BIJLAGE 2: ENGELSE TEKST VAN DE
ALGEMENE AANBEVELINGEN VAN HET CEDAW GENERAL RECOMMENDATIONS
adopted by the
Committee on the Elimination
of Discrimination
against Women
According to article 21,
paragraph 1, of the Convention on the Elimination of
Discrimination against Women, the Committee may make
suggestions and general recommendations based on the
examination of the reports and information received from
the States parties. Such suggestions and general
recommendations shall be included in the report of the
Committee together with comments, if any, from States
parties. The Committee has so far (1996) adopted a total
of 22 general recommendations.
General Recommendation
1 (1986)
Reporting by States
parties
"Initial reports
submitted under article 18 of the Convention should cover
the situation up to the date of submission. Thereafter,
reports should be submitted at least every four years
after the first report was due and should include
obstacles encountered in implementing the Convention
fully and the measures adopted to overcome such
obstacles."
General Recommendation
2 (1987)
Reporting by States
parties
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Bearing in mind
that the Committee had been faced with difficulties in
its work because some initial reports of States parties
under article 18 of the Convention did not reflect
adequately the information available in the State party
concerned in accordance with the guidelines,
Recommends:
(a) That the States
parties, in preparing reports under article 18 of the
Convention, should follow the general guidelines adopted
in August 1983 as to the form, content and date of
reports;
(b) That the States
parties should follow the general recommendation adopted
in 1986 in these terms:
"Initial reports
submitted under article 18 of the Convention should cover
the situation up to the date of submission. Thereafter,
reports should be submitted at least every four years
after the first report was due and should include
obstacles encountered in implementing the Convention
fully and the measures adopted to overcome such
obstacles."
(c) That additional
information supplementing the report of a State party
should be sent to the Secretariat at least three months
before the session at which the report is due to be
considered.
General Recommendation
3 (1987)
Education and public
information campaigns
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Considering that
the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
against Women has considered 34 reports from States
parties since 1983,
Further considering
that, although the reports have come from States with
different levels of development, they present features in
varying degrees showing the existence of stereotyped
conceptions of women, owing to socio-cultural factors,
that perpetuate discrimination based on sex and hinder
the implementation of article 5 of the Convention,
Urges all States
parties effectively to adopt education and public
information programmes, which will help eliminate
prejudices and current practices that hinder the full
operation of the principle of the social equality of
women.
General Recommendation
4 (1987)
Reservations
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against women,
Having examined
reports from States parties at its sessions,
Expressed concern
in relation to the significant number of reservations
that appeared to be incompatible with the object and
purpose of the Convention.
Welcomes the
decision of the States parties to consider reservations
at its next meeting in New York in 1988, and to that end
suggests that all States parties concerned reconsider
such reservations with a view to withdrawing them.
General Recommendation
5 (1988)
Temporary special
measures
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Taking note that
the reports, the introductory remarks and the replies by
States parties reveal that while significant progress has
been achieved in regard to repealing or modifying
discriminatory laws, there is still a need for action to
be taken to implement fully the Convention by introducing
measures to promote de facto equality between men and
women,
Recalling article
4.1 of the Convention,
Recommends that
States parties make more use of temporary special
measures such as positive action, preferential treatment
or quota systems to advance women's integration into
education, the economy, politics and employment.
General Recommendation
6 (1988)
Effective national
machinery and publicity
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Having considered the
reports of States parties to the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women,
Noting United
Nations General Assembly resolution 42/60 of 30 November
1987,
Recommends that
States parties:
1. Establish and/or
strengthen effective national machinery, institutions and
procedures, at a high level of Government, and with
adequate resources, commitment and authority to:
(a) Advise on the impact
on women of all government policies;
(b) Monitor the situation
of women comprehensively;
(c) Help formulate new
policies and effectively carry out strategies and
measures to eliminate discrimination;
2. Take appropriate steps
to ensure the dissemination of the Convention, the
reports of the States parties under article 18 and the
reports of the Committee in the language of the States
concerned;
3. Seek the assistance of
the Secretary-General and the Department of Public
Information in providing translations of the Convention
and the reports of the Committee;
4. Include in their
initial and periodic reports the action taken in respect
of this recommendation.
General Recommendation
7 (1988)
Resources
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination of Women,
Noting General
Assembly resolutions 40/39, 41/108 and in particular
42/60, paragraph 14, which invited the Committee and the
States parties to consider the question of holding future
sessions of the Committee at Vienna,
Bearing in mind
General Assembly resolution 42/105 and, in particular,
paragraph ll, which requests the Secretary-General to
strengthen coordination between the United Nations Centre
for Human Rights and the Centre for Social Development
and Humanitarian Affairs of the secretariat in relation
to the implementation of human rights treaties and
servicing treaty bodies,
Recommends to the
States parties:
1. That they continue to
support proposals for strengthening the coordination
between the Centre for Human Rights at Geneva and the
Centre for Social Development and Humanitarian Affairs at
Vienna, in relation to the servicing of the Committee;
2. That they support
proposals that the Committee meet in New York and Vienna:
3. That they take all
necessary and appropriate steps to ensure that adequate
resources and services are available to the Committee to
assist it in its functions under the Convention and in
particular that full-time staff are available to help the
Committee to prepare for its sessions and during its
session;
4. That they ensure that
supplementary reports and materials are submitted to the
Secretariat in due time to be translated into the
official languages of the United Nations in time for
distribution and consideration by the Committee.
General Recommendation
8 (1988)
Implementation of
article 8 of the Convention
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Having considered
the reports of States parties submitted in accordance
with article 18 of the Convention,
Recommends that
States parties take further direct measures in accordance
with article 4 of the Convention to ensure the full
implementation of article 8 of the Convention and to
ensure to women on equal terms with men and without any
discrimination the opportunities to represent their
Government at the international level and to participate
in the work of international organizations.
General Recommendation
9 (1989)
Statistical data
concerning the situation of women
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Considering that
statistical information is absolutely necessary in order
to understand the real situation of women in each of the
States parties to the Convention.
Having observed
that many of the States parties that present their
reports for consideration by the Committee do not provide
statistics,
Recommends that
States parties should make every effort to ensure that
their national statistical services responsible for
planning national censuses and other social and economic
surveys formulate their questionnaires in such a way that
data can be disaggregated according to gender, with
regard to both absolute numbers and percentages, so that
interested users can easily obtain information on the
situation of women in the particular sector in which they
are interested.
