29

 “Quotas | International IDEA” (12 November 2025), https://tinyurl.com/4cxmmmfk.

30

 Marcela Ríos Tobar (ed.), Mujer y política. El impacto de las cuotas de género en América Latina [Women and politics: The effect of gender quotas in Latin America] (Santiago de Chile: IDEA Internacional; FLACSO-Chile; Catalonia, 2008), https://tinyurl.com/5x7jrthd.

31

 Anabella Molina, “Presidentes débiles y ministras pre­sentes: La representación de género en los gabinetes de América Latina 1999–2019” [Weak presidents and present female ministers: Gender representation in Latin American cabinets 1999–2019], Estado, Gobierno y Gestión Pública [State, government and public management] 21, no. 41 (2023), doi: 10.5354/0717-8980.2023.71534.

32

 Paula Drumond et al., Mapeando la agenda “Mujeres, Paz y Seguridad” en América Latina: una comparación de los Planes de Acción Nacional de la ONU [Mapping der Agenda “Frauen, Frie­den und Sicherheit” in Lateinamerika: Ein Vergleich der Nationalen Aktionspläne der UNO], BRICS Policy Brief, no. V.12 N.4 (BRICS Policy Center, 2022), https://bit.ly/4i0Qyca.

33

 The first part of this section is adapted from Claudia Zilla, “Introduction: Feminist Foreign Policy as a Work in Progress”, in Feminist Foreign and Development Policy in Practice: Requirements and Potentials, ed. idem, SWP Research Paper 9/2024 (Berlin: Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik, June 2024), 7–16.

34

 See, for example, Katie M. Whipkey et al., Defining Feminist Foreign Policy 2025 (Feminist Foreign Policy Collabo­rative, 2025), 4, https://bit.ly/3JOkAU7.

35

 “Decreto que Reforma y Adiciona los Artículos 4o., 5o., 30 y 123 de la Constitución Política de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos, en relación con la Igualdad Jurídica de la Mujer”, 31 December 1974 (Diario Oficial de la Federación, no. 41), https://tinyurl.com/59c46h3r.

36

 “Decreto por el que se aprueba el diverso por el que se adicionan un segundo y tercer párrafos al artículo 1o., se reforma el artículo 2o., se deroga el párrafo primero del artículo 4o.; y se adicionan un sexto párrafo al artículo 18, y un último párrafo a la fracción tercera del artículo 115 de la Constitución Política de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos”, 14 August 2001 (Diario Oficial de la Federación), https://tinyurl.com/325zknxr.

37

 “Decreto por el que se modifica la denominación del Capítulo I del Título Primero y reforma diversos artículos de la Constitución Política de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos”, 10 June 2011 (Diario Oficial de la Federación), https:// tinyurl.com/bdfe3ksz.

38

 “Ley General para la Igualdad entre Mujeres y Hom­bres”, 2 August 2006 (Diario Oficial de la Federación), https://tinyurl.com/2hsr4up8.

39

 “Ley de Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo”, 6 April 2011 (Diario Oficial de la Federación), https://tinyurl. com/bdfvsyce.

40

 Gobierno de México, Plan Nacional de Desarrollo. 2019–2024 (2019), 12; 30, https://tinyurl.com/3mjn8psk.

41

 Gobierno de México/INMUJERES, Proigualdad 2013–2018: Programa Nacional para la Igualdad entre Mujeres y Hombres (2013), https://tinyurl.com/4y5wynvv.

42

 Gobierno de México/INMUJERES, Proigualdad 2020–2024: Programa Nacional para la Igualdad entre Mujeres y Hombres (2020), https://tinyurl.com/57dpczet.

43

 Ana Güezmes García and Brianda Romero Castelán, Diez años de política exterior feminista y política de cooperación inter­nacional para el desarrollo feminista: una oportunidad para América Latina y el Caribe [Ten years of feminist foreign policy and feminist international cooperation for development: An op­portunity for Latin America and the Caribbean], serie Asun­tos de Género, no. 164 (Santiago: CEPAL, March 2024), 53, https://tinyurl.com/44tru3zt.

44

 “¿Y la paridad de género? Así es el gabinete de AMLO en 2022” [And gender parity? This is AMLO’s cabinet in 2022], El Financiero (online), 6 October 2022, https://bit.ly/3X0LuuU.

45

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, Mensaje del canciller Marcelo Ebrard Casaubon en el marco de la 74 Asamblea General de la ONU [Message from Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard Casaubon at the 74th United Nations General Assembly] (New York, 28 September 2019), https://bit.ly/4idKrBG.

