Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

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Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India

Transcript of Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

Page 1: Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

Women’s Rights

© Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda

© Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India

Page 2: Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

Women’s Rights are Human Rights

© Oxfam photo Annie Bungeroth, Zimbabwe

Women’s rights are human rights. In theory, women have never been overtly excluded from the concept of human rights.

Yet, women today earn less than men, own less property than men, and have less access to education, employment, housing and health care.

Page 3: Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

Human Rights Abuses

Oxfam Photo, Abbie Trayler-Smith, Yemen

Women and girls’ experiences with human rights abuse have been virtually ignored.

Most of the: -casualties of war -world’s refugees -world’s poor

are women and children.

Page 4: Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

Protecting Women’s Rights

Each of the human rights treaties in the next few slides, and the whole of the human rights framework are essential for the realization of women’s full spectrum of rights. -

© Oxfam photo Annie Bungeroth, Sri Lanka

Page 5: Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

UDHR

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights stipulates that human rights apply to all people equally, “without distinction of any kind such as race, color, sex, language…or any other status”.

© Oxfam Photo- Gilvan Barrreto, Honduras

Page 6: Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

CEDAW

The Convention on the Elimination of All Form of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), was adopted by the UN in 1979.

CEDAW was the first document to comprehensively address women’s rights within political, cultural, economic, social and family spheres.

© Oxfam photo, Howard Davies, Sri Lanka

Page 7: Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

DEVAW

The 1993 Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women (DEVAW) set forth ways in which governments should act to prevent violence, and to protect and defend women’s rights. -

© Oxfam photo Anonymous, South Africa

Page 8: Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

Violence Against Women

© Oxfam Photo, Aubrey Wade, Liberia

Violence against women is rooted in a global culture that discriminates against women and denies them equal rights with men.

Women and girls more often face abuse from their employers, partners, husbands, families and community members.

Page 9: Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

Condoning Violence

When the state dismisses the majority of violence against women as private or domestic matters, thereby allowing this violence to continue, it sends a clear message that violence against women is condoned. © Oxfam photo Annie Bungeroth, Zimbabwe

Page 10: Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

Discrimination

Human rights violations against women are often complicated by further discrimination on the grounds of race, ethnicity, sexual identity, caste, religion, class or age.

© Oxfam photo Jane Beesley, Kenya

© Oxfam photo Annie Bungeroth, Sri Lanka

Page 11: Women’s Rights © Oxfam photo Geoff Sayar, Uganda © Oxfam photo Rajendra Shaw, India.

State Responsibility

States have a responsibility when abuses against women are committed.

Their obligations under international human rights law can be summarized under three categories: respect, protect and fulfill.  

© Oxfam photo Caroline Gluck, Uganda