About the IFLN

We are an international feminist legal network of lawyers and legally focussed NGOs (doing strategic legal work and other policy impact work) on male psychological violence against women.

The IFLN was formed by Centre for Women’s Justice and independent advisor, Purna Sen, with funding from The Oak Foundation.

Logo of Centre for Women's Justice
Logo of the Oak Foundation

Objectives:

The network connects with individual lawyers, NGOs that work on the law and how it operates, and others making creative use of the law and campaigning for legislative reform to

  • improve our mutual learning

  • create an evidence base of legislative, policy, practical and litigation initiatives that combat psychological violence

  • build state accountability on psychological violence towards women

  • explore defences and other solutions for women criminalised as a consequence of psychological violence

  • produce a reliable, authoritative evidence base in the form of briefings, resources and event recordings, that will be of longer-term use.

The network allows experts to share learning with each other and with decision makers in their own jurisdictions, contributing towards improvements in law and practice to tackle psychological violence to women and girls, and its harmful impacts.

The working language of the network is English.

Principles

1. A shared commitment to:

  • challenging and containing male violence against women and girls targeting the roots causes of intersectional gender inequalities

  • making visible state violence and fostering state accountability for the safety of women and children

  • holding abusers, private financial and business entities and the state accountable; thus working to change systemic inequalities anti-racist principles and practice

2. Strategic working

  • Learning and sharing strategies on strategic litigation, strategies to improve access to justice for victims/survivors, collaborations, embedding change and other interventions that bring feminist analyses into legal practice incorporating feminist perspectives that re-conceptualising 'justice’.

3. Mutual Learning and Respect

  • IFLN seeks to advance mutual learning on the context, inhibitors and enablers of litigation in line with principle 1 Recognising diversity of positions and analysis, IFLN will make it possible to have spaces of complexity that draw on expert and evidence-based discourse, seeking to avoid the shutting down of discussion and debate as membership and participation is extended to include those who may have different perspectives as to how to best tackle complex issues.




Advisory Group

Headshot of Purna Sen
Headshot of Harriet Wistrich
Headshot Gemma Fernandez
Headshot of Taina Bien-Aimé
Headshot of Bronwyn Pithey
Headshot of Cristina Sevilla
Headshot of Jessica Gavron