General Recommendation
10 (1989)
Tenth anniversary of
the adoption of the Convention on the Elimination of All
Forms of Discrimination against Women
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Considering that 18
December 1989 marks the tenth anniversary of the adoption
of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women,
Considering further
that in those 10 years the Convention has proved to be
one of the most effective instruments that the United
Nations has adopted to promote equality between the sexes
in the societies of its States Members,
Recalling general
recommendation No. 6 (1988) on effective national
machinery and publicity,
Recommends that, on
the occasion of the tenth anniversary of the adoption of
the Convention, the States parties should consider:
1. Undertaking programmes
including conferences and seminars to publicize the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women in the main languages of and
providing information on the Convention in their
respective countries;
2. Inviting their national
women's organizations to cooperate in the publicity
campaigns regarding the Convention and its implementation
and encouraging non-governmental organizations at the
national, regional and international levels to publicize
the Convention and its implementation;
3. Encouraging action to
ensure the full implementation of the principles of the
Convention, and in particular article 8, which relates to
the participation of women at all levels of activity of
the United Nations and the United Nations system;
4. Requesting the
Secretary-General to commemorate the tenth anniversary of
the adoption of the Convention by publishing and
disseminating, in cooperation with the specialized
agencies, printed and other materials regarding the
Convention and its implementation in all official
languages of the United Nations, preparing television
documentaries about the Convention, and making the
necessary resources available to the Division for the
Advancement of Women, Centre for Social Development and
Humanitarian Affairs of the United Nations Office at
Vienna, to prepare an analysis of the information
provided by States parties in order to update and publish
the report of the Committee, which was first published
for the World Conference to Review and Appraise the
Achievements of the United Nations Decade for Women:
Equality, Development and Peace, held at Nairobi in 1985.
General Recommendation
11 (1989)
Technical advisory
services for reporting obligations
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Bearing in mind
that, as at 3 March 1989, 96 States had ratified the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women,
Taking into account
the fact that by that date 60 initial and 19 second
periodic reports had been received,
Noting that 36
initial and 36 second periodic reports were due by 3
March 1989 and had not yet been received,
Welcoming the
request in General Assembly resolution 43/115, paragraph
9, that the Secretary-General should arrange, within
existing resources and taking into account the priorities
of the programme of advisory services, further training
courses for those countries experiencing the most serious
difficulties in meeting their reporting obligations under
international instruments on human rights,
Recommends to
States parties that they should encourage, support and
cooperate in projects for technical advisory services,
including training seminars, to assist States parties on
their request in fulfilling their reporting obligations
under article 18 of the Convention.
General Recommendation
12 (1989)
Violence against
women
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Considering that
articles 2, 5, 11, 12 and 16 of the Convention require
the States parties to act to protect women against
violence of any kind occurring within the family, at the
workplace or in any other area of social life,
Taking into account Economic
and Social Council resolution 1988/27,
Recommends to the
States parties that they should include in their periodic
reports to the Committee information about:
1. The legislation in
force to protect women against the incidence of all kinds
of violence in everyday life (including sexual violence,
abuses in the family, sexual harassment at the workplace,
etc.);
2. Other measures adopted
to eradicate this violence;
3. The existence of
support services for women who are the victims of
aggression or abuses;
4 Statistical data on the
incidence of violence of all kinds against women and on
women who are the victims of violence.
General Recommendation
13 (1989)
Equal remuneration
for work of equal value
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Recalling
International Labour Organisation Convention No. 100
concerning Equal Remuneration for Men and Women Workers
for Work of Equal Value, which has been ratified by a
large majority of States parties to the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women,
Recalling also that
it has considered 51 initial and 5 second periodic
reports of States parties since 1983,
Considering that
although reports of States parties indicate that, even
though the principle of equal remuneration for work of
equal value has been accepted in the legislation of many
countries, more remains to be done to ensure the
application of that principle in practice, in order to
overcome the gender-segregation in the labour market,
Recommends to the
States parties to the Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Discrimination against Women that:
1. In order to implement
fully the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women, those States parties that
have not yet ratified ILO Convention No. 100 should be
encouraged to do so;
2. They should consider
the study, development and adoption of job evaluation
systems based on gender-neutral criteria that would
facilitate the comparison of the value of those jobs of a
different nature, in which women presently predominate,
with those jobs in which men presently predominate, and
they should include the results achieved in their reports
to the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
against Women;
3. They should support, as
far as practicable, the creation of implementation
machinery and encourage the efforts of the parties to
collective agreements, where they apply, to ensure the
application of the principle of equal remuneration for
work of equal value.
General Recommendation
14 (1990)
Female circumcision
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Concerned about the
continuation of the practice of female circumcision and
other traditional practices harmful to the health of
women,
Noting with
satisfaction that Governments, where such practices
exist, national women's organizations, non-governmental
organizations, specialized agencies, such as the World
Health Organization, the United Nations Children's Fund,
as well as the Commission on Human Rights and its
Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and
Protection of Minorities, remain seized of the issue
having particularly recognized that such traditional
practices as female circumcision have serious health and
other consequences for women and children.
Noting with interest
the study of the Special Rapporteur on Traditional
Practices Affecting the Health of Women and Children, as
well as the study of the Special Working Group on
Traditional Practices,
Recognizing that
women are taking important action themselves to identify
and to combat practices that are prejudicial to the
health and well-being of women and children,
Convinced that the
important action that is being taken by women and by all
interested groups needs to be supported and encouraged by
Governments,
Noting with grave
concern that there are continuing cultural,
traditional and economic pressures which help to
perpetuate harmful practices, such as female
circumcision,
Recommends to
States parties:
(a) That States parties
take appropriate and effective measures with a view to
eradicating the practice of female circumcision. Such
measures could include:
(i) The collection and
dissemination by universities, medical or nursing
associations, national women's organizations or other
bodies of basic data about such traditional practices;
(ii) The support of
women's organizations at the national and local levels
working for the elimination of female circumcision and
other practices harmful to women;
(iii) The encouragement of
politicians, professionals, religious and community
leaders at all levels including the media and the arts to
cooperate in influencing attitudes towards the
eradication of female circumcision;
(iv) The introduction of
appropriate educational and training programmes and
seminars based on research findings about the problems
arising from female circumcision;
(b) That States parties
include in their national health policies appropriate
strategies aimed at eradicating female circumcision in
public health care. Such strategies could include the
special responsibility of health personnel including
traditional birth attendants to explain the harmful
effects of female circumcision;
(c) That States parties
invite assistance, information and advice from the
appropriate organizations of the United Nations system to
support and assist efforts being deployed to eliminate
harmful traditional practices;
(d) That States parties
include in their reports to the Committee under articles
10 and 12 of the Convention on the Elimination of All
Forms of Discrimination against Women information about
measures taken to eliminate female circumcision.
