Background
to the Demands Including Recommendations, Questions and Actions
The
demands included in this Take Action kit
focus on the commitments governments made in the Beijing Declaration
and Platform for Action (IV World Conference on Women, 1995)
to take action toward the realization of women's human rights. This
background information contains specific recommendations from the
Platform for Action of concrete steps governments should
take regarding each demand. In addition, we provide more information
about the topic, relating it to the Universal Declaration for
Human Rights and the Vienna Declaration and Programme of
Action (World Conference on Human Rights, 1993). Finally, we
include a series of questions for advocates to pose to their governments
as a way to generate a broader conversation about the governments'
plans for acting upon their commitments, as well as some suggested
actions for non-governmental organizations (NGO) who are concerned
with these issues.
Building
on the UDHR and the Vienna Declaration and Programme
of Action, the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action
declares: "Human rights and fundamental freedoms are the birthright
of all human beings; their protection and promotion is the first
responsibility of Governments." (Para.210). It reaffirms that
"all human rights -- civil, cultural, economic, political and
social, including the right to development -- are universal, indivisible,
interdependent and interrelated." (Para. 214). It emphasizes
that "[t]he full and equal enjoyment of all human rights and
fundamental freedoms by women and girls is a priority for Governments
and the United Nations and is essential for the advancement of women"
(para. 214).
In
this background information, the five demands and questions
are arranged in the following format:
A.
Demand
B.
Recommended steps governments should take to meet that demand,
with relevant language from the Beijing Declaration
and Platform for Action;
C.
Background information about the demands from the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, the Beijing
Declaration and Platform for Action, and the
Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action;
D.
Questions to ask your government and generate discussion
about the demands;
E.
Five actions you can take to advance these demands.
A
short list which contains the demands and recommended
steps only is included in the Take Action
kit also.
Demands,
Recommendations and Questions
A.
Demand #1
The
Beijing Platform for Action provides a detailed articulation of
what implementation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
means for women. Therefore, we call for increased action toward
and resources for its full implementation. In order to fully achieve
these goals, governments must also respect and protect defenders
of the human rights of women.
B.
Recommendations
*
Dedicate new and expanded resources or reallocate existing resources
to addressing women's human rights.
Paragraph
232 (a) of the Platform for Action calls for governments
to "give priority to promoting and protecting the full and
equal enjoyment by women and men of all human rights and fundamental
freedoms without distinction of any kind as to race, colour, sex,
language, religion, political or other opinions, national or social
origin, property, birth or other status." Realizing this commitment
requires that governments dedicate adequate resources to gender
integration and gender analysis in all their activities.
*
Take immediate steps to implement the Beijing
Platform for Action's recommendation to fully
integrate the human rights of women throughout all policies and
programmes.
As
emphasized in paragraph 221 of the Platform for Action,
"[t]he human rights of women and the girl-child must form an
integral part of United Nations human rights activities. Intensified
efforts are needed to integrate the equal status and the human rights
of all women and girls into the mainstream of United Nations system-wide
activities and to address these issues regularly and systematically
throughout relevant bodies and mechanisms."
*
Work toward ratification of the Declaration
on the Rights of Human Rights Defenders (officially
referred to as the Draft Declaration on the
Right and Responsibility of Individuals, Groups and Organs of Society
to Promote and Protect Universally Recognized Human Rights and Fundamental
Freedoms).
Paragraph
228 states that "[w]omen engaged in the defense of human rights
must be protected...Non-governmental organizations, women's organizations
and feminist groups have played a catalytic role in the promotion
of the human rights of women through grass-roots activities, networking
and advocacy and need encouragement, support and access to information
from Governments in order to carry out these activities."
C.
Background
The
Platform for Action notes that "[u]nless the human
rights of women, as defined by international human rights instruments,
are fully recognized and effectively protected, applied,implemented
and enforced in national law as well as national practice in family,
civil, penal, labor and commercial codes and administrative rules
and regulations, they will exist in name only" (Paragraph 218).
The steps needed to implement this commitment can only be effectively
implemented if adequate resources are devoted to them.
The
steps recommended here are fundamental to fulfilling Article 1 of
the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which proclaims
"[a]ll human beings are born free and equal in dignity and
rights," and Article 2 which emphasizes that "[e]veryone
is entitled to all the rights and freedoms set forth in this Declaration,
without distinction of any kind, such as race, color, sex, language,
religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin,
property, birth or other status."
These
commitments by governmental and intergovernmental agencies are reiterated
in the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action which
clearly states "[t]he human rights of women and of the girl-child
are an inalienable, integral and indivisible part of universal human
rights. The full and equal participation of women in political,
civil, economic, social and cultural life, at the national, regional
and international levels, and the eradication of all forms of discrimination
on ground of sex are priority objectives of the international community"
(Paragraph 18).
Thus,
while the UDHR sets out the broad foundations of human
rights, the Vienna Declaration and the Beijing Platform
for Action translate these into more concrete steps that governments
must take. More detailed articulations of human rights are also
spelled out in various human rights conventions and declarations.
These broad goals require that governments actively work toward
the ratification and implementation of international and regional
human rights treaties. Moreover, they will only become translated
into national law and policy with a commitment to implementation
and the resources necessary to ensuring such implementation. The
Platform for Action urges governments to do so by developing
national action plans which identify steps to improve the promotion
and protection of the human rights of women (paragraph 230 [d]).
