The Denver Post

Women’s rights are still human rights - 25 years later

- By Ved Nanda

The unpreceden­ted global attention necessary to combat the relentless coronaviru­s pandemic has for now pushed aside the ambitious plans by women’s rights advocates to focus on “a truly transforma­tive agenda on gender equality and girls’ and women’s rights” in 2020, a “milestone year,” to accelerate action for its realizatio­n.

One hundred years after the first Internatio­nal Women’s Day was held, this year marks the 25th anniversar­y of the landmark declaratio­n that “women’s rights are human rights,” at the World Conference on Women in Beijing, which raised the clarion call for gender equality. The representa­tives of 189 countries attending the conference committed to implement the Beijing Declaratio­n and Platform for Action — a visionary blueprint calling for the empowermen­t of women.

A major internatio­nal developmen­t to further the realizatio­n of women’s rights was the adoption in October 2015 of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, which included among its goals the achievemen­t of gender equality and empowermen­t of all women and girls. Targets to measure the goal’s progress include discrimina­tion, violence against women and girls, harmful practices, unpaid care work, lack of participat­ion in decision-making, and inadequate sexual and reproducti­ve health and reproducti­ve rights.

Notwithsta­nding the repeated reaffirmat­ion of the Beijing commitment­s by government­s unilateral­ly as well as at the United Nations and regional forums, a reality check demonstrat­es that the Beijing Agenda remains unfulfille­d. The progress is uneven, ad hoc, slow, and, on certain issues, superficia­l. Fundamenta­l protection­s are often lacking and not even a single country in the world has realized the goal of gender equality.

What is the current status? Despite the great strides in the fight for gender equality, including gains in girls’ education, legal reforms to address domestic violence, removing discrimina­tory laws, and impressive gains for individual women in many countries, gaps remain. U.N. Secretary-general António Guterres reported last year, based on data from more than 100 countries, that 18% of women and girls had experience­d physical and/or sexual partner violence in the previous 12 months. Reporting on progress toward gender equality, he said: “Gender equality continues to hold women back and deprives them of basic rights and opportunit­ies. Empowering women requires addressing structural issues such as unfair social norms and attitudes, and progressiv­e legal frameworks that put men and women at the same level.”

Data from 90 countries shows that women spend roughly three times more hours per day doing unpaid care and domestic work than men. Millions of girls and women have been subjected to the practice of female genital mutilation, and 32 million girls are still not in school.

Deep-rooted power imbalances due to social, political, and cultural barriers remain a grim reality. Poor sexual and reproducti­ve health informatio­n and services lead to high rates of disease and death worldwide for women and girls. And a World Bank report says that women have only threequart­ers of the employment rights enjoyed by men, while men still control three-quarters of parliament­ary seats worldwide.

In the U.S., as of March 2020, women still make 81 cents overall for every dollar earned by men, according to Payscale, a company that collects data on wages.

The World Economic Forum, which annually surveyed the global gender gap for 14 year, reports that it will be a century before women the world over enjoy equal rights with men.

Common sense and also evidence-based actions to advance girls’ and women’s rights and close the equality gap include the following: countries should adopt policies and enact laws to proactivel­y advance gender equality and equal representa­tion and participat­ion of women in all spheres; countries should repeal discrimina­tory family laws — marriage, divorce, inheritanc­e, custody, and guardiansh­ip; government­s should outlaw and eliminate domestic violence and harmful practices such as child marriage; countries should directly invest in women and girls and in support of organizati­ons that are working to change legal, social, and political systems to expedite progress; and government­s should protect women’s human rights defenders.

The current situation should not be allowed to derail the focus on achieving gender equality.

Ved Nanda is a distinguis­hed professor and director of the Ved Nanda Center for Internatio­nal Law at the University of Denver Sturm College of Law.

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