General Recommendation
15 (1990)
Avoidance of
discrimination against women in national strategies for
the prevention and control of acquired immunodeficiency
syndrome (AIDS)
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Having considered
information brought to its attention on the potential
effects of both the global pandemic of acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and strategies to
control it on the exercise of the rights of women,
Having regard to
the reports and materials prepared by the World Health
Organization and other United Nations organizations,
organs and bodies in relation to human immunodeficiency
virus (HIV), and, in particular, the note by the
Secretary-General to the Commission on the Status of
Women on the effects of AIDS on the advancement of women
and the Final Document of the International Consultation
on AIDS and Human Rights, held at Geneva from 26 to 28
July 1989,
Noting World Health
Assembly resolution WHA 41.24 on the avoidance of
discrimination in relation to HIV-infected people and
people with AIDS of 13 May 1988, resolution 1989/11 of
the Commission on Human Rights on non-discrimination in
the field of health, of 2 March 1989, and in particular
the Paris Declaration on Women, Children and AIDS, of 30
November 1989,
Noting that the
World Health Organization has announced that the theme of
World Aids Day, 1 December 1990, will be "Women and
Aids",
Recommends:
(a) That States parties
intensify efforts in disseminating information to
increase public awareness of the risk of HIV infection
and AIDS, especially in women and children, and of its
effects on them;
(b) That programmes to
combat AIDS should give special attention to the rights
and needs of women and children, and to the factors
relating to the reproductive role of women and their
subordinate position in some societies which make them
especially vulnerable to HIV infection;
(c) That States parties
ensure the active participation of women in primary
health care and take measures to enhance their role as
care providers, health workers and educators in the
prevention of infection with HIV;
(d) That all States
parties include in their reports under article 12 of the
Convention information on the effects of AIDS on the
situation of women and on the action taken to cater to
the needs of those women who are infected and to prevent
specific discrimination against women in response to
AIDS.
General recommendation
No. 16 (1991)
Unpaid women workers
in rural and urban family enterprises
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Bearing in mind
articles 2 (c) and 11 (c), (d) and (e) of the Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women and general recommendation No. 9 (eighth session,
1989) on statistical data concerning the situation of
women,
Taking into
consideration that a high percentage of women in the
States parties work without payment, social security and
social benefits in enterprises owned usually by a male
member of the family,
Noting that the
reports presented to the Committee on the Elimination of
Discrimination against Women generally do not refer to
the problem of unpaid women workers of family
enterPrises.
Affirming that
unpaid work constitutes a form of women's exploitation
that is contrary to the Convention,
Recommends that
States parties:
(a) Include in their
reports to the Committee information on the legal and
social situation of unpaid women working in family
enterprises:
(b) Collect statistical
data on women who work without payment, social security
and social benefits in enterprises owned by a family
member, and include these data in their report to the
Committee:
(c) Take the necessary
steps to guarantee payment, social security and social
benefits for women who work without such benefits in
enterprises owned by a family member.
General recommendation
17 (1991)
Measurement and
quantification of the unremunerated domestic activities
of women and their recognition in the gross national
product
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Bearing in mind
article 11 of the Convention on the Elimination of All
Forms of Discrimination against Women,
Recalling paragraph
120 of the Nairobi Forward-looking Strategies for the
Advancement of Women, 1/
Affirming that the
measurement and quantification of the unremunerated
domestic activities of women, which contribute to
development in each country, will help to reveal the de
facto economic role of women,
Convinced that such
measurement and quantification offers a basis for the
formulation of further policies related to the
advancement of women,
Noting the
discussions of the Statistical Commission, at its
twenty-fifth session, on the current revision of the
System of National Accounts and the development of
statistics on women,
Recommends that
States parties:
(a) Encourage and support
research and experimental studies to measure and value
the unremunerated domestic activities of women; for
example, by conducting time-use surveys as part of their
national household survey programmes and by collecting
statistics disaggregated by gender on time spent on
activities both in the household and on the labour
market:
(b) Take steps, in
accordance with the provisions of the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
and the Nairobi Forward-looking Strategies for the
Advancement of Women, to quantify and include the
unremunerated domestic activities of women in the gross
national product:
(c) Include in their
reports submitted under article 18 of the Convention
information on the research and experimental studies
undertaken to measure and value unremunerated domestic
activities, as well as on the progress made in the
incorporation of the unremunerated domestic activities of
women in national accounts.
General recommendation
No. 18 (1991)
Disabled women
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Taking into
consideration particularly article 3 of the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women,
Having considered
more than 60 periodic reports of States parties, and
having recognized that they provide scarce information on
disabled women,
Concerned about the
situation of disabled women, who suffer from a double
discrimination linked to their special living conditions,
Recalling paragraph
296 of the Nairobi Forward-looking Strategies for the
Advancement of Women, 1/ in which disabled women are
considered as a vulnerable group under the heading
"areas of special concern",
Affirming its
support for the World Programme of Action concerning
Disabled Persons (1982),
Recommends that
States parties provide information on disabled women in
their periodic reports, and on measures taken to deal
with their particular situation, including special
measures to ensure that they have equal access to
education and employment, health services and social
security, and to ensure that they can participate in all
areas of social and cultural life.
General recommendation
19 (1992)
Violence against
women
Background
1. Gender-based violence
is a form of discrimination that seriously inhibits
women's ability to enjoy rights and freedoms on a basis
of equality with men.
2. In 1989, the Committee
recommended that States should include in their reports
information on violence and on measures introduced to
deal with it (General recommendation 12, eighth session).
3. At its tenth session in
1991, it was decided to allocate part of the eleventh
session to a discussion and study on article 6 and other
articles of the Convention relating to violence towards
women and the sexual harassment and exploitation of
women. That subject was chosen in anticipation of the
1993 World Conference on Human Rights, convened by the
General Assembly by its resolution 45/155 of 18 December
1990.
4. The Committee concluded
that not all the reports of States parties adequately
reflected the close connection between discrimination
against women, gender-based violence and violations of
human rights and fundamental freedoms. The full
implementation of the Convention required States to take
positive measures to eliminate all forms of violence
against women.