D.
Questions to ask your governments
1.
What efforts is your government taking to promote gender equality
and gender parity as measured by the percentage of the budget allocated
to women's needs and rights in education, health care, social services,
etc?
2. Has your government undertaken efforts which have increased the
number of women in elected and appointed office? If not, why not?
3. What specific measures are being taken to implement the commitments
made in the Platform for Action through national law as
well as national practice, including family, civil, penal, labor
and commercial codes and administrative rules and regulations?
4. Has your government filed a National Action Plan
with the UN Division for the Advancement
of Women, regarding implementation of the Platform for Action?
If not, why not?
E.
Five actions you can take
1.
Resources: Adapt the enclosed postcard to the Secretary-General
of the United Nations, and send a similar request to appropriate
local and national policymakers.
2. Implementation: Begin a campaign to get your
village, town or city to adopt policies of gender equity and parity,
so that budget allocations are examined with a gender analysis.
(The Women's Institute for Leadership Development, based in San
Francisco, California, USA defines gender analysis as a critical
analysis of how the work of all agencies and programs affect women
and girls, and recognizes that both women and men can take action
that has an adverse impact on women and girls.
3. Implementation: Work with other women's, human
rights and social justice organizations to bring national laws into
compliance with international human rights instruments.
4. Human Rights Defenders: Build coalitions with
other women's, human rights and civil rights organizations to ensure
that human rights defenders are adequately protected.
5. Human Rights Defenders: Use commemorative dates
(such as March 8-International Women's Day, May 1-International
Labour Day, May 28-International Women's Health Day, November 25-International
Day Against Violence Against Women, December 1-World AIDS Day, etc.)
to highlight and honor the work of grassroots women activists as
human rights defenders.
A.
Demand #2
Outlaw
all forms of discrimination against women.
B.
Recommendations
*
Ensure ratification and implementation of the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against
Women (the Women's Convention) immediately.
In
paragraph 230 (b), the Platform for Action recommends governments
to take action to "ratify and accede to and ensure implementation
of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women (Women's Convention) so that universal ratification
of the Convention can be achieved by the year 2000."
*
Remove any reservations to the Women's Convention.
Paragraph
230 (c) of the Platform for Action recommends that governments
"limit the extent of any reservations to the Convention;
formulate any such reservations as precisely and as narrowly as
possible; ensure that no reservations are incompatible with the
object and purpose of the Convention or otherwise incompatible
with international treaty law and regularly review them with a view
to withdrawing them; and withdraw reservations that are contrary
to the object and purpose of the Convention...or which
are otherwise incompatible with international treaty law."
*Bring
national laws and policies into compliance with the Women's
Convention.
As
noted in paragraph 230 (g), governments should "implement the
Convention by reviewing all national laws, policies, practices
and procedures to ensure that they meet the obligations set out
in the Convention. Further, they should "embody the
principle of the equality of men and women in their legislation
and ensure, through law and other appropriate means, the practical
realization of this principle" (paragraph 232 [c]).
*
Work toward adopting a strong optional protocol to the Women's
Convention establishing a right of petition.
Paragraph
230 (k) of the Platform for Action calls for governments
to "support the process initiated by the Commission on the
Status of Women with a view to elaborating a draft optional protocol
to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women that could enter into force as soon as possible
on a rights of petition procedure..."
C.
Background
The
Universal Declaration of Human Rights calls for the protection
of human rights "without distinction of any kind, such as race,
color, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national
or social origin, property, birth or other status," (Article
2) and proclaims that "[a]ll are equal before the law and are
entitled without any discrimination to equal protection of the law"
(Article 6). The Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action
elaborates this in paragraph 15 by noting that "[r]espect for
human rights and for fundamental freedoms without distinction of
any kind is a fundamental rule of international human rights law.
The speedy and comprehensive elimination of all forms of racism
and racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance is
a priority task for the international community." Thus, while
the UDHR prohibits sex as a basis for discrimination it
does not have a gender perspective, nor does it specifically discuss
women's human rights. Elaborating upon this, the Vienna Declaration
emphasizes the importance of the elimination of discrimination,
as called for by the UDHR.
In
addition to emphasizing the importance of eliminating discrimination
against women on the basis of sex, the Platform recognizes
that many women may experience discrimination based on other factors.
It notes that "[m]any women face additional barriers to the
enjoyment of their human rights because of such factors as their
race, language, ethnicity, culture, religion, disability or socio-economic
class or because they are indigenous people, migrants, including
women migrant workers, displaced women or refugees. They may also
be marginalized by a general lack of knowledge and recognition of
their human rights as well as by the obstacles they meet in gaining
access to information and recourse mechanisms in cases of violations
of rights" (Paragraph 225).
The
primary document elaborating the steps required to eliminate discrimination
against women is the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Discrimination Against Women (the Women's Convention), adopted
by the United Nations in 1979. It defines discrimination against
women and outlines steps which ratifying countries must take in
both the public and private sphere to end discrimination against
women. To date, over 160 countries have ratified the Women's
Convention. Some countries, like the United States, have signed
but not ratified the treaty. Others have ratified the Convention,
but with reservations which are intended to limit the scope of governments'
duties under the Convention. In addition to the detailed
obligations in areas such as education, employment, health care,
family and marital relations, CEDAW (the Committee on the Elimination
of Discrimination Against Women, which monitors governments' compliance
with their obligations) has established through its General Recommendation
19, interpreting the Convention, that violence against
women is prohibited. The Platform for Action includes explicit
goals of universal ratification of the Convention by the
year 2000.