46

 In Spanish the gender-neutral title “Reunión Anual de Titulares de Embajadas y Cónsules de México” replaced the gendered form “Reunión Anual de Embajadores y cónsules” in 2024.

47

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, La Política Exterior Feminista del Gobierno de México (2020), https://tinyurl.com/ 9h773vyp.

48

 “‘O están las mujeres o no es 4T’: Claudia Sheinbaum se declaró aliada y feminista” [“If women are not included it is not 4T”: Claudia Sheinbaum declares herself ally and femi­nist], infobae, 25 November 2021 (online), https://tinyurl.com/ y89uzkh6.

49

 Presidencia de la República, “Presidenta Claudia Shein­baum firma decreto que garantiza la igualdad sustantiva de las mujeres en la Constitución” [President Claudia Shein­baum signs decree guaranteeing meaningful women’s equality in the constitution], press release, 15 November 2024, https://bit.ly/4809kvX; Irma Kánter Coronel, Reforma constitucional para la igualdad sustantiva de las mujeres y el derecho a una vida libre de violencia [Constitutional reform for meaning­ful women’s equality and the right to a life without vio­lence], Dirección Mirada Legislativa, no. 252 (General de Análisis Legislativo, November 2024), https://bit.ly/3XApbfG.

50

 Andrés García, “Secretaría de las Mujeres inicia opera­ciones; reconoce labor del Inmujeres” [Women’s Ministry inaugurated, praises work of Inmujeres], infobae (online), 1 January 2025, https://tinyurl.com/muv8yxr4.

51

 Presidencia de la República, Anuncia Gobierno de México que 2025 será el año de la mujer indígena, 23 November 2024, https://tinyurl.com/5xfpemvv.

52

 There is one exception. In a joint declaration of 8 No­vember 2025, issued during French President Emmanuel Macron’s official visit to Mexico, the two heads of state underline their engagement for gender equality and their intention to promote the principles of FFP at the inter­national level. Presidencia de la República, Declaración con­junta México-Francia, 8 November 2025, https://tinyurl.com/ 3dumyvn3. All translations of titles, quotations etc. from Spanish into English were made by the authors.

53

 Claudia Sheinbaum, 100 pasos para la transformación (2024), https://tinyurl.com/2fewd4v6.

54

 Gobierno de México, Plan Nacional de Desarrollo. 2025–2030 (2025), 75ff., https://tinyurl.com/5az8fwzc.

55

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, “Realiza Cancillería diversas actividades en el marco del Día Internacional de las Mujeres en la Diplomacia” [Foreign Ministry organises various activities in the framework of the International Day of Women in Diplomacy], 27 June 2025, https://tinyurl.com/ 445eku7t.

56

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, La Política Exterior Feminista del Gobierno de México (see note 47).

57

 One of the authors attended and photographed the second PowerPoint presentation.

58

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, Programa Sectorial de Relaciones Exteriores 2020–2024 (2 July 2020), https://tinyurl. com/mrrzu6et.

59

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, Programa Sectorial de Relaciones Exteriores 2025–2030 (30 September 2025), https://tinyurl.com/2sa26arw.

60

 Ibid.

61

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, Programa de Coopera­ción Internacional para el Desarrollo 2021–2024 (2021), https:// tinyurl.com/4jrtu4ma.

62

 Agencia Mexicana de Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo and GIZ, Protocolo Mexicano de Actuación para la Transversalización de la Perspectiva de Género (4 December 2018), https://bit.ly/49plalE.

63

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores et al., Guía para la transversalización de la Perspectiva de Género en Programas y Proyectos de Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo (2023), https://bit.ly/4pzQRO3.

64

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, La Política Exterior Feminista del Gobierno de México (see note 47).

65

 Corporación Humanas et al., Política Exterior Feminista: Una mirada a 5 países de América Latina [Feminist foreign policy: A Look at five Latin American countries] (Santiago de Chile, June 2024), https://tinyurl.com/4vherbvw.

66

 Definition from 2020: “The entirety of foreign policy principles intended to guide state measures to reduce and eliminate structural differences, omissions and gender-spe­cific inequalities, in order to create a more just and prosperous society.” Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, La Política Exterior Feminista del Gobierno de México (see note 47), 4.

