International
Human Rights Law and Practice: Implications for Women
By
Florence Butegwa* (This article originally appeared in a publication
by Women, Law and Development International entitled, From Basic
Needs to Basic Rights: Women's Claim to Human Rights, edited
by Margaret Schuler. Posted with the publisher's permission.)
There appears to be broad agreement that "modern" international
human rights law owes its development to the United Nations and
its institutions (Buergenthal, 1988; Renteln, 1990; Shelley, 1989).
It is becoming increasingly clear that the human rights discourse
is central to many multilateral and bilateral policy formulations
whether within or outside the framework of the United Nations. Progress
in the protections of human rights is a determining factor, at least
at the rhetorical level and in certain international political contexts,
in shaping international and bilateral political and economic relationships
(Shelley, 1989).
In
spite of this broad agreement and the significance of the concept
of human rights in current politics at the national and international
level, the exact meaning tends to be hazy, subjective and clouded
by political self-interests of the states. The nature and content
of human rights is as controversial today as it was in 1948 when
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted.
This
paper examines the concept of human rights, the development of international
human rights law and the implications for the human rights of women.
The major human rights instruments shy away from a definition of
human rights, contenting themselves with an enumeration of the rights
that they respectively seek to protect. Despite attempts by scholars
to define the concept, it would appear from the formulations of
the instruments and the practice of human rights treaty bodies,
states and nongovernmental human rights organizations that the content
of human rights and the nature and extent of obligations assumed
by states is not definitive. It may vary from one historical moment
to another. Human Rights is a dynamic concept and this fact has
significant implications for women.
If
the content of and obligations pertinent to changes with time, are
they also influenced by cultural, religious and development specificity?
In other words, is the controversy over the so-called universality
or relativism of human rights significant to the women's human rights
discourse? This paper argues that women's human rights are vulnerable
in both theoretical and political positions. While many states and
the international human rights bodies have historically promoted
the concept of universal human rights, their practices have rarely
addressed women-specific violations. Similarly, those states advancing
the need for a concept of human rights that is sensitive and responsive
to cultural, religious and developmental contexts have tended to
raise their voices more in those issues of specific concern to women.
The
development of human rights law and practice also has been significantly
influenced by the still controversial concept of indivisibility
of human rights. In spite of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, which treated all human rights stated therein as equal,
the practice has been for different states to give preference to
either civil and political rights or economic, social and cultural
rights. The so-called "Western" and "socialist"
or developing country positions can easily be seen from the following
excerpts:
Since
human rights and fundamental freedoms are indivisible, the full
realization of civil and political rights without the enjoyment
of economic, social and cultural rights is impossible. The achievement
of lasting progress in the implementation of human rights is dependent
upon sound and effective national and international development
policies of economic and social development (Proclamation of Tehran,
1968).
By
contrast, some legal scholars do rank rights in order of importance.
Cassese (1986), for example, argues, "Although it is not possible
to rank human rights in order of preference, civil and political
rights appear to be of primary importance."
The
paper argues that the division of human rights into civil and political
rights and the resultant hierarchical importance given to civil
and political rights within the United Nations and in the practice
of states have slowed down progress in the recognition and protection
of women's human rights. They have also restricted the women's human
rights discourse and jurisprudence to the framework of equality
and discrimination. In this framework the theory, practice and application
accept the male as the norm and point of departure (Peterson, 1990).
As a result, legitimate concerns of women which lacked a male norm
or experience, have been considered irrelevant to the human rights
framework until very recently.
The
end of the Cold War and the growth of a strong women's human rights
advocacy movement have opened up possibilities for international
human rights law to be relevant to the majority of the world's women.
The progress made as a result of the Second World Conference on
Human Rights in Vienna in 1993 needs to be consolidated by the development
and jurisprudence and practice in women's rights in the United Nations
human rights system, in regional human rights frameworks and in
the work of nongovernmental organizations at all levels.
The
Concept of Human Rights
Although
human rights is a key concept in international law and relations,
its precise meaning and content remain as controversial as ever.