An
"optional protocol" to the Women's
Convention is currently being drafted. An optional
protocol is an additional treaty attached to a convention
and it must be separately signed and ratified. This optional protocol
is intended to enable individuals, and potentially groups and organizations,
to bring complaints to the committee which reviews countries' compliance
with the treaty- CEDAW. A strong optional protocol must first authorize
the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women
(CEDAW) to receive complaints from individuals, groups and organizations
alleging violations. Second, it must institute an inquiry procedure
which will enable CEDAW to initiate investigations of serious or
systematic violations of the Women's Convention. Currently
the only monitoring process for the Women's Convention
is through the periodic reports which countries make to CEDAW.
D.
Questions to ask your governments
1.
If your government has not yet ratified the Women's Convention,
why not?
2. If your government has ratified, but with reservations to the
Women's Convention, what will it take to remove or narrow
these reservations?
3. Has your government reported to CEDAW (the Committee on the Elimination
of Discrimination Against Women, which monitors governments' compliance
with the Women's Convention) on their efforts to implement
the Convention? Have they made this report(s) available to non-governmental
organizations?
4. How will or does your government involve non-governmental organizations
and civil society in developing their country report to CEDAW?
5. What process does your government use to disseminate CEDAW's
conclusions about national progress toward implementing the Women's
Convention?
6. How has the government incorporated the Women's Convention
and its General Recommendations into national law? What will it
take to bring all national laws at least up to the standard of the
Women's Convention?
7. Does your government actively support a strong optional protocol
to the Women's Convention? If not, why not? Do they need
additional information or resources?
E.
Five actions you can take
1.
Women's Convention: Campaign for ratification by
those countries that have not yet ratified the Women's Convention,
and to remove reservations in those countries that have ratified
with reservations.
2. Women's Convention: Work with women's, human
rights and legal action organizations to use the Women's Convention,
along with other international human rights instruments, in national
courts.
3. National laws: Build coalitions with other women's
and human rights organizations to pressure your government to bring
national laws into compliance with all human rights instruments
4. National compliance: Develop "shadow"
reports on your government's compliance with the Women's Convention.
(A "shadow report" is a report researched and written
by NGOs to reflect their analysis of the steps your government has
taken to comply with the Convention.)
5. Optional protocol: Lobby your governments to
work actively for a strong optional protocal.
A.
Demand #3
Ensure
women's right to live free from violence.
B.
Recommendations
*Take
concerted and systematic action to end violence against women in
the home and family through all necessary means.
The
Platform for Action notes that "[a]cts or threats
of violence, whether occurring within the home or in the community,
or perpetrated or condoned by the State, instill fear and insecurity
in women's lives and are obstacles to the achievement of equality
and for development and peace...High social, health and economic
costs to the individual and society are associated with violence
against women" (paragraph 117).
The
Platform also sets out specific steps that governments
must take to end violence against women, including violence against
women in the home, whether these are perpetrated by the State or
by private persons. Such measures include: condemning violence against
women and refraining from invoking any custom, tradition or religious
consideration to avoid their obligations as delineated in the Declaration
on the Elimination of Violence Against Women, refraining from
engaging in violence against women and taking active steps to prevent,
investigate and punish it, enacting legislation to punish and redress
such violence, adopting, implementing and reviewing legislation
to ensure its effectiveness, ratifying international human rights
norms and instruments, actively mainstreaming a gender perspective
in all policies and programmes, providing women who are subjected
to violence with access to the mechanisms of justice, enacting and
enforcing legislation against the perpetrators of violence against
women, formulating plans of action to eliminate violence against
women, as well as raising awareness, creating a safe and accessible
environment for reporting, training appropriate judicial, legal,
medical, social, educational, police and immigration personnel,
allocating adequate resources, reporting on measures taken, and
cooperating with UN human rights monitoring bodies.
*Recognize
that gender-based violence and discrimination, and the reprisals
women experience when they resist such oppression can constitute
persecution and should therefore be considered as grounds for showing
a well-founded fear of persecution in refugee and asylum claims.
Paragraph
147 (h) of the Platform for Action calls upon governments
to "[a]pply international norms to ensure equal access and
equal treatment of women and men in refugee determination procedures
and the granting of asylum, including full respect and strict observance
of the principle of non-refoulement through, inter
alia, bringing national immigration regulations into conformity
with relevant international instruments, and consider recognizing
as refugees those women whose claim to refugee status is based upon
the well-founded fear of persecution for reasons enumerated in the
1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol relating
to the Status of Refugees, including persecution through sexual
violence or other gender-related persecution, and provide access
to specially trained officers, including female officers to interview
women regarding sensitive or painful experiences, such as sexual
assault...."
*Eliminate
gender-based persecution in situations of war and armed conflict
and provide justice and reparations to victims of such persecution.
Regarding
rape and sexual violence in humanitarian and international law,
the Platform for Action calls upon governments and international
and regional organizations to "reaffirm that rape in the conduct
of armed conflict constitutes a war crime and under certain circumstances
it constitutes a crime against humanity and an act of genocide as
defined in the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of
the Crime of Genocide; take all measures required for the protection
of women and children from such acts and strengthen mechanisms to
investigate and punish all those responsible and bring the perpetrators
to justice" (Paragraph 145 [d]).