67

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, “Diálogo y nego­ciación consolidarán relaciones bilaterales y multilaterales de México: canciller De la Fuente” [Dialogue and negotia­tions will consolidate Mexico’s bilateral and multilateral relations: Foreign Minister De la Fuente], 4 April 2025, https://tinyurl.com/3hvzzc36.

68

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, “El Gobierno de México implementa una política exterior humanista cercana a la gente” [The Mexican government pursues a humanist foreign policy close to the people], press release, 20 August 2024, https://tinyurl.com/96dhpmx4.

69

 Martha Delgado Peralta, “La política exterior feminista de México y la agenda de la sostenibilidad 2030” [Mexico’s feminist foreign policy and the 2030 Sustainable Develop­ment Agenda], Revista Mexicana de Política Exterior, no. 118 (2020): 131–38 (137).

70

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, La Política Exterior Feminista del Gobierno de México (see note 47).

71

 Ibid., 4.

72

 Ibid., 16.

73

 Ibid., 17ff.

74

 Ibid., 19.

75

Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores et al., Guía para la trans­versalización de la Perspectiva de Género (see note 63), 19–20.

76

 Gobierno de México, Plan Nacional de Desarrollo: 2025–2030 (see note 54).

77

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, “Se celebra el foro ‘Avanzar hacia una sociedad del cuidado’” [Forum held: “Moving towards a care society”], press release, 8 May 2024, https://tinyurl.com/4r39b3ct. As part of the preparations for the Regional Conference on Women, the Foreign Ministry held a forum in May 2024 entitled “Moving towards a care society”, organised jointly with ECLAC, UN Women, the Ger­man embassy and other institutions.

78

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, La Política Exterior Feminista del Gobierno de México (see note 47), 2.

79

 Ibid., 10.

80

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, Guía de lenguaje incluyente y no sexista (20 January 2023), https://tinyurl.com/ 2yyj5mmd.

81

 Fátima Gamboa, La política exterior feminista ¿o no será? Situación de la política exterior feminista del Gobierno de México [Feminist foreign policy – or not? The situation of the Mexi­can government’s feminist foreign policy] (EQUIS Justicia para las Mujeres, March 2024), 20, https://tinyurl.com/ 39exsjwk.

82

 Ibid., 18.

83

 Mariana Herrera Salcedo Serrano, “La Política Exterior Feminista: ensayo para la retención de las mujeres en la diplomacia mexicana” [Feminist foreign policy: seeking to retain women in Mexican diplomacy], Foreign Affairs Latino­américa, (February 2025), https://tinyurl.com/3hz98ywa.

84

 Whipkey et al., Defining Feminist Foreign Policy 2025 (see note 34), 121–32.

85

Gamboa, La política exterior feminista ¿o no será? (see note 81), 18.

86

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, Memorándum de Entendimiento en materia de colaboración en Política Exterior Femi­nista entre el Ministerio de Asuntos Exteriores, Unión Europea y Co­operación del Reino de España y la Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores de los Estados Unidos Mexicanos (9 March 2022), https://bit.ly/ 3LC9ke7.

87

 International Labour Organization, “Ratification by Mexico of Convention No. 189 on Domestic Workers”, 6 July 2020, https://tinyurl.com/4zxdsk3n; Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, “El Estado mexicano ratifica el Convenio 190 de la OIT sobre acoso y violencia” [The Mexican state ratifies ILO Convention 190 on Harassment and Violence], press release, 1 October 2025, https://tinyurl.com/acz4pj78.

88

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, Plan Nacional de Acción sobre género y cambio climático del gobierno de México (No­vember 2022), https://tinyurl.com/mseh23jn. This “action plan” (also referred to as a “strategy”) names concrete steps and objectives but no timeframe.

89

 Ibid.

90

Generation Equality Forum, https://forum.generation equality.org.

91

 Alianza Global por los Cuidados, Alianza Global por los Cuidados (19 September 2025), 2, https://tinyurl.com/4ahsjxdf.

92

 “Ley Núm. 19.611”, 16 June 1999 (Diario Oficial de la República de Chile), https://bcn.cl/2k4o1.

93

 Constitución Política de la República de Chile, 1980, https:// tinyurl.com/2xx68mnp.

94

 “Ley Núm. 20.609”, 24 July 2012 (Diario Oficial de la República de Chile), https://bcn.cl/2g7mr.

95

 “Ley Núm. 20.820”, 20 March 2015 (Diario Oficial de la República de Chile), https://bcn.cl/2flok.

