Pathfinding Global Alliance on Ending Violence Against Children
A State-owned, multistakeholder platform designed to accelerate global efforts to end violence against children. It supports member states in translating political commitments into concrete actions through peer learning, strengthening co-operation, and sharing promising practices.
A collaborative platform built by and for Member States
The Pathfinding Global Alliance on Ending Violence against Children emerged from an extensive consultative process launched in January 2024, involving Member States, regional and subregional organizations, United Nations entities, civil society organizations, faith-based organizations, the private sector, development partners, academia, and children and young people.

From Commitment to Action: How the Alliance Works




Timeline of Key Milestones
2023 | OCTOBER - The Special Representative was requested to lead the Pathfinding countries workstream, following the decision of the Board of the Global Partnership |
2024 | JANUARY - Launch of extensive consultative processes with Member States and various stakeholders |
| SEPTEMBER - First multistakeholder technical workshop - Geneva | |
NOVEMBER - Launch of the Pathfinding Global Alliance at the First Global Ministerial Conference on Ending Violence against Children - Bogotá, Colombia | |
2025 | APRIL - Regional meeting of Pathfinding countries - Europe |
MAY - Regional meeting of Pathfinding countries - Africa | |
JULY - Regional meeting of Pathfinding countries - Americas | |
SEPTEMBER - Regional meeting of Pathfinding countries - Arab Region | |
OCTOBER - Regional meeting — Central Asia | |
| OCTOBER - UN General Assembly welcomes the Alliance UNGA | |
NOVEMBER - | |
| NOVEMBER - Meeting of Permanent Representatives to the UN - New York | |
2026 | MARCH - Group of Friends and Permanent Representatives of Pathfinding Countries to the UN - Geneva |
JUNE - Global Gathering of Pathfinding Countries - Turin, Italy |
Members of the Pathfinding Global Alliance
*As of May 2026, 52 Member States have joined the Alliance.
(Angola, Armenia, Botswana, Brazil, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Côte d’Ivoire, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Finland, France, Gabon, Georgia, Greece, Guinea, Honduras, Iceland, Indonesia, Iraq, Jamaica, Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Mexico, Mongolia, Montenegro, Namibia, Nigeria, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Peru, Philippines, Portugal, Romania, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Spain, Sri Lanka, Sweden, Tanzania, Timor-Leste, Türkiye, Uganda, United Arab Emirates, Uzbekistan, Zambia, and Zimbabwe)
The Marketplace for Knowledge Sharing
A secure space for countries to connect and share expertise, access practical tools, engage in peer learning, and actively facilitate bilateral and multilateral co-operation across regions.
Developed within the framework of the Pathfinding Global Alliance on Ending Violence Against Children, the Marketplace serves as a collaborative space dedicated to advancing efforts to end all forms of violence against children. It brings together governments, United Nations entities, civil society organizations, children and young people, the private sector, and other key stakeholders from across regions.
The Marketplace facilitates the exchange of knowledge, experience, and promising practices, enabling stakeholders to learn from one another and strengthen cross-border collaboration. It provides access to a growing repository of resources, including policy frameworks, evidence-based interventions, community engagement initiatives, advocacy approaches, and lessons learned from implementation.
How to prioritize child protection and well-being in the political agenda?
How to ensure a whole-of-government approach to end violence against children?
How to ensure a protective legal framework and a child-friendly justice for all children?
How to translate policies into a set of integrated services accessible to all children?
How to involve CSOs, religious and traditional leaders, communities, and children?
How can progress on ending violence against children be measured and demonstrated?
How can co-operations and partnerships strengthen action to end violence against children?