*Work
toward establishing an effective and independent International
Criminal Court that includes a gender perspective
throughout its statute, such as the inclusion of sexual violence
and rape in the definitions of crimes against humanity and war crimes.
The
Platform enjoins governments along with international and
regional organizations to "uphold and reinforce standards set
out in international humanitarian law and international human rights
instruments to prevent all acts of violence against women in situations
of armed and other conflicts; undertake a full investigation of
all acts of violence against women committed during war, including
rape, in particular systematic rape, forced prostitution and other
forms of indecent assault and sexual slavery; prosecute all criminals
responsible for war crimes against women and provide full redress
to women victims" (Paragraph 145[e]).
C.
Background
The
Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, by proclaiming
that "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" (para.
18) set an important precedent for demanding that governments take
firm and immediate action to ensure women's right to live free from
violence, and called for the international community to adopt a
Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women.
For example, it stresses the "importance of working toward
the elimination of violence against women in public and private
life, the elimination of all forms of sexual harassment, exploitation
and trafficking in women, the elimination of gender bias in the
administration of justice and the eradication of any conflict which
may arise between the rights of women and the harmful effects of
certain traditional or customary practices, cultural prejudices
and religious extremism" (paragraph 38). Building on this,
and reiterating the definition in the Declaration on the Elimination
of Violence Against Women, the Platform for Action
defines violence against women as "any act of gender-based
violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual
or psychological harm or suffering to women, including threats of
such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether
occurring in public or private (para. 113). It details such acts
and notes that "other acts of violence against women include
violation of the human rights of women in situations of armed conflict,
in particular murder, systematic rape, sexual slavery and forced
pregnancy."
One
critical advance in addressing violence against women has been the
recognition by the international community, and therefore by governments,
that violence against women by private actors in the home is a human
rights violation. Actions to end domestic violence, including incest
and elder abuse, are needed at many levels. Laws and policies that
hold the perpetrators of violence against women in their homes accountable
should be strengthened and victims should be effectively protected,
for instance, by ensuring that marital rape is considered to be
a crime; programs and policies that can help change attitudes and
practices to eliminate violence against women must be created; community
responsibility to end these human rights violations must be increased.
Particular attention should be paid to the increased violence some
women face because of regional disparities and differences in race,
ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, culture, social status
and income.
In
order to ensure justice for victims of violence, and to work toward
the elimination of violence against women, governments should:
1.
Increase resources and financial support to programs and projects
that seek to hold perpetrators of violence accountable;
2. Develop educational and community programs to provide protection
to victims, including the provision of shelter, job protection and
social services, while also working toward reducing and eliminating
such violence;
3. Integrate effective actions to end violence against women into
all areas of public and private life;
4. Develop and implement effective measures to prevent and redress
violence by changing legislation, especially family law; ensuring
that marital rape is considered to be a crime; developing clear
and comprehensive guidelines for the criminal justice system; and
providing training to police, prosecutors and judges about their
human rights obligations;
5. Monitor and implement national legislation, as well as international
agreements to achieve accountability and enforcement of these laws
and policies, with the participation of women's organizations.
Situations
of war and armed conflict may be particularly devastating to women,
and increase the human rights violations they experience. The Platform
for Action notes that "Violations of human rights in situations
of armed conflict and military occupation are violations of the
fundamental principles of international human rights and humanitarian
law...Gross human rights violations and policies of ethnic cleansing
in war-torn and occupied areas continue to be carried out. These
practices have created, inter alia, a mass flow of refugees
and other displaced persons in need of international protection...the
majority of whom are women, adolescent girls and children"
(paragraph 133). Further, as paragraph 135 of the Platform
details "[w]hile entire communities suffer the consequences
of armed conflict and terrorism, women and girls are particularly
affected because of their status in society and their sex. Parties
to conflict often rape women with impunity, sometimes using systematic
rape as a tactic of war and terrorism. The impact of violence against
women and violation of the human rights of women in such situations
is experienced by women of all ages, who suffer displacement, loss
of home and property, loss or involuntary disappearance of close
relatives, poverty and family separation and disintegration, and
who are victims of acts of murder, terrorism, torture, involuntary
disappearance, sexual slavery, rape, sexual abuse and forced pregnancy..."
as well as sexual harassment, forced eviction, forced prostitution
and trafficking, and military sexual slavery.
The
Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action underscores
the urgency for governments to address the human rights violations
against women which occur in situations of armed conflict. It urges
States to combat violence against women, and notes that "[v]iolations
of the human rights of women in situations of armed conflict are
violations of the fundamental principles of international human
rights and humanitarian law. All violations of this kind, including
in particular murder, systematic rape, sexual slavery, and forced
pregnancy, require a particularly effective response" (paragraph
38).
Articles
13 and 14 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
articulate a strong commitment to freedom of movement and the right
to asylum. Article 13 proclaims that "[e]veryone has the right
to freedom of movement and residence within the borders of each
State....Everyone has the right to leave any country, including
his [or her] own, and to return to his [or her] country." Building
on this, Article 14 pronounces the right to asylum by claiming that
"[e]veryone has the right to seek...in other countries asylum
from persecution." Such rights are reiterated in Paragraph
23 of the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, which
also refers to the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of
Refugees, its 1967 Protocol and regional instruments.