96

 Ministerio de la Mujer y la Equidad de Género, Cuarto Plan Nacional de Igualdad Entre mujeres y hombres 2018–2030, 2018, https://tinyurl.com/yckyzu74.

97

 Ibid., 27.

98

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, “Gobierno presenta Tercer Plan de Acción Nacional sobre la Resolución 1325 de Naciones Unidas” [Government publishes third National Action Plan on UN Resolution 1325], press release, 2 Sep­tem­ber 2025, https://tinyurl.com/2tvc3v9w.

99

 Gobierno de Chile, Tercer Plan de Acción Nacional para la Implementación de la Resolución 1325 (2000) del Consejo de Segu­ridad de las Naciones Unidas sobre Mujeres, Paz y Seguridad: 2025–2030 (1 September 2025), 44, https://tinyurl.com/46dpj3hf.

100

 Gabriel Boric, Programa de Gobierno (2021), https:// tinyurl.com/mv82wwtp.

101

 Rocío Montes, “Chile consolida el primer Gobierno femi­nista latinoamericano” [Chile consolidates Latin America’s first feminist government], Ediciones El País S.L., 11 March 2022 (online), https://tinyurl.com/3c29wabr.

102

 Emiliana Pariente, “Las implicancias de que el Minis­terio de la Mujer y la Equidad de Género integre por primera vez en la historia el Comité Político” [The effects of including the Ministry of Women and Gender Equity in the political committee], 25 March 2022, https://bit.ly/4r3zHcX.

103

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, “Canciller Antonia Urrejola: ‘El desarrollo de una política exterior feminista será un sello distintivo y elemento de vanguardia de nuestra diplomacia’” [Foreign Minister Antonia Urrejola: “Devel­op­ing a feminist foreign policy will be a mark of distinction and a cutting-edge element of our diplomacy”], press release, 22 March 2022, https://tinyurl.com/mv6ansrk.

104

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, “Canciller Antonia Urrejola se reúne con su par de España y firma Memorán­dum de Entendimiento de colaboración en Política Exterior Feminista” [Foreign Minister Antonia Urrejola meets Spanish counterpart and signs memorandum of understanding on cooperation on feminist foreign policy], press release, 1 July 2022, https://tinyurl.com/4c5yvkjy.

105

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, “Cancillería pre­senta el Plan de Acción de la Política Exterior Feminista en conmemoración del Día Internacional de la Mujer” [Foreign minister presents Plan of Action on Feminist Foreign Policy on International Women’s Day], press release, 7 March 2024, https://tinyurl.com/2p9k4yve.

106

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, “Cancillería pre­senta la Política Exterior Feminista de Chile y refuerza su compromiso internacional con los derechos humanos” [For­eign Ministry presents Chile’s feminist foreign policy and underlines international engagement for human rights], press release, 12 June 2023, https://bit.ly/48feqWl.

107

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Política exterior femi­nista de Chile (June 2023), 9, https://tinyurl.com/4v7njmmm.

108

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Plan de Acción Política Exterior Feminista 2024–2025 (March 2024), 5, https:// bit.ly/3LIqMNY.

109

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Política exterior feminista de Chile (see note 107).

110

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Plan de Acción Política Exterior Feminista 2024–2025 (see note 108).

111

 A decree on gender issues in the context of consular business is currently in the review process.

112

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, “División de Asun­tos de Género de la Cancillería inicia funciones” [Gender division in Foreign Ministry begins operation], press release, 27 August 2025, https://bit.ly/4oHr5aj.

113

 “Decreto 207”, 27 August 2025 (Diario Oficial de la República de Chile), https://bcn.cl/Br6lXW.

114

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Política exterior feminista de Chile (see note 107), 50.

115

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Plan de Acción Política Exterior Feminista 2024–2025 (see note 108), 24.

116

 Agencia Chilena de Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo AGCID, Estrategia de la Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo de AGCID 2023–2026 (September 2023), 4, https:// tinyurl.com/hkysmmes.

117

 Ibid.

118

 Agencia Chilena de Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo AGCID, “AGCID reitera compromiso de seguir integrando el enfoque de género en la cooperación inter­nacional de Chile” [AGCID underlines continuing commit­ment to integrate gender approach in Chile’s international cooperation], press release, 13 March 2023, https://bit.ly/ 4r5Ljw5.

119

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Plan de Acción Política Exterior Feminista 2024–2025 (see note 108), 22.

