http://www.unwomen.org/~/media/headquarters/attachments/sections/library/publications/2015/cyber_violence_gender%20report.pdf?v=1&d=20150924T154259
  
Millions of women and girls around the world are 
subjected to deliberate violence because of their gender. 
Violence against women and girls (VAWG) knows no 
boundaries, cutting across borders, race, culture and 
income groups, profoundly harming victims, people 
around them, and society as a whole.
1
The growing reach of the Internet, the rapid spread of 
mobile information and communications technologies 
(ICTs) and the wide diffusion of social media have 
presented new opportunities and enabled various efforts 
to address VAWG.
2
 However, they are also being used as 
tools to inflict harm on women and girls. Cyber-VAWG is 
emerging as a global problem with serious implications for 
societies and economies around the world. The statistics 
pose risks to the peace and prosperity for all enshrined 
in the Charter of the United Nations, and, in par ticular, to 
the goals of inclusive, sustainable development that puts 
gender equality and the empowerment of women as key 
to its achievement.  
Writing this repor t has, in some sense, been a race to 
keep up with breaking news, as girl after girl and woman 
after woman, has come forward to expose physical and 
verbal attacks on them: teenage girls driven to suicide by 
online trolling
; an airline passenger using her cell phone 
to record and report physical and sexual harassment from 
a male co-passenger; an actress publicly responding to 
targeted 
online hate speech
 against her; a former Major 
League Baseball pitcher using 
doxing
3
 to identify people 
responsible for "Twitter troll" posts with obscene, sexually 
explicit comments about his teenage daughter. 
 
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