The Platform adds specificity to these concerns by enjoining
governments to protect and assist women who are displaced within
their country, and to find solutions to the root causes of their
displacement, to protect the safety and physical integrity of refugee
and displaced women, and apply "international norms to ensure
equal access and equal treatment of women and men in refugee determination
procedures and the granting of asylum, including full respect and
strict observation of the principle of non-refoulement
through, inter alia, bringing national immigration regulations
into conformity with relevant international instruments, and consider
recognizing as refugees those women whose claim to refugee status
is based upon...persecution through sexual violence or other gender-related
persecution..." (Paragraph 147 [h]).
Some
efforts have been made by national governments and the international
community to hold perpetrators of violence against women in situations
of armed conflict accountable. For instance, as a result of extensive
advocacy, public attention and monitoring by women's groups of the
existing ad-hoc international criminal tribunals for the former
Yugoslavia and Rwanda, some progress has been made to recognize
sexual violence against women as a serious violation of international
law. However, although in rhetoric these ad-hoc tribunals have addressed
issues of sexual violence, the application of these principles has
been slow and inadequate. Efforts are also underway to construct
a permanent, functioning system of international justice in the
attempts to create an International Criminal Court (ICC).
In contrast to the ad-hoc tribunals, the ICC would be available
to try the most serious human rights offenders when national courts
are unable to do so, or are ineffective. However, while support
is growing throughout the world for such an international mechanism,
some governments are opposed to creating a truly independent body.
Efforts
to create an International Criminal Court find their basis
in Article 28 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
which proclaims that "[e]veryone is entitled to a social and
international order in which the rights and freedoms set forth in
[the UDHR] can be fully realized." While efforts around
the ICC postdate both the Vienna World Conference on Human
Rights and the Fourth World Conference on Women, elements in both
the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action and the
Beijing Platform for Action, speak to some of the gender-specific
requirements and issues in such an international body. For instance,
the Platform calls upon governments along with international
and regional intergovernmental institutions to "integrate a
gender perspective in the resolution of armed or other conflicts
and foreign occupation and aim for gender balance when nominating
or promoting candidates for judicial and other positions in all
relevant international bodies..." (Paragraph 142 [b]). Further,
it recommends that governments, international and regional organizations
"Ensure that these bodies are able to address gender issues
properly by providing appropriate training to prosecutors, judges
and other officials in handling cases involving rape, forced pregnancy
in situations of armed conflict, indecent assault and other forms
of violence against women in armed conflicts, including terrorism,
and integrate a gender perspective into their work." (Paragraph
142 [c]).
D.
Questions to ask your governments
1.
What steps is your government taking in all sectors to prevent and
redress violence against women, in recognition of its international
obligations? For instance, how does your government address violence
against women? Have there been changes in the judiciary, law enforcement
procedures, the education system, the health care system or the
social welfare system?
2. Is violence against women in the home and family a crime under
national law?
3. Has marital rape been criminalized in your country?
4. What educational programs is the government sponsoring in schools
to promote non-violence and respect for girls and women?
5. Does your government recognize gender-based persecution as a
legitimate ground for requesting asylum?
6. Is your government actively supporting a strong and independent
International Criminal Court? If not, why not? Is it supporting
the incorporation of a gender perspective throughout the statute?
7. What is your government doing to protect and assist women living
in situations of armed conflict, either taking place within your
own country or outside? Does your government provide aid or humanitarian
assistance that incorporates a gender perspective?
8. What is your government doing to protect and assist women who
are displaced or refugees?
9. What has the government done to provide resources for rehabilitation
programs and reparations for survivors of gender-based violence,
including rape, abduction, forced pregnancy, forced sterilization,
and sexual slavery in situations of armed conflict and occupation?
What is your government's position with respect to this issue in
the International Criminal Court?
10.What actions has the government taken to eliminate trafficking
in women, including girls and young women, and to provide services
to victims of violence related to forced prostitution and trafficking?
E.
Five actions you can take
1.
National legislation: Build coalitions with women's,
human rights and other anti-violence efforts to change or strengthen
national legislation or policies to prevent and redress violence
against women, as well as to promote effective public awareness
endeavors to prevent violence in all its forms.
2. Training programs: Create effective training
programs in the criminal justice, social welfare and health care
systems about violence against women as a human rights violation.
3. Asylum: Lobby your governments to include gender-based
persecution as a grounds for making an asylum claim.
4. International Criminal Court: Meet with relevant
foreign ministry officials to raise their awareness about the importance
of integrating a gender perspective into the statute of the International
Criminal Court, which will establish and define the jurisdiction
and procedures of the ICC.
5. International Criminal Court: Lobby your government
to support the appointment of women at all levels of the ICC
and for more women delegates to the conference that will create
the ICC in June-July of 1998.
A.
Demand #4
Take
steps to realize women's health, including their reproductive and
sexual rights.
B.
Recommendations
*Ensure
the realization of women's right to the highest attainable standard
of physical and mental health.