120

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Balance de la Imple­mentación del Plan de Acción: Política Exterior Feminista 2024 (March 2025), 41, https://tinyurl.com/4ds74px7.

121

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Plan de Acción Política Exterior Feminista 2024–2025 (see note 108).

122

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Balance de la Imple­mentación del Plan de Acción (see note 120).

123

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Política exterior femi­nista de Chile (see note 107), 29.

124

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Balance de la Imple­mentación del Plan de Acción (see note 120), 8.

125

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Plan de Acción Política Exterior Feminista 2024–2025 (see note 108), 5.

126

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Política exterior femi­nista de Chile (see note 107), 8.

127

 Ibid., 10. The trade agreements with Mexico (2024) and Saudi Arabia (2024) also included gender chapters, but have not entered into force.

128

 Ibid., 35.

129

 Agencia Chilena de Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo AGCID, Estrategia de la Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo de AGCID 2023–2026 (see note 116), 9.

130

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Política exterior femi­nista de Chile (see note 107), 33ff.

131

 Ibid., 15.

132

 Ibid., 54.

133

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Plan de Acción Política Exterior Feminista 2024–2025 (see note 108), 20f.

134

 Ibid., 22.

135

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Balance de la Imple­mentación del Plan de Acción (see note 120).

136

 UNDP, “Sello de Género PNUD – Instituciones Púb­licas” [UNDP Gender Equality Seal for Public Institutions], https://tinyurl.com/3paz2xvc.

137

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, “Cancillería recibe la distinción del Sello de Oro en Igualdad de Género del PNUD” [Foreign Ministry receives UNDP Gold Seal for Gender Equality ], press release, 25 August 2025, https://tinyurl.com/ mxtet79m.

138

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Balance de la Imple­mentación del Plan de Acción (see note 120), 53.

139

 Ibid., 54.

140

 Ibid., 75.

141

 Ibid., 77.

142

 Ibid., 33; Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, “Chile y Noruega suscriben Memorándum de Entendimiento sobre Igualdad de Género en Política Exterior” [Chile and Norway sign memorandum of understanding on gender equality in foreign policy], press release, 14 July 2025, https://tinyurl. com/5y28asuvk.

143

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Balance de la Imple­mentación del Plan de Acción (see note 120), 38.

144

 Ibid., 45.

145

 Constitución Política de Colombia, 1991, https://tinyurl.com/ 33524au9.

146

 “Ley 823”, 7 July 2003 (Diario Oficial), https://tinyurl. com/4vnn6rr2.

147

 Departamento Nacional de Planeación, Plan Nacional de Desarrollo 2018–2022. Pacto por Colombia, pacto por la equidad (Resumen), 160ff., https://tinyurl.com/4puad6jr.

148

 “Ley 1955”, 25 May 2019 (Diario Oficial), https:// tinyurl.com/2827yhw3.

149

 Gustavo Petro/Francia Márquez, Colombia potencia mundial de la vida. Programa de Gobierno 2022–2026 (2022), https://tinyurl.com/24m62bwx.

150

 “Gobierno nacional planteó ante ONU mujeres la con­strucción de una política exterior feminista para el país” [Government proposes to UN Women to develop a feminist foreign policy], infobae, 20 September 2022 (online), https:// tinyurl.com/87r6cxkp.

151

 Las Igualadas, “‘Vamos a formular una política exterior feminista’: Colombia en la OEA” [“We will develop a femi­nist foreign policy”: Colombia at OAS], El Espectador, 5 Octo­ber 2022 (online), https://tinyurl.com/3zdub5pe.

152

 Ministerio de Igualdad y Equidad, “Viceministerios”, 16 November 2025, https://tinyurl.com/35w4wau9.

153

 The Colombian Constitutional Court annulled the min­istry’s establishment in 2024 on grounds of procedural error, but delayed the effect of the ruling until 2026 in order to give the Congress time to pass new legislation. The ministry has also been criticised for having one of the lowest implementation rates. Juan E. Lewin/Juan Miguel Hernández Bonilla, “La Corte Constitucional anula la creación del Minis­terio de la Igualdad” [Constitutional Court annuls creation of Ministry of Equality], Ediciones El País S.L., 9 May 2024 (online), https://tinyurl.com/3avkt2ss.