5. The Committee suggested
to States parties that in reviewing their laws and
policies, and in reporting under the Convention, they
should have regard to the following comments of the
Committee concerning gender-based violence.
General comments
6. The Convention in
article 1 defines discrimination against women. The
definition of discrimination includes gender-based
violence, that is, violence that is directed against a
woman because she is a woman or that affects women
disproportionately. It includes acts that inflict
physical, mental or sexual harm or suffering, threats of
such acts, coercion and other deprivations of liberty.
Gender-based violence may breach specific provisions of
the Convention, regardless of whether those provisions
expressly mention violence.
7. Gender-based violence,
which impairs or nullifies the enjoyment by women of
human rights and fundamental freedoms under general
international law or under human rights conventions, is
discrimination within the meaning of article 1 of the
Convention. These rights and freedoms include
(a) The right to life:
(b) The right not to be
subject to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment;
(c) The right to equal
protection according to humanitarian norms in time of
international or internal armed conflict:
(d) The right to liberty
and security of person:
(e) The right to equal
protection under the law
(f) The right to equality
in the family:
(g) The right to the
highest standard attainable of physical and mental health
(h) The right to just and
favourable conditions of work.
8. The Convention applies
to violence perpetrated by public authorities. Such acts
of violence may breach that State's obligations under
general international human rights law and under other
conventions, in addition to breaching this Convention.
9. It is emphasized,
however, that discrimination under the Convention is not
restricted to action by or on behalf of Governments (see
articles 2 (e), 2 (f) and 5). For example, under article
2-(e) the Convention calls on States parties to take all
appropriate measures to eliminate discrimination against
women by any person, organization or enterprise. Under
general international law and specific human rights
covenants, States may also be responsible for private
acts if they fail to act with due diligence to prevent
violations of rights or to investigate and punish acts of
violence, and for providing compensation.
Comments on
specific articles of the Convention
Articles 2 and 3
10. Articles 2 and 3
establish a comprehensive obligation to eliminate
discrimination in all its forms in addition to the
specific obligations under articles 5 to 16.
Articles 2 (f) 5 and 10
(c)
11. Traditional attitudes
by which women are regarded as subordinate to men or as
having stereotyped roles perpetuate widespread practices
involving violence or coercion, such as family violence
and abuse, forced marriage, dowry deaths, acid attacks
and female circumcision. Such prejudices and practices
may justify gender-based violence as a form of protection
or control of women. The effect of such violence on the
physical and mental integrity of women is to deprive them
of the equal enjoyment, exercise and knowledge of human
rights and fundamental freedoms. While this comment
addresses mainly actual or threatened violence the
underlying consequences of these forms of gender-based
violence help to maintain women in subordinate roles and
contribute to their low level of political participation
and to their lower level of education, skills and work
opportunities.
12. These attitudes also
contribute to the propagation of pornography and the
depiction and other commercial exploitation of women as
sexual objects, rather than as individuals. This in turn
contributes to gender-based violence.
Article 6
13. States parties are
required by article 6 to take measures to suppress all
forms of traffic in women and exploitation of the
prostitution of women.
14. Poverty and
unemployment increase opportunities for trafficking in
women. In addition to established forms of trafficking
there are new forms of sexual exploitation, such as sex
tourism, the recruitment of domestic labour from
developing countries to work in developed countries and
organized marriages between women from developing
countries and foreign nationals. These practices are
incompatible with the equal enjoyment of rights by women
and with respect for their rights and dignity. They put
women at special risk of violence and abuse.
15. Poverty and
unemployment force many women, including young girls,
into prostitution. Prostitutes are especially vulnerable
to violence because their status, which may be unlawful,
tends to marginalize them. They need the equal protection
of laws against rape and other forms of violence.
16. Wars, armed conflicts
and the occupation of territories often lead to increased
prostitution, trafficking in women and sexual assault of
women, which require specific protective and punitive
measures.
Article 11
17. Equality in employment
can be seriously impaired when women are subjected to
gender-specific violence, such as sexual harassment in
the workplace.
18. Sexual harassment
includes such unwelcome sexually determined behaviour as
physical contact and advances, sexually coloured remarks,
showing pornography and sexual demands, whether by words
or actions. Such conduct can be humiliating and may
constitute a health and safety problem; it is
discriminatory when the woman has reasonable grounds to
believe that her objection would disadvantage her in
connection with her employment, including recruitment or
promotion, or when it creates a hostile working
environment.
Article 12
19. States parties are
required by article 12 to take measures to ensure equal
access to health care. Violence against women puts their
health and lives at risk.
20. In some States there
are traditional practices perpetuated by culture and
tradition that are harmful to the health of women and
children. These practices include dietary restrictions
for pregnant women, preference for male children and
female circumcision or genital mutilation.
Article 14
21. Rural women are at
risk of gender-based violence because traditional
attitudes regarding the subordinate role of women persist
in many rural communities. Girls from rural communities
are at special risk of violence and sexual exploitation
when they leave the rural community to seek employment in
towns.
Article 16 (and article
5)
22. Compulsory
sterilization or abortion adversely affects women's
physical and mental health, and infringes the right of
women to decide on the number and spacing of their
children.
23. Family violence is one
of the most insidious forms of violence against women. It
is prevalent in all societies. Within family
relationships women of all ages are subjected to violence
of all kinds, including battering, rape, other forms of
sexual assault, mental and other forms of violence, which
are perpetuated by traditional attitudes. Lack of
economic independence forces many women to stay in
violent relationships. The abrogation of their family
responsibilities by men can be a form of violence and
coercion. These forms of violence put women's health at
risk and impair their ability to participate in family
life and public life on a basis of equality.