The
Platform for Action affirms a broad understanding of the right
to health and to reproductive and sexual rights. It asserts that
"women have the right to the enjoyment of the highest attainable
standards of physical and mental health. The enjoyment of this right
is vital to their life and well-being and their ability to participate
in all areas of public and private life. Health is a state of complete
physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence
of disease or infirmity" (paragraph 89). Thus, the Platform
directs governments to reaffirm this right; to support and implement
commitments made in other international agreements and human rights
instruments to women's health throughout their life cycle, including
their reproductive and sexual health; to protect and promote its
attainment; and to incorporate it into national legislation by,
for example "review[ing] existing legislation, including health
legislation, as well as policies, where necessary, to reflect a
commitment to women's health and to ensure that they meet the changing
roles and responsibilities of women wherever they reside" (paragraph
106[b]).
*Secure
women's access to reproductive and sexual health and rights.
The
Platform for Action affirms that "the human rights
of women include their right to have control over and decide freely
and responsibly on matters related to their sexuality, including
sexual and reproductive health, free of coercion, discrimination
and violence" (Paragraph 96). It asserts that women's human
rights include women's right to health as well as their reproductive
and sexual rights. As noted in paragraph 94 of the Platform
for Action, "Reproductive health therefore implies that
people are able to have a satisfying and safe sex life and that
they have the capability to reproduce and the freedom to decide
if, when and how often to do so."
The
Platform for Action thus emphasizes the link between the
right to reproductive and sexual health and access to information
as well as to affordable and quality health care. It therefore calls
on governments to increase women's access to appropriate, affordable
and quality health care, information and related services, including
family planning, while also strengthening preventive programmes
(paragraph 106[e]), undertaking gender-sensitive initiatives that
address sexually transmitted diseases, HIV/AIDS, and sexual and
reproductive health issues; as well as promoting research, disseminating
information and increasing resources and monitoring. For instance,
paragraph 232 (f) of the Platform instructs governments
to take action to ensure that the human rights of women, including
their reproductive rights and their right to have control over and
decide freely and responsibly on matters related to their sexuality,
are fully respected and protected. Furthermore, some governments
have interpreted the prohibition against discrimination on the basis
of "other status" to include sexual orientation.
C.
Background
The
measures proposed in the Platform for Action build on Article
25 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which states
"[e]veryone has the right to a standard of living adequate
for the health and well-being of him [or her]self and of his [or
her] family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care
and necessary social services, and the right to security in the
event of unemployment, sickness, disability, widowhood, old age
or other lack of livelihood in circumstances beyond his [or her]
control." The universality of women's human rights and the
link between the right to health and all other rights, is underscored
in paragraph 5 of the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action
which proclaims that "[a]ll human rights are universal, indivisible
and interdependent and interrelated...While the significance of
national and regional particularities and various historical, cultural
and religious background must be borne in mind, it is the duty of
States, regardless of their political, economic and cultural systems,
to promote and protect all human rights and fundamental freedoms."
The Women's Convention further spells out the duties of
government which can be understood to be necessary to realize women's
health, including their sexual and reproductive health.
The
Platform for Action underscores and reaffirms the commitments
governments have made to advance women's health, including their
reproductive and sexual health. It affirms a broad understanding
of women's health, by noting that women's health "involves
their emotional, social and physical well-being and is determined
by the social, political and economic context of their lives, as
well as by biology" (paragraph 89). In this context, women's
sexual and reproductive health care is understood to be "the
constellation of methods, techniques and services that contribute
to reproductive health and well-being by preventing and solving
reproductive health problems. It also includes sexual health, the
purpose of which is the enhancement of life and personal relations,
and not merely counselling and care related to reproduction and
sexually transmitted diseases" (paragraph 94). It further notes
that "reproductive rights embrace certain human rights that
are already recognized in national laws, international human rights
documents and other consensus documents," which includes the
"right to attain the highest standard of sexual and reproductive
health. It also includes the right to make decisions concerning
reproduction free of discrimination, coercion and violence, as expressed
in human rights documents "(paragraph 95).
The
Platform for Action details the steps needed to advance
governments' commitments to women's health. Paragraph 106 of the
Platform, for example, directs governments to "design
and implement, in cooperation with women and community-based organizations,
gender-sensitive health programmes, including decentralized health
services, that address the need of women throughout their lives
and take into account their multiple roles and responsibilities,
the demands on their time, the special needs of rural women and
women with disabilities and the diversity of women's needs arising
from age and socio-economic and cultural differences among others;
include women, especially local and indigenous women, in the identification
and planning of health-care policies and programmes; remove all
barriers to women's health services and provide a broad range of
health-care services." Noting that the lack of affordable,
appropriate and quality health care may be life-threatening to women,
especially pregnant women, and to ensure the protection and promotion
of health, reproductive and sexual rights for women and girls, paragraph
106 (i) of the Platform for Action instructs governments
to "strengthen and reorient health services, particularly primary
health care, in order to ensure universal access to quality health
services for women and girls; reduce maternal mortality and morbidity
and achieve worldwide the agreed-upon goal of reducing maternal
mortality by at least 50 percent of the 1990 levels by the year
2000...."
Linking
health to education and literacy, the Platform further
calls for governments to "give priority to both formal and
informal educational programmes that support and enable women to
develop self-esteem, acquire knowledge, make decisions on and take
responsibility for their own health, achieve mutual respect in matters
concerning sexuality and fertility and educate men regarding the
importance of women's health and well-being" (paragraph 107[a]).
