The rankings must compel action — not provide comfort.
Canada sits at 16th place in the latest global ranking of women's safety and well-being — one spot higher than it held two years ago, and fifteen ahead of its southern neighbor. The numbers come from the Women, Peace, and Security Index, a biennial report produced jointly by the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace, and Security and the Peace Research Institute Oslo. This edition assessed 181 countries across three broad dimensions: inclusion, justice, and security.
The index is not a narrow measure. It draws on data about financial independence, legal protections, political representation, and rates of violence against women. Canada's relative strength in all of these areas — particularly financial autonomy, women's share of parliamentary seats, the absence of formal legal discrimination, and comparatively low rates of intimate partner violence — pushed it up from 17th in the 2023/2024 edition to 16th in the current one.
The United States, by contrast, sits at 31st. That's an improvement of six places from its previous ranking of 37th, which means the country is moving in the right direction — but it still trails Canada by a significant margin. The report also breaks the U.S. down by state, and the internal variation is stark: Massachusetts ranks first among all 51 entries, while Louisiana comes in dead last.
At the very top of the global list, Denmark holds the number one position for the second consecutive cycle, posting strong scores across every measured category. Iceland, Norway, and Sweden follow closely, rounding out a Nordic bloc that has dominated these rankings for years. Finland comes in fifth. The bottom of the list belongs to Afghanistan, ranked 181st — last among all nations assessed.
The researchers behind the index are careful to frame these rankings not as abstract scorecards but as reflections of something deeper. Societies where women hold higher status, the report argues, tend to be more peaceful, more economically resilient, and better equipped to absorb shocks — whether from climate disruption or financial crisis. The connection, in their view, runs in both directions: women's well-being shapes national stability, and national stability shapes women's well-being.
But the report does not let high-ranking countries rest easy. Its authors note that women around the world continue to carry a disproportionate share of the work involved in rebuilding communities and improving conditions — often without meaningful institutional backing. The language in the report is pointed: that reality, the authors write, must compel action, not provide comfort.
Canada's climb is real, but it is incremental. One place in two years. The country still faces persistent challenges on women's issues, and the index captures only what data can measure. What it cannot fully capture is the lived experience of women navigating systems that the numbers describe only in outline.
The next edition of the WPS Index will arrive in roughly two years. Between now and then, the question the report implicitly poses is whether the countries near the top of the list — and those far from it — will treat these rankings as a ceiling or a floor.
Notable Quotes
Societies where women's status is higher are also more peaceful, prosperous, and resilient — including in the face of climate change and economic shocks.— Women, Peace, and Security Index report
Women have been left to shoulder the responsibility of rebuilding their communities, often with little support. This reality must compel us to act — not comfort us.— Women, Peace, and Security Index report
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
What does it actually mean to rank 16th in something like this? Is that genuinely good?
It means Canada is in the top ten percent of 181 countries — which is meaningful. But the gap between 16th and 1st is still real, and the report is careful not to let high-ranking countries treat the number as a trophy.
What's Denmark doing that Canada isn't?
The report doesn't spell it out country by country, but Denmark scores strongly across all three pillars — inclusion, justice, and security — without notable weak spots. Canada has strengths, but the composite picture is slightly less consistent.
The U.S. jumped six spots. Is that significant progress?
Six places in two years is a real move. But going from 37th to 31st still leaves the U.S. outside the top 30, and well behind Canada. The direction is right; the distance remaining is considerable.
The state-level breakdown for the U.S. is interesting. What does it tell us?
It tells us the national number masks enormous internal variation. Massachusetts and Louisiana are both in the same country, but they represent very different realities for women living there.
The report says women are left to rebuild communities with little support. What does that mean in practice?
It means that even in countries making measurable progress, the informal labor of recovery — after disasters, economic downturns, social disruption — still falls disproportionately on women, often invisibly and without compensation.
Why does this index matter beyond the rankings themselves?
Because the researchers argue the correlation runs both ways — countries that do better by women are also more stable and resilient overall. It reframes women's rights as a structural issue, not just a moral one.
Afghanistan at 181st — is that a surprise to anyone?
No. But seeing it written plainly, as the last country on a list of 181, is still a stark reminder of how far conditions there have deteriorated, particularly since 2021.