A new analysis reveals that simply placing women in leadership roles falls short of achieving genuine gender equality in global health organisations.
Women hold just 17% of leadership positions across major global health organisations, according to new data highlighted by the BMJ. The figures show that 13 out of 78 senior roles have been filled by women over time, with the World Health Organisation’s executive board performing even worse at under 10% female representation.
But the numbers tell only part of the story. Research suggests that increasing female representation without adopting feminist leadership principles risks creating what experts call “tokenism” – a superficial approach that fails to address deeper structural inequalities.
The Evidence Behind Feminist Leadership
The Global 50/50 framework describes feminist leadership as both “a moral compass anchored in empathy, transparency, and accountability” and “a practical toolkit for more effective organisations”. Data from a PMC study indicates that feminist leadership promotes social justice more effectively than other approaches, including transformational leadership styles.
Women of colour from the Global South face chiefly steep barriers. The GWL Voices report documents how these leaders encounter compounded challenges including racism, tokenism, and limited access to informal networks that often determine career progression in global health.
Research shows women are less likely to secure top leadership appointments even when outperforming male colleagues. The data suggests that policies aimed at improving gender balance often fail without corresponding accountability measures and cultural change within organisations.
What the Numbers Don’t Capture
The Women Leaders in Global Health initiative, launched in 2015, has focused on networking, mentorship and capacity building to tackle these barriers. Yet the statistics remain stubbornly low nearly a decade later.
Gender-balanced hiring panels, active sponsorship programmes and inclusive leadership pipelines have emerged as potential solutions. But according to the BMJ analysis, these measures must be underpinned by genuine feminist principles rather than treating women’s advancement as a box-ticking exercise.
The UN Foundation and Women Leaders in Global Health maintain that gender equality in leadership is essential for building resilient health systems and achieving Sustainable Development Goals.
Source: @bmj_latest
Key Takeaways
- Women hold only 17% of leadership roles in major global health organisations
- Feminist leadership principles prove more effective than simply increasing female representation
- Women of colour from the Global South face additional barriers including racism and tokenism
What This Means for Kent Residents
While this analysis focuses on international health leadership, Kent residents working in global health roles through organisations like Médecins Sans Frontières or the World Health Organisation may benefit from these broader equity initiatives. NHS Kent and Medway promotes gender diversity in its leadership structures, though no specific feminist leadership framework has been verified for the region. Health professionals in Kent can access leadership development through NHS leadership academies, which may increasingly incorporate these evidence-based approaches to creating more effective and equitable healthcare organisations.
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