The Charter of the United Nations, to which the development of human
rights law is often attributed, is a prototype. Article 1(3) includes,
as part of the purposes of the organization, the promotion and encouragement
of a respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms for all,
but without defining them. (See also Article 55 and 56 of the Charter
of the United Nations.) The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
also shies away from a definition. Its preamble merely declares
that "recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal
and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the
foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world." The
operative articles merely list the rights and freedoms guaranteed
by the Declaration. This pattern is repeated in the other major
international human rights instruments. (See the International
Covenant on Social, Economic and Cultural Rights, the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the Convention on
the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, the Convention
on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women
and the Convention on the Rights of the Child.)
Human
rights scholars either have assumed that the concept is universal
and requires no definition or have offered definitions which offer
little help to a person grappling with the questions of what a human
right is and what qualifies something to be a human right. Henkin
(1989) states that the idea of human rights is related, but not
equivalent to, justice, good and democracy. It is a political idea
with a moral foundation which defines the relationship that should
exist between the individual and society (Henkin, 1989). Cranston
(1973) defines human rights as moral rights which all men everywhere
at all times ought to have and something which no one may be deprived
of without grave affront to justice; something which is owing to
every human being simply because he is human. Wasserstrom (1964)
outlines the four characteristics which a human right must have:
First,
it must be possessed by all human beings, as well as only by human
beings. Second, because it is the same right that all human beings
possess, it must be possessed equally by all human beings. Third,
because human rights are possessed by all human beings, we can
rule out as possible candidates any of those rights which one
might have in virtue of occupying any particular status or relationship,
such as that of parent, president, or promisee. And fourth, if
there are any human rights, they have the additional characteristic
of being assertable, in a manner of speaking, "against the
whole world." (p. 50)
Stark
(1989) sees human rights as internationally recognized norms for
behavior of states and other persons in international law; Buergenthal
(1988) defines human rights by reference to the law which governs
human rights. He refers to "the law which deals with the protection
of individuals and groups against violations by governments"
(p. 1).
Attempts
at defining human rights have not been central to the human rights
discourse. There is a surprising and significant assumption, similar
to that made by the human rights instrument, that the concept itself
is obvious and does not require clarification. A look at the definition
of human rights provided above shows the inherent difficulty of
the concept. They range from the very abstract and justification-oriented
approach offered by Henkin to the limited and pragmatic approach
adopted by Stark.
The
aim of this section of the paper is not to critique existing definitions,
however, but rather to shed some light on the position of women
within the human rights discourse. International human rights law
has not been effectively used to redress violations of women's human
rights (Cook, 1993). Is the problem inherent in the definition and
perception of human rights as a concept? Wasserstrom's (1964) understanding
of human rights as rights possessed by all human beings equally
seems to reflect the notion underlying most human rights instruments.
While there is no explicit reference to women in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) or in the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), all
of the instruments implicitly include women in the "equality"
context. The covenants underscore this "unisex approach"
by providing that
each
State Party to the present Covenant undertakes to respect and
to ensure to all individuals within its territory and subject
to its jurisdiction the rights recognized in the present Covenant,
without distinction of any kind, such as...sex... (Tomasevski,
1993).
Because
women have not been perceived as having any human rights unique
to their gender and not shared equally with men, any claims to entitlement
to protection by women had to be framed within the "equality"
framework. For women to show violations of their rights as women,
they had to show that they were discriminated against in that the
law or practices of the state failed to provide women the same protections
as men. As a result, scholars and other proponents of women's human
rights were forced to argue for recognition of specific women's
human rights issues within the discrimination clauses of the international
instruments.
It
is this assumption of a "unisex" concept of human rights
that needs closer attention and analysis. How objective and/or justified
is this assumption of a "unisex" conception of human rights?
Women and men do share some common aspirations as to fundamental
rights and freedoms, but one cannot deny the fact that there are
significant differences between men and women. The differences arise
from biological differences as well as from the differential roles
and vulnerabilities arising out of those biological differences.
