“…Marginalisation, everyday survival and wider structural inequalities means that women's rights and needs are left aside (Chant & McIlwaine, 2016;Razavi, 2020;Tacoli & Satterthwaite, 2013, Holliss et al, 2023. Such inequalities have been reinforced further with the COVID-19 pandemic during which women faced increased violence, immobility and under-representation (Bichard & Ramster, 2021, Holliss, 2021, Parker et al, this issue, Üçoğlu et al, 2021. The decolonial lens inherent to women-led urbanism is here crucial to unpack systems of power and domination and also the forms of knowledge production leading to gender inequalities (Koleth et al, 2023).…”