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AGENDA 21 OBLIGATIONS
Chapter 24
GLOBAL
ACTION FOR WOMEN TOWARDS SUSTAINABLE AND EQUITABLE DEVELOPMENT
Objectives
24.2. The following objectives are proposed
for national Governments:
·
To implement the
Nairobi Forward-looking Strategies for the Advancement of Women,
particularly with regard to women's participation in national ecosystem
management and control of environment degradation;
·
To increase the
proportion of women decision makers, planners, technical advisers,
managers and extension workers in environment and development fields;
·
To consider
developing and issuing by the year 2000 a strategy of changes necessary
to eliminate constitutional, legal, administrative, cultural,
behavioural, social and economic obstacles to women's full participation
in sustainable development and in public life;
·
To establish by
the year 1995 mechanisms at the national, regional and international
levels to assess the implementation and impact of development and
environment policies and programmes on women and to ensure their
contributions and benefits;
·
To assess,
review, revise and implement, where appropriate, curricula and other
educational material, with a view to promoting the dissemination to both
men and women of gender-relevant knowledge and valuation of women's
roles through formal and non-formal education, as well as through
training institutions, in collaboration with non-governmental
organizations;
·
To formulate and
implement clear governmental policies and national guidelines,
strategies and plans for the achievement of equality in all aspects of
society, including the promotion of women's literacy, education,
training, nutrition and health and their participation in key
decision-making positions and in management of the environment,
particularly as it pertains to their access to resources, by
facilitating better access to all forms of credit, particularly in the
informal sector, taking measures towards ensuring women's access to
property rights as well as agricultural inputs and implements;
·
To implement, as
a matter of urgency, in accordance with country-specific conditions,
measures to ensure that women and men have the same right to decide
freely and responsibly the number and spacing of their children and have
access to information, education and means, as appropriate, to enable
them to exercise this right in keeping with their freedom, dignity and
personally held values;
·
To consider
adopting, strengthening and enforcing legislation prohibiting violence
against women and to take all necessary administrative, social and
educational measures to eliminate violence against women in all its
forms.
Activities
24.3. Governments should take active
steps to implement the following:
·
Measures to
review policies and establish plans to increase the proportion of women
involved as decision makers, planners, managers, scientists and
technical advisers in the design, development and implementation of
policies and programmes for sustainable development;
·
Measures to
strengthen and empower women's bureaux, women's non-governmental
organizations and women's groups in enhancing capacity-building for
sustainable development;
·
Measures to
eliminate illiteracy among females and to expand the enrolment of women
and girls in educational institutions, to promote the goal of universal
access to primary and secondary education for girl children and for
women, and to increase educational and training opportunities for women
and girls in sciences and technology, particularly at the post-secondary
level;
·
Programmes to
promote the reduction of the heavy workload of women and girl children
at home and outside through the establishment of more and affordable
nurseries and kindergartens by Governments, local authorities, employers
and other relevant organizations and the sharing of household tasks by
men and women on an equal basis, and to promote the provision of
environmentally sound technologies which have been designed, developed
and improved in consultation with women, accessible and clean water, an
efficient fuel supply and adequate sanitation facilities;
·
Programmes to
establish and strengthen preventive and curative health facilities,
which include women-centred, women-managed, safe and effective
reproductive health care and affordable, accessible, responsible
planning of family size and services, as appropriate, in keeping with
freedom, dignity and personally held values. Programmes should focus on
providing comprehensive health care, including pre-natal care, education
and information on health and responsible parenthood, and should provide
the opportunity for all women to fully breastfeed at least during the
first four months post-partum. Programmes should fully support women's
productive and reproductive roles and well-being and should pay special
attention to the need to provide equal and improved health care for all
children and to reduce the risk of maternal and child mortality and
sickness;
·
Programmes to
support and strengthen equal employment opportunities and equitable
remuneration for women in the formal and informal sectors with adequate
economic, political and social support systems and services, including
child care, particularly day-care facilities and parental leave, and
equal access to credit, land and other natural resources;
·
Programmes to
establish rural banking systems with a view to facilitating and
increasing rural women's access to credit and to agricultural inputs and
implements;
·
Programmes to
develop consumer awareness and the active participation of women,
emphasizing their crucial role in achieving changes necessary to reduce
or eliminate unsustainable patterns of consumption and production,
particularly in industrialized countries, in order to encourage
investment in environmentally sound productive activities and induce
environmentally and socially friendly industrial development;
·
Programmes to
eliminate persistent negative images, stereotypes, attitudes and
prejudices against women through changes in socialization patterns, the
media, advertising, and formal and non-formal education;
·
Measures to
review progress made in these areas, including the preparation of a
review and appraisal report which includes recommendations to be
submitted to the 1995 world conference on women.
