Protecting human rights in childbirth

Registered Charity Number 1151152

Birthrights CEOs to step down

Shanthi Gunesekera and Janaki Mahadevan will be stepping down as Birthrights co-CEOs from July 2025. 

Having joined in January 2023, a decade since the charity began, Shanthi and Janaki have laid the groundwork for Birthrights to continue to protect human rights in childbirth for the next ten years. Birthrights’ new 10-year strategic framework will support long-term, systemic change in maternity care, centring on anti-oppression and the most marginalised communities. Shanthi and Janaki’s contributions have strengthened our organisational foundations, achieved real impact for women and birthing people and established an exciting pipeline of critical activity in support of our mission.

“We are deeply honoured to have been able to be a part of the movement for birth justice and reproductive justice, as CEOs of Birthrights. The work towards meaningful, systemic change in maternity care is long-term, generational work, and we leave Birthrights in a stronger position than ever to champion and protect the rights of women and birthing people during pregnancy and childbirth. The charity has in place an incredibly talented and dedicated staff team and Board of Trustees; strengthened organisational foundations; and multi-year support from funders committed to systemic change for the most marginalised communities. 

We are so proud of Birthrights’ recent work including developing a new 10 year strategic framework; launching a campaign for a new SAFE Maternity Care Act; challenging the emergency response to the 2024 riots to consider maternity and postnatal care needs; publishing ‘Access Denied’ – a report unveiling the national failure to provide widely available and accessible home birth services, denying our rights to make decisions about our bodies and our care; influencing policy on unassisted birth and out of guidelines care; and working in partnership with communities and organisations towards a radically different future for women and birthing people.

And we are confident in Birthrights’ powerful pipeline activity: campaigning for new legislation rooted in community-led visioning; supporting community power-building through training and resource development; strategic litigation; training to healthcare professionals; and our ongoing information service for women and birthing people. 

We have learned so much as CEOs of Birthrights and are so grateful that Birthrights has supported us to lead the organisation together. ”

Birthrights’ trustees have now started recruitment for a new CEO/s.