They may also arise from the socialization process and consequent
roles and vulnerabilities associated with those roles.
It
is from this perspective that women do have legitimate claim to
human rights and fundamental freedoms due them as women. There are
actions and/or omissions which impinge on "the inherent dignity"
of women as members of the human family within the context of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights that are not experienced
by men. When there is no equivalent category of experience for men,
the equality or non- discrimination discourse found in most human
rights instruments is inapplicable. The result has been an absence
of guarantees for fundamental rights and freedoms when women are
the actors most affected. A closer look at the interpretation and
actions of various human rights organizations will confirm that
despite claims of gender neutrality in human rights instruments,
the monitoring bodies and human rights nongovernmental organizations
have rarely considered human rights specific to women as worth monitoring
and reporting upon.
Similarly,
within national constitutions where the concept of gender neutrality
has been adopted, interpretation and application tends to leave
out women. A notable historical example (unfortunately still replicated
in many countries) was the English Representation of the People
Act (1867), granting men the right to vote. The term "man"
was used in the text of the act. On the basis of the rule of interpretation
that words importing the male gender shall be taken to include females,
a woman, Mary Abbott, requested that her name be included on the
electoral registrar. Her application was rejected by both electoral
authorities and the courts in the ensuing court case (Tomasevski,
1993).
Acceptance
by the international community of the demand for a specific framework
for women's rights would give the human rights system effective
mechanisms to address women-specific issues, including reproductive
choice and health, and violence against women in all its forms,
such as the slave-like practices like Ngozi in Zimbabwe or trokosi
in Ghana in which young girls are given out (to other families or
to shrines) in atonement for "wrongs" committed by their
families.
Some
encouraging steps toward broadening the language of human rights
instruments to protect women have already been taken. In June 1993,
the Second World Conference on Human Rights declared that:
The
human rights of women and the girl-child are an inalienable, integral
and indivisible part of universal human rights. Gender-based violence
and all forms of sexual harassment and exploitation, including
those resulting from cultural prejudice and international trafficking,
are incompatible with the dignity and worth of the human person,
and must be eliminated. (Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action,
1993, p. 33).
The
United Nations General Assembly also has adopted the Declaration
on the Elimination of Violence Against Women. The United Nations
Commission on Human Rights has appointed a Special Rapporteur on
Violence Against Women and has called upon other human rights bodies
and special rapporteurs to deal with the issue of violence against
women within their specific mandates. These advances are welcome
but much more needs to be done in reconceptualizing human rights
and the mandates and practices of the international community to
address women-specific human rights concerns. The safeguarding of
people's rights is, and will continue to be, both conceptually and
practically, an unfinished task, a permanent challenge to take action
to advance the humanization of the world community.
Universality
of Human Rights
The
magnitude of the horrors of the Second World War and the need to
protect individuals from abuses on that scale provided sufficient
incentives for states to put their own interests and claims of sovereignty
in second place in 1948. States were able to adopt the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights as a common standard of achievement
for all peoples and all nations. The rights and freedoms guaranteed
therein were to have universal validity and application. The concept
of universality of human rights has become one of the cornerstones
of the international human rights framework reiterated as recently
as 1993. The Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action boldly
assert that the universal nature of human rights is beyond question.
This would appear to be borne out by the practice states in adopting
the principles enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights into national constitutions and other domestic law or
in relying upon it in their relationships with other states and
intergovernmental organizations.
In
spite of the apparent consensus on universality, however, it cannot
be denied that when it suits some states, the idea of universal
human rights has been and continues to be questioned and disowned.
Demands for a concept of human rights that is sensitive to cultural
and religious particularities and values continue to be voiced.
Governments in national and international fora that demand cultural
and religious hegemony argue that women's dignity is at risk when
universal standards are applied in their countries, especially in
the arenas of marriage and the family. Even within these spheres,
aspects of culture that safeguarded the dignity of women have been
largely discarded and/or made inoperable in the modern socio-economic
environment.