Further, such efforts should place "special focus on programmes
for both men and women that emphasize the elimination of harmful
attitudes and practices, including female genital mutilation, son
preference (which results in female infanticide and prenatal sex
selection), early marriage, including child marriage, violence against
women, sexual exploitation, sexual times is conducive to infection
with HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases, drug abuse,
discrimination against girls and women in food allocation and other
harmful attitudes and practices related to the life, health and
well-being of women, and recognizing that some of these practices
can be violations of human rights and ethical medical principles"
(Paragraph 107 [a]).
D.
Questions to ask your governments
1.
What steps is your government taking to reformulate their reproductive
health policies in line with their commitment to women's health
from the Platform for Action as well as the Cairo International
Conference on Population and Development?
2. What efforts are being made by your government to provide accessible,
affordable and quality health care services, including reproductive
and sexual health care?
3. How is your government working to guarantee the right to health,
especially where access to services is increasingly dependent upon
the ability to pay?
4. Are women's reproductive and sexual rights recognized by law?
What steps are being taken to remove barriers which result from
national and local laws, customs, policies and practices?
5. What is your government doing to reduce maternal mortality and
morbidity in line with its agreed upon commitments?
6. What efforts are being made to ensure the implementation of strategies
focused on HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted diseases which
are realistically targetted to the needs of girls and women?
7. What actions are being taken to prevent violence, discrimination
or other human rights abuses directed at persons because of or in
connection to their real or perceived sexual identity or orientation?
E.
Five actions you can take
1.
Resources: Lobby your government to ensure adequate
resources for women's health, including affordable and quality health
care services for women in all stages of life, as well as research
on women's health concerns.
2. Information and services: Build coalitions with
other women's, human rights, medical, social service, and AIDS service
organizations to ensure that governments collect and disseminate
sex-disaggregated information about women's health as well as to
ensure accessible, affordable and quality services, in line with
the government's commitment to advance women's health.
3. Training: Urge your government to provide resources
for training medical and health care professionals about gender-specific
health care issues.
4. Integration: Read Part Four, Section C of the
Platform for Action, and bring this information to your
governments to remind them of the steps they have agreed to undertake
to fully integrate their commitment to women's health, including
their reproductive and sexual health and rights into national laws
and policies.
5. Sexual orientation: In collaboration with other
women's, human rights, and lesbian/gay/transgender rights organizations,
campaign to ensure protection against abuses perpetrated on the
basis of real or perceived sexual orientation.
A.
Demand #5
Secure
women's economic, social and cultural rights.
B.
Recommendations
*Guarantee
women's right to development, by providing women with equal access
to economic resources, as well as protecting their rights to own
property and to equal inheritance, to land tenure and to credit
and training, through law policy and practice.
The
Platform for Action proclaims in paragraph 220, that "every
person should be entitled to participate in, contribute to and enjoy
cultural, economic, political and social development." It notes
that "[i]n many cases women and girls suffer discrimination
in the allocation of economic and social resources. This directly
violates their economic, social and cultural rights" (paragraph
220). Thus, it directs governments to "[u]ndertake legislation
and administrative reforms to give women equal rights with men to
economic resources, including access to ownership and control over
land and other forms of property, credit, inheritance, natural resources
and appropriate new technology" (paragraph 165 [e]).
*Secure
literacy for every woman and girl by ensuring equal access to education,
including human rights education and legal literacy.
Paragraph
69 of the Platform for Action proclaims that "education
is a human right and an essential tool for achieving the goals of
equality, development and peace...Literacy of women is an important
key to improving health, nutrition and education in the family and
to empowering women to participate in decision-making in society."
Further, paragraph 81(a), calls upon governments, among others,
to "reduce the female illiteracy rate to at least half its
1990 level, with emphasis on rural women, migrant, refugee and internally
displaced women and women with disabilities."
*Enforce
women workers' rights on the basis of equality, non-discrimination
and due process, including the right to organize, to bargain collectively,
to health and safety protection and to a living wage.
The
Platform enjoins governments to take immediate action to
"safeguard and promote respect for basic workers' rights, including
the prohibition of forced labor and child labor, freedom of association
and the right to organize and bargain collectively, equal remuneration
for men and women for work of equal value and non-discrimination
in employment, fully implementing the conventions of the International
Labor Organization in the case of States parties to those conventions
and, taking into account the principles embodied in the case of
those countries that are not parties to those conventions in order
to achieve truly sustained economic growth and sustainable development"(Paragraph
166 [l]).
C.
Background
The
Platform for Action affirms the importance of action to
realize women's economic, social and cultural rights, noting specifically
the importance of education, literacy, development and working conditions.
It builds on a recognition of these rights set out in the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights. Article 22 of the UDHR
underscores that "economic, social and cultural rights [are]
indispensable for [everyone's] dignity and the free development
of his [sic] personality." The UDHR further proclaims
the right to work and to just and favorable working conditions (Article
23), the right to rest and leisure (Article 24), the right to education
(Article 26), and the right to freely participate in the cultural
life of the community (Article 27), along with the right to an adequate
standard of living.
The
Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action stresses the
importance of the right to development set out in the UDHR, as well
as in the Declaration on the Right to Development, as "a universal
and inalienable right and an integral part of fundamental human
rights...[and]...the human person is the central subject of development"
(Paragraph 10). It calls upon States to "cooperate with each
other in ensuring development and eliminating obstacles to development"
and notes that "lasting progress toward the implementation
of the right to development requires effective development policies
at the national level, as well as equitable economic relations and
a favourable economic environment at the international level"
(Paragraph 10).