Specific recommendation
24. In light of these
comments, the Committee on the Elimination of
Discrimination against Women recommends that:
(a) States parties should
take appropriate and effective measures to overcome all
forms of gender-based violence, whether by public or
private act;
(b) States parties should
ensure that laws against family violence and abuse, rape,
sexual assault and other gender-based violence give
adequate protection to all women, and respect their
integrity and dignity. Appropriate protective and support
services should be provided for victims. Gendersensitive
training of judicial and law enforcement officers and
other public officials is essential for the effective
implementation of the Convention;
(c) States parties should
encourage the compilation of statistics and research on
the extent, causes and effects of violence, and on the
effectiveness of measures to prevent and deal with
violence;
(d) Effective measures
should be taken to ensure that the media respect and
promote respect for women;
(e) States parties in
their reports should identify the nature and extent of
attitudes, customs and practices that perpetuate violence
against women and the kinds of violence that result. They
should report on the measures that they have undertaken
to overcome violence and the effect of those measures;
(f) Effective measures
should be taken to overcome these attitudes and
practices. States should introduce education and public
information programmes to help eliminate prejudices that
hinder women's equality (recommendation No. 3, 1987);
(g) Specific preventive
and punitive measures are necessary to overcome
trafficking and sexual exploitation;
(h) States parties in
their reports should describe the extent of all these
problems and the measures, including penal provisions and
preventive and rehabilitation measures, that have been
taken to protect women engaged in prostitution or subject
to trafficking and other forms of sexual exploitation.
The effectiveness of these measures should also be
described;
(i) Effective complaints
procedures and remedies, including compensation, should
be provided;
(j) States parties should
include in their reports information on sexual
harassment, and on measures to protect women from sexual
harassment and other forms of violence or coercion in the
workplace;
(k) States parties should
establish or support services for victims of family
violence, rape, sexual assault and other forms of
gender-based violence, including refuges, specially
trained health workers, rehabilitation and counselling;
(1) States parties should
take measures to overcome such practices and should take
account of the Committee's recommendation on female
circumcision (recommendation No. 14) in reporting on
health issues;
(m) States parties should
ensure that measures are taken to prevent coercion in
regard to fertility and reproduction, and to ensure that
women are not forced to seek unsafe medical procedures
such as illegal abortion because of lack of appropriate
services in regard to fertility control;
(n) States parties in
their reports should state the extent of these problems
and should indicate the measures that have been taken and
their effect;
(o) States parties should
ensure that services for victims of violence are
accessible to rural women and that where necessary
special services are provided to isolated communities;
(p) Measures to protect
them from violence should include training and employment
opportunities and the monitoring of the employment
conditions of domestic workers;
(q) States parties should
report on the risks to rural women, the extent and nature
of violence and abuse to which they are subject, their
need for and access to support and other services and the
effectiveness of measures to overcome violence;
(r) Measures that are
necessary to overcome family violence should include:
(i) Criminal penalties
where necessary and civil remedies in cases of domestic
violence;
(ii) Legislation to remove
the defence of honour in regard to the assault nr murder
of a female family member;
(iii) Services to ensure
the safety and security of victims of family violence,
including refuges, counselling and rehabilitation
programmes;
(iv) Rehabilitation
programmes for perpetrators of domestic violence;
(v) Support services for
families where incest or sexual abuse has occurred;
(s) States parties should
report on the extent of domestic violence and sexual
abuse and on the preventive, punitive and remedial
measures that have been taken;
(t) States parties should
take all legal and other measures that are necessary to
provide effective protection of women against
gender-based violence, including, inter alia:
(i) Effective legal
measures, including penal sanctions, civil remedies and
compensatory provisions to protect women against all
kinds of violence, including inter alia violence
and abuse in the family, sexual assault and sexual
harassment in the workplace;
(ii) Preventive measures,
including public information and education programmes to
change attitudes concerning the roles and status of men
and women;
(iii) Protective measures,
including refuges, counselling, rehabilitation and
support services for women who are the victims of
violence or who are at risk of violence;
(u) States parties should
report on all forms of gender-based violence, and such
reports should include all available data on the
incidence of each form of violence and on the effects of
such violence on the women who are victims;
(v) The reports of States
parties should include information on the legal,
preventive and protective measures that have been taken
to overcome violence against women and on the
effectiveness of such measures.
General recommendation
20 (1992)
Reservations to the
Convention
1. The Committee recalled
the decision of the fourth meeting of States parties on
reservations to the Convention with regard to article
28.2, which was welcomed in general recommendation 4 of
the Committee.
2. The Committee
recommended that, in connection with preparations for the
world conference on Human Rights in 1993, States parties
should:
(a) Raise the question of
the validity and the legal effect of reservations to the
Convention in the contest of reservations to other human
rights treaties:
(b) Reconsider such
reservations with a view to strengthening the
implementation of all human rights treaties:
(c) Consider introducing a
procedure on reservations to the Convention comparable
with that of other human rights treaties.
General recommendation
21 (1994)
Equality in marriage
and family relations
l. The Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
affirms the equality of human rights for women and men in
society and in the family. The Convention has an
important place among international treaties concerned
with human rights.
2. Other conventions and
declarations also confer great significance on the family
and woman's status within it. These include the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, the International Covenant
on Civil and Political Rights, the Convention on the
Nationality of Married Women, the Convention on Consent
to Marriage, Minimum Age for Marriage and Registration of
Marriages, and the subsequent Recommendation thereon and
the Nairobi Forward-looking Strategies for the
Advancement of Women.
3. The Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
recalls the inalienable rights of women which are already
embodied in the above-mentioned conventions and
declarations, but it goes further by recognizing the
importance of culture and tradition in shaping the
thinking and behaviour of men and women and the
significant part they play in restricting the exercise of
basic rights by women.
Background
4. The year 1994 has been
designated by the General Assembly in its resolution
44/82 as the International Year of the Family. The
Committee wishes to take the opportunity to stress the
significance of compliance with women's basic rights
within the family as one of the measures which will
support and encourage the national celebrations that will
take place.
5. Having chosen in this
way to mark the International Year of the Family, the
Committee wishes to analyse three articles in the
Convention that have special significance for the status
of women in the family:
Article 9
1. States parties shall
grant women equal rights with men to acquire, change or
retain their nationality. They shall ensure in particular
that neither marriage to an alien nor change of
nationality by the husband during marriage shall
automatically change the nationality of the wife, render
her stateless or force upon her the nationality of the
husband.
2. States parties shall
grant women equal rights with men with respect to the
nationality of their children.
Comment
6. Nationality is critical
to full participation in society. In general, States
confer nationality on those who are born in that country.
Nationality can also be acquired by reason of settlement
or granted for humanitarian reasons such as
statelessness. Without status as nationals or citizens,
women are deprived of the right to vote or to stand for
public office and may be denied access to public benefits
and a choice of residence. Nationality should be capable
of change by an adult woman and should not be arbitrarily
removed because of marriage or dissolution of marriage or
because her husband or father changes his nationality.
Article 15
1. States parties shall
accord to women equality with men before the law.
