| The 2005
World Summit: What’s At Stake
for Women
Prepared by:
Center for Women’s Global Leadership (CWGL),
Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN),
United Methodist United Nations Office and
Women’s Environment and Development Organization (WEDO)
The United Nations has been a galvanizing force for women in the
past two decades, facilitating their efforts to define a comprehensive
global agenda for peace and human rights, gender equality and women’s
empowerment, and poverty eradication and sustainable development.
More than 190 governments have made commitments to this global agenda
yet there continues to be a large gap between these promises and
implementation at the international and national level.
From September 14th-16th, heads of governments from around the world
—the overwhelming majority of whom are men - will meet at
the United Nations headquarters in New York for the 2005 World Summit.
They will be seeking consensus on a package of proposals linking
peace and security, human rights and development with UN reform.
Yet the United States threatens this process by seeking last minute,
far-reaching amendments that would gut the proposals on sustainable
development, debt relief and financial assistance to poor countries,
and the environment, and weaken support for agreements on social
and economic issues reached at past conferences.
Women have paid considerable attention to this process. What’s
at stake for women are the promises of equality, empowerment and
women’s human rights contained in the Women’s Treaty
(or CEDAW, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
Against Women), in the Beijing Platform for Action, Cairo Programme
of Action and other widely-endorsed government agreements of the
1990s. The following overview details the critical issues that will
be on the table at the World Summit and their importance to women
around the world.
A. Development
Gender equality and women’s empowerment are essential for
meeting goals
Most governments and international institutions, including the United
Nations and the World Bank, agree in principle that gender equality
and women’s empowerment are essential components for achievement
of goals in all areas of development, including those contained
in the Millennium Development Goals articulated by the UN at the
2000 Millennium Summit. In an effort to create sustainable development,
governments must now go beyond words to take action under this framework.
At the 2005 World Summit, women want governments to:
* Expand efforts to combat violence against women and girls;
* Guarantee sexual and reproductive health and rights;
* Assure women’s and girls’ property, housing, land
and inheritance rights;
* Eliminate gender inequality in employment, including the earnings
gap;
* Ensure equal representation and participation of women in national
and local governments;
* Invest in infrastructure that reduces women’s and girls’
time burdens, like the amount of time women and girls spend on gathering
fuel, water and other basic domestic necessities;
* Expand girls’ access to primary as well as secondary education.
These strategic priorities are a subset of priorities governments
have already signed on to in previous international agreements.
They are the minimum necessary to achieve the crucial goals of gender
equality and women’s empowerment.
Human rights-based policies are a critical priority in a global
community
The World Summit must address the systemic imbalances in the global
economy that leave poor countries more susceptible to increased
exploitation by powerful multinational corporations backed by rich
countries. These imbalances contribute to the loss of local businesses
and jobs, increasing the gap between rich and poor. Governments
and international trade and financial institutions must be held
responsible for their embrace of current neo-liberal growth-based
policies that pay scant regard to social needs. These policies have
been particularly disastrous for women as paid employment and social
protections have become increasingly insecure, pushing women into
informal and often dangerous work, and increasing their unpaid care-giving
responsibilities. At the World Summit, women want governments to:
· Acknowledge that neo-liberal economic policies exacerbate
poverty and inequity, contributing to human rights abuses that jeopardize
human security;
· Adopt a human rights-based approach to policy and planning
to achieve the interdependent goals of development, security and
human rights.
B. Peace and Security
Women are central to conflict prevention, peacemaking
and Peacebuilding initiatives
Women’s groups strongly support the Secretary General’s
proposal for a new security consensus based on the recognition that
all threats are interconnected and require a collective response.
Women’s groups call for greater focus on human security, conflict
prevention and equal participation of women in all decision-making
on peace and security issues. At the World Summit, women want governments
to:
* Commit to rapid and full implementation of Security Council Resolution
1325 on Women, Peace and Security;
* Take action to ensure greater protection of women in conflict
and post-conflict situations, and develop accountability and reporting
mechanisms for gender-based violence;
* Ensure participation of women at all levels of peace and security
decision-making and specifically in the proposed Peace building
Commission.
Peacebuilding Commission
The proposal to establish a UN Peace building Commission—to
support countries in transition from armed conflict to lasting peace—has
received considerable support from governments and civil society,
including women’s groups. The Commission could provide the
UN system with much needed policy coherence and coordination for
peace building. However, to be successful and effective, the Commission
would need to draw on the knowledge, networks, and commitment of
civil society to peace building and conflict prevention. The mandate
of the commission should explicitly commit to partnering with civil
society through formal mechanisms at headquarters and at the country
level. The details for the Commission’s mandate, composition
and reporting lines should to be developed in consultation with
member states and civil society, particularly national and grass
roots women’s groups.
At the World Summit, women want governments to:
* Mandate the Commission to examine the entire spectrum of conflict
rather than limit its work to post-conflict situations;
* Mandate the Commission to work with civil society organizations
at the country-level and at the headquarters;
* Allocate predictable and adequate funding for the Commission’s
work.