154

 The equality minister changed again in August 2025. The appointment of Juan Carlos Florián was widely criticised, as he had previously performed in pornographic films. The appointment of Cuban-born trans woman Charlotte Schneider Callejas as vice minister for women also generated controversy. Valentina P. Lugo, “Petro aparta a su vicepresi­denta Francia Márquez de su cargo como ministra de Igual­dad” [Petro dismisses Vice President Francia Márquez from post of Equality Minister], Ediciones EL PAÍS S.L., 28 February 2025 (online), https://tinyurl.com/9t9ky7sj; Santiago Torrado, “Gustavo Petro elige a Juan Carlos Florián como reemplazo de Carlos Rosero en el Ministerio de la Igualdad” [Gustavo Petro chooses Juan Carlos Florián as successor to Carlos Rosero at Ministry of Equality], Ediciones EL PAÍS S.L., 1 August 2025 (online), https://tinyurl.com/3j3zxf2p; Redacción Políti­ca, “Charlotte Schneider: la nueva viceministra de la Mujer en Colombia es transexual y nació en Cuba” [Charlotte Schneider: New Colombian vice minister of women’s affairs is Cuban-born transsexual], El Irreverente, 16 August 2025 (online), https://tinyurl.com/7rrt4wcc.

155

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Política Exterior Feminista Colombiana. Pacifista + Participativa + Interseccional = Transformadora (Bogotá, 19 December 2023), 3, https:// tinyurl.com/ym6f94dj.

156

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Por primera vez en la historia Colombia presentó su Política Exterior Feminista ante Naciones Unidas [Historical first: Colombia presents feminist foreign policy at United Nations] (Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, 15 March 2024), https://tinyurl.com/2jsp8uj8.

157

 Ministerio de Igualdad y Equidad, “Colombia da un paso histórico: Gobierno adopta el Plan Nacional de Mujeres, Paz y Seguridad” [Colombia takes historic step: Government adopts National Plan for Women, Peace and Security], press release, 11 November 2025, https://tinyurl.com/4tptrjnb.

158

 Ministerio de Igualdad y Equidad, Primer Plan De Acción Nacional Mujeres, Paz Y Seguridad Resolución 1325 Del Consejo De Seguridad De Las Naciones Unidas, República de Colombia, 2024–2034 (2024), https://tinyurl.com/3kb6tvp8.

159

 “Ley 2294”, 19 May 2023 (Diario Oficial), https://tinyurl. com/34ey79yc.

160

 Departamento Nacional de Planeación, Plan Nacional de Desarrollo 2022–2026: Colombia, Potencia Mundial de la Vida (2023), https://tinyurl.com/m4c4amf8.

161

 Redacción Política, “Gobierno Petro dejó en firme la Política Exterior Feminista: Sarabia ya firmó decreto” [Petro government confirms feminist foreign policy: Sarabia has already signed decree], El Espectador, 25 June 2025 (online), https://tinyurl.com/4jpbe6yt.

162

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Plan de Acción Política Exterior Feminista (May 2024; updated 30 September 2024), https://tinyurl.com/yrkrj7xd.

163

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y su Fondo Rota­torio, Informe Proyecto de Inversión. Incorporación del Enfoque de Género en la política exterior del estado, a nivel bilateral y multi­lateral (2024), 10, https://tinyurl.com/3hhexsdb.

164

 Cancillería, “Análisis de género: Una herramienta para poner en práctica la Política Exterior Feminista” [Gen­der analysis: An instrument for implementing the feminist foreign policy], press release, 25 June 2025, https://tinyurl.com/4yzpdbvz.

165

 Agencia Presidencial de Cooperación Internacional de Colombia, “Quiénes somos” [About us], 17 July 2023, https://tinyurl.com/2m9wp9zv.

166

 Diana M. Parra Romero, Documento Política Exterior Feminista (1 November 2024), https://tinyurl.com/2vwmk4yy.

167

 Agencia Presidencial de Cooperación Internacional de Colombia, Estrategia Nacional de Cooperación Internacional de Colombia (ENCI) 2023–2026 (2023), 15ff., https://tinyurl.com/ jawc858m.

168

 Parra Romero, Documento Política Exterior Feminista (see note 166), 61.

169

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Política Exterior Femi­nista Colombiana (see note 155), 11.

170

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y su Fondo Rota­torio, Informe Proyecto de Inversión (see note 163), 6f.

171

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Por el cual se adopta la Política Pública Exterior Feminista o Política Exterior con Enfoque de Género y se dictan otras disposiciones (1 November 2024), https://tinyurl.com/ty9tsrwu.

172

 Ibid.

