About IAW
Intersectionality Awareness Week exists because identity is never just one thing.
About
What is Intersectionality Awareness Week?
Intersectionality Awareness Week is a global awareness campaign dedicated to spotlighting the lives, experiences, and challenges of people who exist at the crossroads of multiple marginalised identities.
This year (2026), Intersectionality Awareness Week will take place between 11th – 17th May.
Every year, this week brings together individuals, organisations, and communities to move beyond single-issue conversations about equality and start talking about the full, complex picture of who people are. Because identity is never just one thing. Race, disability, gender, sexuality, class, and more do not exist in isolation. They overlap, interact, and shape lived experiences in ways that mainstream diversity and inclusion frameworks too often miss.
Intersectionality Awareness Week creates dedicated space to change that. Through events, conversations, campaigns, and advocacy, the week amplifies the voices of intersectional communities and challenges the systems and structures that marginalise them.

Crenshaw
What is intersectionality?
To understand Intersectionality Awareness Week, it helps to understand where the concept comes from.
Kimberlé Crenshaw coined the term “intersectionality” in 1989. She used it to describe how social categories such as race, gender, and class intersect to create overlapping experiences of discrimination. Furthermore, she highlighted how these forms of discrimination compound, and how the legal system often fails to recognise their combined impact.
Crenshaw grew up in Ohio during the civil rights and second-wave feminist movements of the 1960s and 70s. Consequently, her upbringing shaped her thinking in profound ways:
“My mom was a little bit more radical and confrontational and my father was a little bit more Martin Luther King and ‘find common ground’. Which is probably why there are strains of both of those in my work.”
Her framework has transformed how we understand discrimination and it remains as urgent today as ever.
The need
Why do we need Intersectionality Awareness Week?
The world often reduces identity to single labels. However, people’s lives are far more complex than that. Intersectionality Awareness Week exists to spotlight the overlapping experiences of those living at the crossroads of multiple marginalised identities.
Intersectionality Awareness Week has three core goals:
Get involved
Intersectionality Awareness Week is, we hope, the beginning of a global cultural shift away from diversity and inclusion frameworks that focus on single aspects of identity, and towards a more holistic, compassionate, and open understanding of the people around us.