A more democratic and transparent Security Council
For the first time in 40 years, governments are considering Security
Council expansion to increase its regional diversity and representation.
The main sticking points center on which states should be included
and the status of their membership—whether they should have
permanent or rotating seats and whether they would be given veto
power. There are even questions about the ethics of the veto power
itself. Several conflicting proposals on Security Council expansion
have been put forward; decision on these proposals will most likely
be postponed until after the Summit.
At the World Summit, women want governments to:
* Restrict the veto powers of the permanent five members particularly
in relation to genocide and crimes against humanity;
* Implement more democratic working methods for the Security Council
based on transparency, accountability and greater collaboration
with member states, UN organs and civil society organizations at
national and international levels.
C. Human Rights
A Human Rights Council that commands greater authority
Throughout the Summit processes, the framework of human rights has
been named as integral to the elimination of poverty and to attaining
peace and security. Yet, in many circumstances, this framework is
under attack. In order to raise the stature of the human rights
system, the Secretary General has recommended that the UN Commission
on Human Rights be replaced with a Human Rights Council with higher
status and members elected by the General Assembly. If this reform
proceeds, women want governments to:
· Protect the considerable advances made by the Commission
on Human Rights in expanding the parameters of human rights discussion,
especially through the Sub-commission and its special procedures
(a system of UN experts and working groups on specific human rights
topics);
· Honor developments made by the Commission in areas of particular
importance to women such as violence against women, sexual rights,
indigenous peoples and minority rights, the rights to education
and health, access to medicine and other areas of economic, social
and cultural rights;
· Maintain special procedures and resist efforts by some
states to narrow the focus of the Council to civil and political
rights and “the most egregious abuses” as a means of
shifting attention from economic, social and cultural rights or
areas of critical importance to women’s human rights;
· Ensure continued, broad civil society participation in
the proceedings of the proposed Council.
More resources for human rights reforms and protection of reporting
on existing treaties
Women urge governments to increase resources for the Office of the
High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) and in proposed treaty
body reform. Additional resources to the OHCHR would enhance reporting
and maintain focus on a range of human rights areas important to
women, including social, economic and cultural rights. And although
streamlining treaty body reporting could eliminate unnecessary duplication
by governments, there is also a risk that states would no longer
be held accountable to report on abuses affecting specific groups.
In particular women want governments to:
* Ensure that treaty body reform does not jeopardize in-depth reporting
to the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women,
the Committee on the Rights of the Child and the Committee on the
Elimination of all forms of Racial Discrimination.
Introduce gender to the “Responsibility to Protect”
concept
The World Summit presents the first real opportunity for world leaders
to endorse the Responsibility to Protect (R2P), a concept, introduced
in 2001 as a response to the UN’s failure to effectively counter
mass atrocities in the Balkans and Rwanda. R2P would be brought
into play in cases where a state is unwilling or unable to halt
or avert genocide or ethnic cleansing, thus over-riding the principle
of non-intervention in the internal affairs of a state. NGOs are
reluctant to push for any norm that includes provisions, however
regulated, for allowing states to use force in the affairs of other
states, as they fear this could be used by more powerful nations
as an excuse for invading other countries. Women’s groups
have expressed concern about the lack of attention to women’s
situation in times of conflict, in the current articulations of
R2P. If the concept is embraced at the Summit, women want governments
to:
* Ensure adoption and implementation includes the provisions of
Security Council Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security which
calls for women to have a prominent role in peace building;
* Ensure the principle of R2P is used in appropriate contexts to
protect against genocide and crimes against humanity, and not as
a pretense for inappropriate involvement in internal affairs of
smaller states.
D. UN Reform
Strengthening the UN requires drastic changes in global governance
A primary goal of the World Summit is to reform the UN system, which
in large part remains as it was created in the era immediately following
World War II. Women and other civil society groups are greatly disappointed
that certain critical components to address the “democracy
deficit” in international decision-making are not included.
Women also say that, in 2005, it is high time that qualified women
be appointed in equal numbers to high-level positions at the UN.
At the Summit, women want governments to:
* Take steps to bring the World Bank, International Monetary Fund
and World Trade Organization under the oversight of the United Nations.
As they stand now, these financial and trade institution’s
power remains unchecked and largely in the hands of the US and Europe,
causing a lack accountability, transparency and democracy.
* Address the need for transnational corporations to be held accountable
for their operations, since they currently function without adequate
systems of regulation or oversight or accountability and are able
to disregard global development and human rights norms.
* Address the gender imbalance in the UN Secretariat through a substantial
increase in the percentage of women in high-level posts. Make sure
women’s needs and perspectives inform all policy and programs
at the UN, and upgrade the status and resources of women-specific
UN entities and offices, such as UNIFEM and the Division for the
Advancement of Women.
For more information on "What's At Stake,"
other Summit materials developed by the Gender Monitoring Group
of the World Summit, and our individual organizational process,
please see the "Bejing and Beyond" website at http://www.beijingandbeyond.org
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