173

 Sofía Perez Gil, “Sobre nuestra Política Exterior [ya no Feminista] con enfoque de género. Y razones para mantener viva la esperanza” [On our (no longer feminist) gender-focussed foreign policy: And reasons to keep hope alive], Diplomacia Abierta, (May 2023), https://tinyurl.com/37cudupr.

174

 Parra Romero, Documento Política Exterior Feminista (see note 166), 2.

175

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Política Exterior Feminista Colombiana (see note 155), 2; Ministerio de Rela­ciones Exteriores y su Fondo Rotatorio, Informe Proyecto de Inversión (see note 163), 6.

176

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y su Fondo Rota­torio, Informe Proyecto de Inversión (see note 163), 19.

177

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Plan de Acción Política Exterior Feminista (May 2024) (see note 162).

178

 Parra Romero, Documento Política Exterior Feminista (see note 166), 7; Ministerio de Rela­ciones Exteriores, Memoria justificativa del proyecto PN-2024-17360 (16 October 2024), 3, https://tinyurl.com/3m4nhupe.

179

 Agencia Presidencial de Cooperación Internacional de Colombia, Estrategia Nacional de Cooperación Internacional de Colombia (ENCI) 2023–2026 (see note 167), 15.

180

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y su Fondo Rota­torio, Informe Proyecto de Inversión (see note 163), 19; Parra Romero, Documento Política Exterior Feminista (see note 166), 9.

181

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Por el cual se adopta la Política Pública Exterior Feminista (see note 171).

182

 Agencia Presidencial de Cooperación Internacional de Colombia, Estrategia Nacional de Cooperación Internacional de Colombia (ENCI) 2023–2026 (see note 167), 18.

183

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Por el cual se adopta la Política Pública Exterior Feminista (see note 171).

184

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, Plan de Acción Política Exterior Feminista (May 2024) (see note 162).

185

 Agencia Presidencial de Cooperación Internacional de Colombia, Estrategia Nacional de Co­operación Internacional de Colombia (ENCI) 2023–2026 (see note 167), 17.

186

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y su Fondo Rota­torio, Informe Proyecto de Inversión (see note 163), 8f.

187

 Ibid., 12.

188

 Cancillería, “Colombia reafirma su compromiso con la igualdad de género a través del fortalecimiento de sus capaci­dades técnicas para implementar la Política Exterior Femi­nista” [Colombia underlines its commitment to gender equality by enhancing technical capacity for implementing feminist foreign policy] (30 May 2025), https://tinyurl.com/ mry39m64.

189

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y su Fondo Rota­torio, Informe Proyecto de Inversión (see note 163), 10.

190

 Ibid.

191

 Ibid., 11.

192

 The original title of the project was: “Atención, pre­vención, investigación y judicialización de las violencias basadas en género: intercambio entre Kenia y Colombia”. Agencia Presidencial de Cooperación Internacional de Colombia, “Colombia y Kenia refuerzan cooperación femi­nista en el marco de la Estrategia África” [Colombia and Kenya strengthen feminist cooperation in scope of the Africa Strategy] (20 May 2025), https://tinyurl.com/4c53xcjc.

193

 Sebastián Vargas Rueda, “Relaciones entre Colombia y Nigeria: Vicepresidenta Francia Márquez visita Abuya para promover cooperación y desarrollo” [Relations between Colombia and Nigeria: Vice-President Francia Márquez visits Abuja to promote cooperation and development], infobae, 31 August 2025 (online), https://tinyurl.com/4huskuk9.

194

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores y su Fondo Rota­torio, Informe Proyecto de Inversión (see note 163), 11f.

195

 Cancillería, “Colombia inicia el proceso del Plan de Acción Nacional de la Resolución 2250 del Consejo de Segu­ridad de la ONU sobre Juventud, Paz y Seguridad” [Colombia starts process for the National Action Plan on UNSC Reso­lution 2250 on Youth, Peace and Security], press release, 23 September 2025, https://tinyurl.com/whsrbw5t.

196

 Cancillería, “Cancillería socializa la Política Exterior Feminista de Colombia en el con­ver­satorio ‘Mujeres que cuidan la vida en el territorio’” [Foreign Ministry presents Colombia’s feminist foreign policy at discussion on “Women who take care of life in the territory”], press release, https://tinyurl.com/ftzkrk5j.