2. States parties shall
accord to women, in civil matters, a legal capacity
identical to that of men and the same opportunities to
exercise that capacity. In particular, they shall give
women equal rights to conclude contracts and to
administer property and shall treat them equally in all
stages of procedure in courts and tribunals.
3. States parties agree
that all contracts and all other private instruments of
any kind with a legal effect which is directed at
restricting the legal capacity of women shall be deemed
null and void.
4. States parties shall
accord to men and women the same rights with regard to
the law relating to the movement of persons and the
freedom to choose their residence and domicile.
Comment
7. When a woman cannot
enter into a contract at all, or have access to financial
credit, or can do so only with her husband's or a male
relative's concurrence or guarantee, she is denied legal
autonomy. Any such restriction prevents her from holding
property as the sole owner and precludes her from the
legal management of her own business or from entering
into any other form of contract. Such restrictions
seriously limit the woman's ability to provide for
herself and her dependents.
8. A woman's right to
bring litigation is limited in some countries by law or
by her access to legal advice and her ability to seek
redress from the courts. In others, her status as a
witness or her evidence is accorded less respect or
weight than that of a man. Such laws or customs limit the
woman's right effectively to pursue or retain her equal
share of property and diminish her standing as an
independent, responsible and valued member of her
community. When countries limit a woman's legal capacity
by their laws, or permit individuals or institutions to
do the same, they are denying women their rights to be
equal with men and restricting women's ability to provide
for themselves and their dependents.
9. Domicile is a concept
in common law countries referring to the country in which
a person intends to reside and to whose jurisdiction she
will submit. Domicile is originally acquired by a child
through its parents but, in adulthood, denotes the
country in which a person normally resides and in which
she intends to reside permanently. As in the case of
nationality, the examination of States parties' reports
demonstrates that a woman will not always be permitted at
law to choose her own domicile. Domicile, like
nationality, should be capable of change at will by an
adult woman regardless of her marital status. Any
restrictions on a woman's right to choose a domicile on
the same basis as a man may limit her access to the
courts in the country in which she lives or prevent her
from entering and leaving a country freely and in her own
right.
10. Migrant women who live
and work temporarily in another country should be
permitted the same rights as men to have their spouses,
partners and children join them.
Article 16
1. States parties shall
take all appropriate measures to eliminate discrimination
against women in all matters relating to marriage and
family relations and in particular shall ensure, on a
basis of equality of men and women:
(a) The same right to
enter into marriage;
(b) The same right freely
to choose a spouse and to enter into marriage only with
their free and full consent;
(c) The same rights and
responsibilities during marriage and at its dissolution;
(d) The same rights and
responsibilities as parents, irrespective of their
marital status, in matters relating to their children; in
all cases the interests of the children shall be
paramount;
(e) The same rights to
decide freely and responsibly on the number and spacing
of their children and to have access to the information,
education and means to enable them to exercise these
rights;
(f) The same rights and
responsibilities with regard to guardianship, wardship,
trusteeship and adoption of children, or similar
institutions where these concepts exist in national
legislation; in all cases the interests of the children
shall be paramount:
(g) The same personal
rights as husband and wife, including the right to choose
a family name, a profession and an occupation;
(h) The same rights for
both spouses in respect of the ownership, acquisition,
management, administration, enjoyment and disposition of
property, whether free of charge or for a valuable
consideration.
2. The betrothal and the
marriage of a child shall have no legal effect, and all
necessary action, including legislation, shall be taken
to specify a minimum age for marriage and to make the
registration of marriages in an official registry
compulsory.
Comment
Public and private life
11. Historically, human
activity in public and private life has been viewed
differently and regulated accordingly. In all societies
women who have traditionally performed their roles in the
private or domestic sphere have long had those activities
treated as inferior.
12. As such activities are
invaluable for the survival of society, there can be no
justification for applying different and discriminatory
laws or customs to them. Reports of States parties
disclose that there are still countries where de jure
equality does not exist. Women are thereby prevented from
having equal access to resources and from enjoying
equality of status in the family and society. Even where de
jure equality exists, all societies assign different
roles, which are regarded as inferior, to women. In this
way, principles of justice and equality contained in
particular in article 16 and also in articles 2, 5 and 24
of the Convention are being violated.
Various forms of family
13. The form and concept
of the family can vary from State to State, and even
between regions within a State. Whatever form it takes,
and whatever the legal system, religion, custom or
tradition within the country, the treatment of women in
the family both at law and in private must accord with
the principles of equality and justice for all people, as
article 2 of the Convention requires.
Polygamous marriages
14. States parties'
reports also disclose that polygamy is practised in a
number of countries. Polygamous marriage contravenes a
woman's right to equality with men, and can have such
serious emotional and financial consequences for her and
her dependents that such marriages ought to be
discouraged and prohibited. The Committee notes with
concern that some States parties, whose constitutions
guarantee equal rights, permit polygamous marriage in
accordance with personal or customary law. This violates
the constitutional rights of women, and breaches the
provisions of article 5 (a) of the Convention.
Article 16 (1) (a) and
(b)
15. While most countries
report that national constitutions and laws comply with
the Convention, custom, tradition and failure to enforce
these laws in reality contravene the Convention.
16. A woman's right to
choose a spouse and enter freely into marriage is central
to her life and to her dignity and equality as a human
being. An examination of States parties' reports
discloses that there are countries which, on the basis of
custom, religious beliefs or the ethnic origins of
particular groups of people, permit forced marriages or
remarriages. Other countries allow a woman's marriage to
be arranged for payment or preferment and in others
women's poverty forces them to marry foreign nationals
for financial security. Subject to reasonable
restrictions based for example on a woman's youth or
consanguinity with her partner, a woman's right to choose
when, if, and whom she will marry must be protected and
enforced at law.
Article 16 (1) (c)
17. An examination of
States parties' reports discloses that many countries in
their legal systems provide for the rights and
responsibilities of married partners by relying on the
application of common law principles, religious or
customary law, rather than by complying with the
principles contained in the Convention. These variations
in law and practice relating to marriage have
wide-ranging consequences for women, invariably
restricting their rights to equal status and
responsibility within marriage. Such limitations often
result in the husband being accorded the status of head
of household and primary decision maker and therefore
contravene the provisions of the Convention.
18. Moreover, generally a
de facto union is not given legal protection at all.
Women living in such relationships should have their
equality of status with men both in family life and in
the sharing of income and assets protected by law. Such
women should share equal rights and responsibilities with
men for the care and raising of dependent children or
family members.