A look
at the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
Against Women may provide a good case study. It is the human
rights convention with the most reservations attached. The reservations
are not limited to procedural matters, but to substantive provisions,
some of which go to the core and purpose of the convention. What
is insightful is that some of the states entered reservations on
articles they purport to accept in the context of other humans rights
instruments. It is, therefore, pertinent to ask whether cultural
and religious or other relativism in human rights theory and practice
are in the interests of the protection of the human rights of women.
Indivisibility
of Human Rights
For
decades most "western" developed countries have put emphasis
and resources on the promotion and protection of civil and political
rights. They see these rights as necessary ingredients of good governance
and democracy, which are prerequisites to development (Cassese,
1986). Several reasons have been advanced for this preference. Among
these is the perceived cost of states of ensuring these rights.
Civil and political rights are characterized as negative and cost-free
rights in that governments are only required to abstain from activities
which would violate them. This is contrasted with economic, social
and cultural rights which require governments to do something, thereby
committing considerable resources, to ensure individuals the enjoyment
of those rights. An additional difference lies in the fact that
civil and political rights are relatively capable of precise definition,
readily justiciable and susceptible to enforcement (Alston, 1987).
A discussion
of whether treating civil and political rights as superior rights
is justified is beyond the scope of this paper. It is sufficient
to make several observations. Privileging civil and political rights
has resulted in significantly advancing those rights over the promotion
of economic, social and cultural rights. The ICCPR has an
Optional Protocol providing an individual complaints procedure.
The right of access by individuals and the resultant interaction
between the committee and state parties have given this treaty body
the much needed political clout to be taken seriously. The Human
Rights Committee has through its General Comments helped develop
jurisprudence in the area of civil and political rights. The United
Nations Commission on Human Rights has complemented and consolidated
these advances through its special procedures. A significant number
of nongovernmental organizations have complemented over the decades
the work of the Human Rights Committee and the Commission on Human
Rights in promoting rights and monitoring and reporting violations.
Indivisibility
and the Human Rights of Women
While
these developments are welcome, they have created an undesirable
hierarchy among human rights. Civil and political rights are now
referred to as first-generation rights. More conservative scholars
and practitioners regard them as the human rights. These developments
have had considerable implications for the human rights of women.
Although women have made significant strides in the bid to play
a key role in the politics of their countries, for the majority
of women economic, social and cultural rights still remain a major
concern. Women are concerned about enhancing their economic status
as a major step in freeing themselves from economic dependence on
men. This in turn contributes to ensuring their own dignity and
life choices. Consequently, access to property, employment (Arts.
6, 7, ICESCR) and credit are crucial rights. Similarly, women
are concerned that adequate housing, food, clothing and overall
living standards be assured (Art. 11, ICESCR). Women want
to work with the State to realize economic, social and cultural
rights. It is crucial, therefore, that they be afforded opportunity
for education at all levels (Art. 13, ICESCR). Because culture
everywhere has a direct impact on the rights of women to exercise
fundamental rights and freedoms, especially in developing countries,
it is important that women participate in the definitions of cultural
values and content (Art. 15, ICESCR).
Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights and Human Development
It
is not only in the interests of the human rights of women that greater
promotion and protection of economic, social and cultural rights
is important. Human development, dignity and security within the
prevailing socio-economic order depend on it. The United Nations
Human Development Report (UNDP, 1994) puts it in the following
terms: For a long time, the concept of (human) security has been
shaped by the potential for conflict between states.
For
too long, security has been equated with threats to a country's
borders. For too long, nations have sought arms to protect their
security.
For
most people today, a feeling of insecurity arises more from worries
about life than from the dread of a cataclysmic world event. Job
security, income security, health security, environmental security,
security from crime - these are emerging concerns of human security
all over the world.
A look
at human development indicators for a majority of countries will
show the urgent need for international human rights community, individual
states, intergovernmental and nongovernmental organizations to give
as much emphasis to the promotion of economic, social and cultural
rights as is given to civil and political rights. For most countries,
standards of living are falling. As countries struggle with economic
structural adjustment programs, job security is no longer guaranteed.