197

 Cancillería, “En 2024, la Cancillería apostó por la paz, sostenibilidad, igualdad y cooperación internacional” [In 2024 the Foreign Ministry bet on peace, sustainability, equality and international cooperation], press release, 2 January 2025, https://tinyurl.com/mwz9kx7m.

198

 CEPAL, “Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Germany, and ECLAC Partner to Strengthen Feminist Foreign Policies and International Cooperation for Development”, 5 October 2025, https://tinyurl.com/22djx2w6.

199

 Agencia Chilena de Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo, “Fondo Chile-México” (16 November 2025), https://tinyurl.com/6p9mmxvy.

200

 VIII Cumbre de la CELAC, “Declaración sobre la Política Exterior Feminista de América Latina y el Caribe” (Kingston, San Vicente y las Granadinas, 1 March 2024), https://tinyurl.com/a3s7khp4.

201

 Secretaría de Relaciones Exteriores, INMUJERES, UN Women, III Ministerial and High-Level Representatives on Feminist Foreign Policies. Declaration by the Chair of the Third Conference (3 July 2024), https://tinyurl.com/26j886h9.

202

 XVI. Conferencia Regional sobre la Mujer, Compromiso de Tlatelolco. Una década de acción para el logro de la igualdad sustantiva de género y la sociedad del cuidado (Mexico City, 15 August 2025), https://tinyurl.com/bdf8ubhe.

203

 European Union External Action Service, “EU–LAC Bi‑regional Pact on Care”, press release, 8 November 2025, https://tinyurl.com/4xunxpwb.

204

 Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, “Spain assumes co‑presidency of UN Feminist Foreign Policy Group”, press release, 17 February 2024, https://tinyurl.com/arwth7dk.

205

 Leonie Stamm, Beyond Values: How Feminist Foreign Policy Serves Strategic Interests, FEPS-FES, Policy Brief, October 2025, https://tinyurl.com/3nkntz9d.

206

 Jorge Z. Patterson, “¿Tenemos un presidente misó­gino?” [Do we have a misogynist president?], Ediciones EL PAÍS S.L., 3 February 2022 (online), https://tinyurl.com/3n6hxwrm.

207

 Corporación Humanas et al., Política Exterior Feminista (see note 65).

208

 Gonzalo Álvarez Fuentes, Resistencias Al Cambio En Políti­ca Exterior: Chile ante el nuevo ciclo político [Resistance to change in foreign policy: Chile entering a new political cycle] (Fried­rich Ebert Stiftung, October 2024), https://tinyurl.com/ d6z6rf3h.

209

 Andrés M. López Obrador, “La mejor política exterior es la interior” [The best foreign policy is domestic policy] (15 June 2022), https://tinyurl.com/53ctvnwz.

210

 CEPAL, Urgent Action to Prevent and Eliminate Femicides, https://tinyurl.com/mt432v62.

211

 The percentages relate to the 24-hour day. CEPAL, “CEPALSTAT DataBank: Proportion of Time Spent on Unpaid Domestic and Care Work, by Sex” (8 January 2025), https:// tinyurl.com/332ran8b.

212

 Gamboa, La política exterior feminista ¿o no será? (see note 81), 19.

213

 María P. Rivera Chávez, “Feminist Foreign Policy: Colo­niality in New Clothes?”, Feminist Perspectives (11 August 2022), https://tinyurl.com/yz9kc95z.

214

 Flor Alcaraz, “Antonia Urrejola: ‘Hay una dificultad interna para comprender por qué es necesaria una política exterior feminista’” [Antonia Urrejola: “There is an internal difficulty understanding why a feminist foreign policy is necessary”] (24 February 2024), https://tinyurl.com/pztwkpfw.

215

 Stefanny Peláez, “Purple Washing” in Feminist Foreign Policy of Chile (May 2024), https://tinyurl.com/2y4vu75x.

216

 Red Mexicana de Política Exterior Feminista (Mexico), Plataforma para la Política Exterior Feminista en América Latina (Chile), Observatório de Política Exterior Femista Inclusiva (Brazil), Observatorio de Mujeres, Paz y Seguridad para América Latina y el Caribe (Colombia), Manifiesto Regional: Consensos y agendas comunes de las políticas exteriores feministas desde América Latina [Regional manifesto: Consensus and shared agendas in feminist foreign policy in Latin America] (Mexico City, May 2025), https://tinyurl.com/5n7x474d.

217

 José Antonio Kast, La fuerza del cambio: Bases programá­ticas [The power of change: Programmatic principles] (2025), https://tinyurl.com/mrxas7mx.

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