The
Platform for Action specifies steps which governments must
take, such as "enacting and enforcing legislation to guarantee
the right of women and men to equal pay for equal work or work of
equal value" (paragraph 165 [a]"; "adopt[ing] and
implement[ing] laws against discrimination based on sex in the labour
market, especially considering older women workers, hiring and promotion,
the extension of employment benefits and social security, and working
conditions" (paragraph 165[c]); "seek[ing] to ensure that
national policies related to international and regional trade agreements
do not have an adverse impact on women's new and traditional economic
activities" (paragraph 165[k]). Further, in articulating some
of the responsibilities of private actors, the Platform
calls for governments to "ensure that all corporations, including
transnational corporations, comply with national laws and codes,
social security regulations, applicable international agreements,
instruments and conventions, including those related to the environment,
and other relevant laws" (Paragraph 165 [l]).
Literacy
and knowledge of one's rights is fundamental to an individual's
or group's ability to participate actively in public and private
life. In order to address their gender-specific needs at all stages
of their life, women and girls must be ensured full participation
in decision-making. This requires equal education, literacy, health
and economic well-being. Thus, the Vienna Declaration and Programme
of Action says States should "strive to eradicate illiteracy
and should direct education toward the full development of the human
personality and to strengthening of respect for human rights and
fundamental freedoms" (Paragraph 79). Further, it recommends
that States "develop specific programmes and strategies for
ensuring the widest human rights education and the dissemination
of public information, taking particular account of the human rights
needs of women" (Paragraph 81). In elaborating this point,
the Platform for Action calls for governments, among others,
to "develop leadership training and opportunities for all women
to encourage them to take leadership roles both as students and
as adults in civil society" (Paragraph 83 [h]).
While
some governments have taken steps to protect and promote women's
economic, social and cultural rights, these have rarely been considered
as priority concerns, and for the most part continue to receive
inadequate attention. At the same time, macro-economic policies
concerning economic restructuring and structural adjustment often
increase women's vulnerability to human rights violations. The Platform
for Action highlights the disproportionately negative impact
of economic recession and restructuring on women's employment, in
a manner that increases women's economic insecurity, compels them
to work in dangerous or unprotected conditions, and/or pressures
them to migrate in a search of better economic opportunities. It
notes that "[e]conomic recession in many developed and developing
countries, as well as ongoing restructuring in countries with economies
in transition, have had a disproportionately negative impact on
women's employment. Women often have no choice but to take employment
that lacks long-term job security or involves dangerous working
conditions, to work in unprotected home-based production or to be
unemployed" (Paragraph 19). Women's work, wherever it takes
place, should be protected and respected as a fundamental aspect
of law. Laws and policies should protect women's work on the basis
of equality, non-discrimination and due process in all spheres of
work, regardless of their legal status. For instance, paragraph
165 (r) directs governments to "reform laws or enact national
policies that support the establishment of labour laws to ensure
the protection of all women workers, including safe work practices,
the right to organize and access to justice" (paragraph 165[r]).
Acknowledging the links between women's economic insecurity and
their vulnerability to violence, paragraph125 (c) calls for governments
to "recognize the vulnerability to violence and other forms
of abuse of women migrants, including women migrant workers, whose
legal status in the host country depends on employers who may exploit
their situation...."
D.
Questions to ask your governments
1.
Is your government taking steps to promote and protect women's economic,
social and cultural rights such as eliminating discriminatory laws,
adopting legislation that equalizes women's access to resources,
including credit, training programs, as well as their access to
and control over land and other forms of property?
2. Does your government ensure equal access to education for girls
and boys, as well as equal access to training for women and men?
Is there universal primary education without gender disparities?
3. How is the government applying all labor rights to women workers,
including rights relating to working conditions and benefits to
women workers and to non-discrimination of older women workers?
4. Is your government seeking to eliminate wage differentials between
women and men in all fields of employment?
5. Are women working in the informal sector, including home-based
workers, covered by labor laws, including health and safety standards?
6. Does your government have health and safety regulations which
adequately protect women workers in all sectors including agriculture,
industry, services, etc? Are these regulations systematically enforced?
7. What is the government doing to ensure women's right and opportunity
to organize and collectively bargain?
8. How is the government addressing the effects of macro-economic
policies and the practices of transnational corporations which may
obstruct women's labor rights and their right to organize?
E.
Five actions you can take
1.
Resources: Build coalitions with women's, human
rights, children's rights and educational organizations to ensure
adequate resources to equal education, in particular by transferring
funds from the military to educational endeavors.
2. Integration: Work with development agencies to
ensure that aid and assistance programs integrate a gender and human
rights perspective into their mandates and programmes.
3. Regulations: Lobby your governments for stronger
health and safety regulations in all workplaces.
4. Labor rights and standards: Campaign with women,
human rights and worker's rights organizations to ensure that labor
rights and standards which pay particular attention to the human
rights of women are integrated into national laws, policies and
practices.
5. Ending discrimination: Seek out effective measures
to redress discrimination in credit, property and inheritance laws
as well as sexual harassment in the workplace and work to eliminate
it by changing national legislation, regulations and policies.
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