24.4. Governments are urged to ratify all
relevant conventions pertaining to women if they have not already done
so. Those that have ratified conventions should enforce and establish
legal, constitutional and administrative procedures to transform agreed
rights into domestic legislation and should adopt measures to implement
them in order to strengthen the legal capacity of women for full and
equal participation in issues and decisions on sustainable development.
24.5. States parties to the Convention on
the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women should
review and suggest amendments to it by the year 2000, with a view to
strengthening those elements of the Convention related to environment
and development, giving special attention to the issue of access and
entitlements to natural resources, technology, creative banking
facilities and low-cost housing, and the control of pollution and
toxicity in the home and workplace. States parties should also clarify
the extent of the Convention's scope with respect to the issues of
environment and development and request the Committee on the Elimination
of Discrimination against Women to develop guidelines regarding the
nature of reporting such issues, required under particular articles of
the Convention.
(a) Areas requiring urgent action
24.6. Countries should take urgent measures
to avert the ongoing rapid environmental and economic degradation in
developing countries that generally affects the lives of women and
children in rural areas suffering drought, desertification and
deforestation, armed hostilities, natural disasters, toxic waste and the
aftermath of the use of unsuitable agro-chemical products.
24.7. In order to reach these goals, women
should be fully involved in decision-making and in the implementation of
sustainable development activities.
(b) Research, data collection and
dissemination of information
24.8. Countries should develop
gender-sensitive databases, information systems and participatory
action-oriented research and policy analyses with the collaboration of
academic institutions and local women researchers on the following:
·
Knowledge and
experience on the part of women of the management and conservation of
natural resources for incorporation in the databases and information
systems for sustainable development;
·
The impact of
structural adjustment programmes on women. In research done on
structural adjustment programmes, special attention should be given to
the differential impact of those programmes on women, especially in
terms of cut-backs in social services, education and health and in the
removal of subsidies on food and fuel;
·
The impact on
women of environmental degradation, particularly drought,
desertification, toxic chemicals and armed hostilities;
·
Analysis of the
structural linkages between gender relations, environment and
development;
·
The integration
of the value of unpaid work, including work that is currently designated
"domestic", in resource accounting mechanisms in order better to
represent the true value of the contribution of women to the economy,
using revised guidelines for the United Nations System of National
Accounts, to be issued in 1993;
·
Measures to
develop and include environmental, social and gender impact analyses as
an essential step in the development and monitoring of programmes and
policies;
·
Programmes to
create rural and urban training, research and resource centres in
developing and developed countries that will serve to disseminate
environmentally sound technologies to women.
(c) International and regional cooperation
and coordination
24.9. The Secretary-General of the United
Nations should review the adequacy of all United Nations institutions,
including those with a special focus on the role of women, in meeting
development and environment objectives, and make recommendations for
strengthening their capacities. Institutions that require special
attention in this area include the Division for the Advancement of Women
(Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs, United Nations
Office at Vienna), the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM),
the International Research and Training Institute for the Advancement of
Women (INSTRAW) and the women's programmes of regional commissions. The
review should consider how the environment and development programmes of
each body of the United Nations system could be strengthened to
implement Agenda 21 and how to incorporate the role of women in
programmes and decisions related to sustainable development.
24.10. Each body of the United Nations
system should review the number of women in senior policy-level and
decision-making posts and, where appropriate, adopt programmes to
increase that number, in accordance with Economic and Social Council
resolution 1991/17 on the improvement of the status of women in the
Secretariat.
24.11. UNIFEM should establish regular
consultations with donors in collaboration with UNICEF, with a view to
promoting operational programmes and projects on sustainable development
that will strengthen the participation of women, especially low-income
women, in sustainable development and in decision-making. UNDP should
establish a women's focal point on development and environment in each
of its resident representative offices to provide information and
promote exchange of experience and information in these fields. Bodies
of the United Nations system, governments and non-governmental
organizations involved in the follow-up to the Conference and the
implementation of Agenda 21 should ensure that gender considerations are
fully integrated into all the policies, programmes and activities.
Means of
implementation
Financing and cost evaluation
24.12. The Conference secretariat has
estimated the average total annual cost (1993-2000) of implementing the
activities of this chapter to be about $40 million from the
international community on grant or concessional terms. These are
indicative and order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not been
reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial terms, including any
that are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia, the specific
strategies and programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
Notes
1/
Report of the World Conference to Review and Appraise the Achievements
of the United Nations Decade for Women: Equality, Development and Peace,
Nairobi, 15-26 July 1985 (United Nations publication, Sales No.
E.85.IV.10), chap. I, sect. A. |