Article 16 (1) (d) and
(f)
19. As provided in article
5 (b), most States recognize the shared responsibility of
parents for the care, protection and maintenance of
children. The principle that "the best interests of
the child shall be the paramount consideration", has
been included in the Convention on the Rights of the
Child and seems now to be universally accepted. However,
in practice, some countries do not observe the principle
of granting the parents of children equal status,
particularly when they are not married. The children of
such unions do not always enjoy the same status as those
born in wedlock and, where the mothers are divorced or
living apart, many fathers fail to share the
responsibility of care, protection and maintenance of
their children.
20. The shared rights and
responsibilities enunciated in the Convention should be
enforced at law and as appropriate through legal concepts
of guardianship, wardship, trusteeship and adoption.
States parties should ensure that by their laws both
parents, regardless of their marital status and whether
they live with their children or not, share equal rights
and responsibilities for their children.
Article 16 (1) (e)
21. The responsibilities
that women have to bear and raise children affect their
right of access to education, employment and other
activities related to their personal development. They
also impose inequitable burdens of work on women. The
number and spacing of their children have a similar
impact on women's lives and also affect their physical
and mental health, as well as that of their children. For
these reasons, women are entitled to decide on the number
and spacing of their children.
22. Some reports disclose
coercive practices which have serious consequences for
women, such as forced pregnancies, abortions or
sterilization. Decisions to have children or not, while
preferably made in consultation with spouse or partner,
must not nevertheless be limited by spouse, parent,
partner or Government. In order to make an informed
decision about safe and reliable contraceptive measures,
women must have information about contraceptive measures
and their use, and
guaranteed access to sex education and family planning
services, as provided in article 10 (h) of the
Convention.
23. There is general
agreement that where there are freely available
appropriate measures for the voluntary regulation of
fertility, the health, development and well-being of all
members of the family improves. Moreover, such services
improve the general quality of life and health of the
population, and the voluntary regulation of population
growth helps preserve the environment and achieve
sustainable economic and social development.
Article 16 (1) (g)
24. A stable family is one
which is based on principles of equity, justice and
individual fulfilment for each member. Each partner must
therefore have the right to choose a profession or
employment that is best suited to his or her abilities,
qualifications and aspirations, as provided in article 11
(a) and (c) of the Convention. Moreover, each partner
should have the right to choose his or her name, thereby
preserving individuality and identity in the community
and distinguishing that person from other members of
society. When by law or custom a woman is obliged to
change her name on marriage or at its dissolution, she is
denied these rights.
Article 16 (1) (h)
25. The rights provided in
this article overlap with and complement those in article
15 (2) in which an obligation is placed on States to give
women equal rights to enter into and conclude contracts
and to administer property.
26. Article 15 (1)
guarantees women equality with men before the law. The
right to own, manage, enjoy and dispose of property is
central to a woman's right to enjoy financial
independence, and in many countries will be critical to
her ability to earn a livelihood and to provide adequate
housing and nutrition for herself and for her family.
27. In countries that are
undergoing a programme of agrarian reform or
redistribution of land among groups of different ethnic
origins, the right of women, regardless of marital
status, to share such redistributed land on equal terms
with men should be carefully observed.
28. In most countries, a
significant proportion of the women are single or
divorced and many have the sole responsibility to support
a family. Any discrimination in the division of property
that rests on the premise that the man alone is
responsible for the support of the women and children of
his family and that he can and will honourably discharge
this responsibility is clearly unrealistic. Consequently,
any law or custom that grants men a right to a greater
share of property at the end of a marriage or de facto
relationship, or on the death of a relative, is
discriminatory and will have a serious impact on a
woman's practical ability to divorce her husband, to
support herself or her family and to live in dignity as
an independent person.
29. All of these rights
should be guaranteed regardless of a woman's marital
status.
Marital property
30. There are countries
that do not acknowledge that right of women to own an
equal share of the property with the husband during a
marriage or de facto relationship and when that marriage
or relationship ends. Many countries recognize that
right, but the practical ability of women to exercise it
may be limited by legal precedent or custom.
31. Even when these legal
rights are vested in women, and the courts enforce them,
property owned by a woman during marriage or on divorce
may be managed by a man. In many States, including those
where there is a community-property regime, there is no
legal requirement that a woman be consulted when property
owned by the parties during marriage or de facto
relationship is sold or otherwise disposed of. This
limits the woman's ability to control disposition of the
property or the income derived from it.
32. In some countries, on
division of marital property, greater emphasis is placed
on financial contributions to property acquired during a
marriage, and other contributions, such as raising
children, caring for elderly relatives and discharging
household duties are diminished. Often, such
contributions of a non-financial nature by the wife
enable the husband to earn an income and increase the
assets. Financial and non-financial contributions should
be accorded the same weight.
33. In many countries,
property accumulated during a de facto relationship is
not treated at law on the same basis as property acquired
during marriage. Invariably, if the relationship ends,
the woman receives a significantly lower share than her
partner. Property laws and customs that discriminate in
this way against married or unmarried women with or
without children should be revoked and discouraged.
Inheritance
34. Reports of States
parties should include comment on the legal or customary
provisions relating to inheritance laws as they affect
the status of women as provided in the Convention and in
Economic and Social Council resolution 884 D (XXXIV), in
which the Council recommended that States ensure that men
and women in the same degree of relationship to a
deceased are entitled to equal shares in the estate and
to equal rank in the order of succession. That provision
has not been generally implemented.
35. There are many
countries where the law and practice concerning
inheritance and property result in serious discrimination
against women. As a result of this uneven treatment,
women may receive a smaller share of the husband's or
father's property at his death than would widowers and
sons. In some instances, women are granted limited and
controlled rights and receive income only from the
deceased's property. Often inheritance rights for widows
do not reflect the principles of equal ownership of
property acquired during marriage. Such provisions
contravene the Convention and should be abolished.
Article 16 (2)
36. In the Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action 2/ adopted by the
World Conference on Human Rights, held at Vienna from 14
to 25 June 1993, States are urged to repeal existing laws
and regulations and to remove customs and practices which
discriminate against and cause harm to the girl child.
