The Our Voices Our Futures (OVOF) consortium elevates voices from across the Global South, aiming to amplify those of structurally silenced women, including the LBQTQIA+* people within their communities. APC mentions, “This initiative is unique among myriad interventions targeting gender equality and women’s rights because it specifically aims to achieve the inclusion of [structurally] silenced women within broader feminist movements, where fragmentation has led to the historical exclusion of structurally silenced women even, at times, from feminist movements themselves.”

Over the past four years, the OVOF project has worked  to shed light on the deep-rooted biases, inequalities, discrimination, and violence that structurally silenced women and people endure. More importantly, the project amplifies their inclusion in online, public spaces, and on legal and policy levels, through movement building, strategic use of technology to support open and safe online spaces, feminist holistic protection to enable advocacy for rights and policy change, and the creative use of arts, media and culture as influential tools to challenge social norms, shape public opinion and counter restriction of expression. Through amplifying these stories, the consortium aims to gather evidence of widespread violence, forging a path for collective strategies that safeguard the rights, dignity, and futures of those living on the margins.

This special edition of GenderIT brings together five powerful stories from OVOF project partners in Bangladesh, Kenya, Uganda, and India, spotlighting the lived struggles of structurally silenced women and people. These stories capture not only the harsh realities of gender-based violence – violence that magnifies existing inequalities – but also the fierce resilience and community-driven movement-building aimed at advancing gender justice.

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editorial

Unmute and Uplift: Online Solidarity Movements Highlighting the Struggles of Structurally Silenced Women

This editorial explores the intersection of gender, technology, and activism, spotlighting how online solidarity movements in the Global South challenge entrenched inequalities. It examines the transformative power of these movements in amplifying structurally silenced voices despite pervasive systemic barriers, including colonial legacies, authoritarian policies, and digital divides, while confronting misinformation and backlash against marginalized communities.

The Fate of Bangladesh’s Cyber Security Act? A Swift Repeal

Bangladesh's Cyber Security Act replicates the draconian legislative framework that its predecessors imposed on online civil liberties in the country. With the new government in place, activists are demanding for its repeal. 

Building Resilience in Uganda: The Importance of Online Solidarity Movements for Structurally Silenced Women

Online spaces in Uganda represent both a platform for empowerment and a battleground for marginalisation, particularly for structurally silenced women. Despite systemic barriers rooted in patriarchal norms, cultural stereotypes, and socio-economic inequalities, these women are leveraging digital platforms to challenge oppression, build resilience, and assert their voices.

Ctrl+Alt+ Resist: “Hashtagging” The Kenyan Revolution

This article explores how digital activism has shaped feminist and youth-led resistance in Kenya over the past decade. It underscores the significance of grassroots community-building, both online and offline, in challenging state violence, amplifying marginalised voices, and imagining liberatory futures while balancing the opportunities and risks of digital resistance.

Under Siege: How Cultural, Political, and Religious Forces Threaten Gender Rights in Bangladesh

Global South Online Solidarity Movements: Whose online solidarity movements are we talking about?

This article reflects on the dynamics of online solidarity movements for gender and sexual minorities, examining barriers like digital divides, systemic oppressions, and privilege hierarchies that shape participation. It critiques the glorification of online activism's successes while questioning its inclusivity, especially in the Global South. The author advocates for structural changes, digital access, and critical self-reflection within queer feminist organising.