Government subsidies on health, education and other amenities are
dwindling fast, exposing greater numbers to a life without health
care and education. Malnourishment in children and adults in the
developing world is an increasingly serious problem.
The
Way Forward
There
is an increasing sense of urgency and consensus that economic, social
and cultural rights must be promoted and protected with greater
zeal and efficiency than ever before. The Second World Conference
on Human Rights resulted in the consensus that "all human rights
are universal, indivisible and interdependent and interrelated.
The international community must treat human rights globally in
a fair and equal manner, on the same footing, and with the same
emphasis" (Vienna Declaration, 1993, para. 5).
The
Second World Conference further encourages the Commission on Human
Rights, in cooperation with the Committee on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights, to continue the examination of optional protocols
to the ICESCR (Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action,
1993, para. 75). Several other developments are also notable, including
the appointment of a thematic working group on the right to development,
which the Second World Conference affirmed as an inalienable fundamental
right.
There
is an urgent need on the part of the Committee on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights, the Commission on Human Rights, other human
rights bodies and nongovernmental organizations to make concrete
proposals for the effective implementation of the ICESCR.
It is true that state parties to the Covenant enter into legally
binding obligations to:
take
steps, individually and through international assistance and cooperation,
especially economic and technical, to the maximum of its available
resources, with a vie to progressive realization of the rights
recognized in the ...Covenant...
An
analysis of this provision indicates that it was never envisaged
that states would do nothing. Rather, states must take steps in
accordance with heir resources to ensure progressive realization
of these rights. The steps may include legislative action to remove
barriers to realization of rights or may involve creating an environment
conducive to the realization of the rights (Alston, 1987). To facilitate
a definition of what steps might be adequate for compliance with
the overall obligations in the Covenant (thereby assisting states
parties in their reporting), there is a need to look at minimum
standards in each area covered by the Covenant. In the field of
health, for instance, what is the absolute minimum that states parties
in the least developed countries group can do to comply with the
obligations in the Covenant? The Covenant recognizes that the realization
of rights has to be progressive and the pace is dependent on the
resources available to the states. Unless attempts are made at more
specific and quantifiable ways of measuring progress there is a
real danger of states feeling overwhelmed by the task and just dismissing
the entire Covenant as a mere statement of ideals rather than creating
legal obligations.
The
women's rights movement can play a key role in this process. As
indicated earlier, economic, social and cultural rights are important
in the struggle for equality and dignity for women. The Commission
on the Status of Women, the Committee on the Elimination of All
Forms of Discrimination Against Women and the various women's rights
advocacy groups around the world need to take the issue of indivisibility
of human rights seriously. Lobbying for a faster pace in the development
of an optional protocol to the ICESCR is one aspect of the
challenge ahead. Articulation of jurisprudence and concepts that
define more concretely the obligations of the states is another
and perhaps more crucial aspect. Lobbying for the strengthening
of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural rights is the
other aspect. Lobbying so-called mainstream human rights groups
to address economic and social rights as an integral part of their
mandate also is a means of adding pressure on states to act.
Conclusion
In
conclusion, I refer to the words of Merek Thee (1993) that the pursuit
of human rights is far from complete. It requires constant attention
with a view to greater precision, amplification and actual incorporation
in national and international law.
For
the world's women, this observation is true. The international human
rights community has a long way to go to guarantee the dignity of
women. The challenge is to reconceptualize human rights to include
the human rights of women and to extend beyond the dictates of equality
to cover concerns particular to women as women. Related to this
challenge of looking at culture, religion and other tenets of group
identity as tools for the dignity of the group and for individuals
rather than as a millstone to keep them in servitude and suffering
human indignities. Another challenge is addressing economic, social
and cultural inequities women suffer by promoting and protecting
more effectively economic, social and cultural rights.
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*Florence
Butegwa was the founder and coordinator of Women in Law and Development
Africa (WiLDAF). She is currently with Associates for Change in
Uganda.
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