Article 16 (2) and the
provisions of the Convention on the Rights of the Child
preclude States parties from permitting or giving
validity to a marriage between persons who have not
attained their majority. In the context of the Convention
on the Rights of the Child, "a child means every
human being below the age of eighteen years unless, under
the law applicable to the child, majority is attained
earlier". Notwithstanding this definition, and
bearing in mind the provisions of the Vienna Declaration,
the Committee considers that the minimum age for marriage
should be 18 years for both man and woman. When men and
women marry, they assume important responsibilities.
Consequently, marriage should not be permitted before
they have attained full maturity and capacity to act.
According to the World Health Organization, when minors,
particularly girls, marry and have children, their health
can be adversely affected and their education is impeded.
As a result their economic autonomy is restricted.
37. This not only affects
women personally but also limits the development of their
skills and independence and reduces access to employment,
thereby detrimentally affecting their families and
communities.
38. Some countries provide
for different ages for marriage for men and women. As
such provisions assume incorrectly that women have a
different rate of intellectual development from men, or
that their stage of physical and intellectual development
at marriage is immaterial, these provisions should be
abolished. In other countries, the betrothal of girls or
undertakings by family members on their behalf is
permitted. Such measures contravene not only the
Convention, but also a woman's right freely to choose her
partner.
39. States parties should
also require the registration of all marriages whether
contracted civilly or according to custom or religious
law. The State can thereby ensure compliance with the
Convention and establish equality between partners, a
minimum age for marriage, prohibition of bigamy and
polygamy and the protection of the rights of children.
Recommendations
Violence against women
40. In considering the
place of women in family life, the Committee wishes to
stress that the provisions of general recommendation 19
(eleventh session) 3/ concerning violence against women
have great significance for women's abilities to enjoy
rights and freedoms on an equal basis with men. States
parties are urged to comply with that general
recommendation to ensure that, in both public and family
life, women will be free of the gender-based violence
that so seriously impedes their rights and freedoms as
individuals.
Reservations
41. The Committee has
noted with alarm the number of States parties which have
entered reservations to the whole or part of article 16,
especially when a reservation has also been entered to
article 2, claiming that compliance may conflict with a
commonly held vision of the family based, inter alia,
on cultural or religious beliefs or on the country's
economic or political status.
42. Many of these
countries hold a belief in the patriarchal structure of a
family which places a father, husband or son in a
favourable position. In some countries where
fundamentalist or other extremist views or economic
hardships have encouraged a return to old values and
traditions, women's place in the family has deteriorated
sharply. In others, where it has been recognized that a
modern society depends for its economic advance and for
the general good of the community on involving all adults
equally, regardless of gender, these taboos and
reactionary or extremist ideas have progressively been
discouraged.
43. Consistent with
articles 2, 3 and 24 in particular, the Committee
requires that all States parties gradually progress to a
stage where, by its resolute discouragement of notions of
the inequality of women in the home, each country will
withdraw its reservation, in particular to articles 9, 15
and 16 of the Convention.
44. States parties should
resolutely discourage any notions of inequality of women
and men which are affirmed by laws, or by religious or
private law or by custom, and progress to the stage where
reservations, particularly to article 16, will be
withdrawn.
45. The Committee noted,
on the basis of its examination of initial and subsequent
periodic reports, that in some States parties to the
Convention that had ratified or acceded without
reservation, certain laws, especially those dealing with
family, do not actually conform to the provisions of the
Convention.
46. Their laws still
contain many measures which discriminate against women
based on norms, customs and socio-cultural prejudices.
These States, because of their specific situation
regarding these articles, make it difficult for the
Committee to evaluate and understand the status of women.
47. The Committee, in
particular on the basis of articles 1 and 2 of the
Convention, requests that those States parties make the
necessary efforts to examine the de facto situation
relating to the issues and to introduce the required
measures in their national legislations still containing
provisions discriminatory to women.
Reports
48. Assisted by the
comments in the present general recommendation, in their
reports States parties should:
(a) Indicate the stage
that has been reached in the country's progress to
removal of all reservations to the Convention, in
particular reservations to article 16;
(b) Set out whether their
laws comply with the principles of articles 9, 15 and 16
and where, by reason of religious or private law or
custom, compliance with the law or with the Convention is
impeded.
Legislation
49. States parties should,
where necessary to comply with the Convention, in
particular in order to comply with articles 9, 15 and 16,
enact and enforce legislation.
Encouraging compliance
with the Convention
50. Assisted by the
comments in the present general recommendation, and as
required by articles 2, 3 and 24, States parties should
introduce measures directed at encouraging full
compliance with the principles of the Convention,
particularly where religious or private law or custom
conflict with those principles.
General recommendation
22 (1995)
Amending article 20 of
the Convention
The Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
Noting that the
States parties to the Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Discrimination against Women, at the request
of the General Assembly, will meet during 1995 to
consider amending article 20 of the Convention,
Recalling its
previous decision, taken at its tenth session, to ensure
effectiveness in its work and prevent the building up of
an undesirable backlog in the consideration of reports of
States parties,
Recalling that the
Convention is one of the international human rights
instruments that has been ratified by the largest number
of States parties,
Considering that
the articles of the Convention address the fundamental
human rights of women in all aspects of their daily lives
and in all areas of society and the State,
Concerned about the
workload of the Committee as a result of the growing
number of ratifications, in addition to the backlog of
reports pending consideration, as reflected in annex I,
Concerned also
about the long lapse of time between the submission of
reports of States parties and their consideration,
resulting in the need for States to provide additional
information for updating their reports,
Bearing in mind
that the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
against Women is the only human rights treaty body whose
meeting time is limited by its Convention, and that it
has the shortest duration of meeting time of all the
human rights treaty bodies, as reflected in annex II,
Noting that the
limitation on the duration of sessions, as contained in
the Convention, has become a serious obstacle to the
effective performance by the Committee of its functions
under the Convention,
1. Recommends that
the States parties favourably consider amending article
20 of the Convention in respect of the meeting time of
the Committee, so as to allow it to meet annually for
such duration as is necessary for the effective
performance of its functions under the Convention, with
no specific restriction except for that which the General
Assembly shall decide;
2. Recommends also
that the General Assembly, pending the completion of an
amendment process, authorize the Committee to meet
exceptionally in 1996 for two sessions, each of three
weeks' duration and each being preceded by pre-session
working groups;
3. Recommends further
that the meeting of States parties receive an oral report
from the chairperson of the Committee on the difficulties
faced by the Committee in performing its functions;
4. Recommends that
the Secretary-General make available to the States
parties at their meeting all relevant information on the
workload of the Committee and comparative information in
respect of the other human rights treaty bodies.
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