Justice still out of reach for millions of women
Justice still out of reach for millions of women, UN Women says
Flagship report from UN’s new organization for women recognizes progress, but calls on governments to take urgent action to end the injustices that keep women poorer and less powerful than men in every country in the world
New York, 6 July 2011 - Justice remains out of reach for millions of the world’s women, a flagship report launched today by UN Women warns.
Progress of the World’s Women: In Pursuit of Justice is UN Women’s first major report, following the organization’s launch in early 2011. It recognizes the positive progress made – 139 countries and territories now guarantee gender equality in their constitutions, for example – but also shows that too often, women continue to experience injustice, violence and inequality in their home and working lives.
To ensure justice becomes a reality for all women, UN Women calls on governments to:
•
Repeal laws that discriminate against women and
ensure that legislation protects women from violence and
inequality in the home and the workplace.
•
Support innovative justice services, including
one-stop shops, legal aid and specialized courts, to ensure
women can access the justice to which they are
entitled.
• Put women on the frontline of
justice delivery. As police, judges, legislators and
activists, women in every region are making a difference and
bringing about change.
• Invest in justice
systems that can respond to women’s needs. Donors
spend US$4.2 billion annually on aid for justice reform, but
only 5% of this spending specifically targets women and
girls.
“With half the world’s
population at stake, the findings of this report are a
powerful call to action. The foundations for justice for
women have been laid: in 1911, just two countries in the
world allowed women to vote – now that right is virtually
universal. But full equality demands that women become
men’s true equals in the eyes of the law – in their home
and working lives, and in the public sphere,” said
Michelle Bachelet, Under-Secretary-General and Executive
Director of UN Women.
Women still suffer gender injustice in their homes, the workplace and public life, Progress finds.
Much has been achieved in the
private and public spheres in the last century. Yet
discrimination and gender injustice remain prevalent around
the world. This inequality can be seen:
In
the home:
• Domestic violence is now
outlawed in 125 countries but, globally, 603 million women
live in countries where domestic violence is not considered
a crime.
• By 2011, at least 52 countries had
made marital rape a criminal offence. And yet, over 2.6
billion women live in countries where it has not been
explicitly criminalized.
• Laws based on
custom or religion, which exist alongside state legislation,
frequently restrict women’s rights within the family, in
marriage, divorce and the right to inherit
property.
In the workplace:
•
117 countries have equal pay laws yet, in practice, women
are still paid up to 30% less than men in some countries.
And women still do more unpaid domestic and caring work than
men in every region of the world.
• Globally,
53% of working women – 600 million in total – are in
vulnerable jobs, such as self-employment, domestic work or
unpaid work for family businesses, which often lack the
protection of labour laws.
In politics and
public life:
• In countries where there
have been steep increases in women’s representation in
parliaments, for example Rwanda, Nepal and Spain,
progressive laws on women’s rights have often followed.
Yet there are still less than 30% of women in parliament in
the vast majority of countries.
Changes in
the law, when properly enforced, lay the groundwork for
changing attitudes and improving women’s position in
society, Progress highlights.
Progress has been
made, the report shows, thanks to the efforts of
individuals, civil society and governments to give women
more economic and political power through legal change –
including guaranteeing equal pay, introducing parliamentary
quotas, and ensuring women know their rights and are able to
claim them. Landmark cases that have sped reform of laws and
changed attitudes include:
• The case of Maria
da Penha in Brazil, whose husband’s attacks, including an
attempt to electrocute her, left her paralyzed. She took the
case to the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, resulting
in stronger legislation in Brazil on domestic violence,
symbolically named Maria da Penha’s Law.
•
The case of Unity Dow, a judge from Botswana, who demanded
that she be able to pass on citizenship to her children,
whose father was a foreigner. Unity won her case, and at
least 19 African countries have since reformed their laws to
allow women to pass on citizenship to their children.
But legal reform is only a start, Progress
argues – laws must be implemented to translate into true
equality.
Across the board, existing laws are too often inadequately enforced, the report finds. Many women shrink away from reporting crimes due to social stigma and weak justice systems. The costs and practical difficulties of seeking justice can be prohibitive – from travel to a distant court, to paying for expensive legal advice. The result is high drop-out rates in cases where women seek redress, especially on gender-based violence.
Many governments are now taking practical steps to make justice more accessible for ordinary women – and others should learn from their example, Progress argues.
Ways of opening up access to justice can include:
• Investing in one-stop
shops which bring together justice, legal and health
care services in one place and cut down the number of steps
a woman has to take to access justice, as in South Africa.
• Employing more women police as in
Latin America, where women’s police stations have led to
an increase in the reporting of gender-based violence.
• Providing legal aid and awareness for
women as in countries as diverse as Pakistan, Mexico,
Fiji and Kyrgyzstan, to ensure that women know their rights
and can navigate justice systems.
• Creating
specialized courts such as mobile courts in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, which are bringing justice
to women in remote rural areas where levels of sexual
violence are very high.
By changing laws
and giving women practical support to see justice done, we
can change society and ensure women and men enjoy real
equality in the future, Progress
concludes.
UN Women is the UN organization dedicated to gender equality and the empowerment of women. A global champion for women and girls, UN Women was established to accelerate progress on meeting their rights worldwide. For more information, visit www.unwomen.org.