Glossary


For additional definitions and related terms, see the Global 50/50 Glossary.

Adjudicatory Bodies (Courts)

Courts, tribunals, and similar bodies that make binding legal decisions at global or regional level. 

Bench (Courts)

The collective body of judges in a court.

Commissions & Expert Mechanisms (Commissions)

Independent bodies that monitor, investigate, or advise on justice and human rights issues. Commissions are typically standing bodies with a formal legal basis and institutional mandates, while expert mechanisms are usually independent, expert-led bodies that provide thematic or issue-specific analysis and recommendations.

Funders & Philanthropies (Funders)

Organisations that provide financial support for initiatives advancing gender justice in the law and justice sector.

Gender equality

Gender equality refers to the achievement of equal rights, access, opportunities, treatment, and outcomes for men, women, girls and boys, and people of all gender identities. It is based on the principle that people of all gender identities should enjoy the same protections and opportunities. Advancing gender equality requires the removing discriminatory gender norms, roles and barriers, and ensuring fair participation and freedom from discrimination, in all areas of public and private life – including the workplace.

Gender inequality

Gender inequality refers to unequal rights, access, opportunities, treatment, safety, and voice, as well as unequal outcomes in representation and resources, between men, women, girls and boys (or people of all gender identities?). These inequalities are upheld and reproduced by gender norms, roles, and power relations. Gender inequality is reflected in disparities such as pay gaps, unequal access to education or healthcare, under-representation in leadership, and unequal legal protections.

Gender injustice

Gender injustice refers to the laws, policies, institutions, and social norms that produce or reinforce discrimination, violence, exclusion, and unequal power on the basis of gender. It exists where people are denied safety, agency, participation, and access to rights, resources, opportunities, and decision-making because of their position in gender relations.

Gender justice

Gender justice is about creating a world where people of all genders can live safely, participate equally, and thrive, by changing the systems and norms that create inequality and limit opportunity.

Global 50/50 works to advance gender justice. Gender justice means creating the conditions in which people of all genders can live safely, participate fully, and thrive, regardless of their position in gender relations. It recognises diverse gender identities and experiences, and seeks the fair and equitable distribution of rights, resources, opportunities, and decision-making power, alongside equality and non-discrimination in law and in practice.

Grounded in international human rights law (including the UN Charter, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, core UN treaties, and the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women), gender justice requires more than formal legal equality. As both a goal and an approach, gender justice requires transforming the laws, policies, institutions, and social norms that produce or reinforce discrimination, violence, exclusion, and inequality, including patriarchy and other intersecting systems of power and disadvantage. It advances the universal rights of all people; ensures inclusive leadership and meaningful participation in decision-making; protects choice and agency; and commits to monitoring progress and holding decision-makers and power-holders accountable.

Gender justice in the workplace is the realisation of substantive and transformative equality in employment, ensuring that all worker – particularly women and gender-diverse people, and those facing intersecting forms of discrimination – can access, participate in, and advance within the workplace on equal terms, and can effectively claim remedies when their rights are violated.
Gender equality and gender justice are closely related, but they are not interchangeable. Gender justice refers to the principle that all people should enjoy the same rights, opportunities, and treatment regardless of gender. Gender equality focuses on outcomes and parity (such as equal pay, equal representation, or equal legal rights).

Gender justice is concerned with how equality is realised, enforced, and sustained, especially in contexts of structural inequality. It recognises that identical treatment under the law is often insufficient where historical discrimination, power imbalances, and intersecting forms of disadvantage exist. Gender justice therefore prioritises substantive and transformative equality, requiring justice systems to actively identify and dismantle discriminatory laws, practices, and norms, and to provide effective remedies when rights are violated.

The work of Global 50/50, including Global Justice 50/50, contributes to the goal and approach of gender justice through accountability and advocacy. As part of that approach, our core variables measure and evaluate every organisation’s commitments and policies to promote gender equality, non-discrimination and fair workplaces for all, and we analyse our findings within a framework of gender justice.

Gender parity

45-55% women. In current international practice, gender parity is increasingly recognised as 50%, but the broader range used by Global 50/50 is intended to allow for practical variation in representation.

Intergovernmental Organisations

Formal organisations established by treaty or other international agreement between states, each with its own legal personality and a mandate to carry out functions, including in relation to justice, human rights, or the rule of law, as agreed by its member governments. 

International Non-Governmental Organisations (International NGOs)

Not-for-profit organisations working across countries to promote justice, human rights, or legal reform.

Jurist

A legal expert or scholar who studies, interprets, and applies the law, often influencing legal thought, policy, or judicial practice.

Law Firms

For-profit private legal practices operating internationally, providing legal services and advocacy.

Legal Professional Associations

Membership-based organisations representing legal professionals and legal professional bodies, promoting professional standards, ethics, and the legal profession globally.

Registrar

The senior official heading the court registry, responsible for overseeing its administration, managing staff and resources, and ensuring the effective and independent operation of the court in support of judicial functions.

Registry

The administrative organ of a court responsible for case management, judicial support, records, filings, and the provision of legal, logistical, and operational services necessary for the court’s functioning.

Selections (Courts and Commissions)

The processes by which leaders such as judges or commissioners are nominated, reviewed, elected, or appointed.

Subsector

An analytically constructed grouping of organisations within the global justice system, categorised according to shared organisational characteristics, mandates, and/or functions.

Workings (Courts and Commissions)

How courts and commissions operate internally, including decision-making, governance, staff selection, and policy implementation.