UNITED NATIONS • Forum on Minority Issues
A. National, regional and local governments
12. Governments should acknowledge the particular challenges and barriers
faced by minority women. They should ensure that domestic legislation relevant to
anti-discrimination, equality, the rights of women and minority rights is adequate to
guarantee the protection of minority women and, where appropriate, that it take
explicitly into account the rights of minority women and the multiple and intersecting
forms of discrimination to which they may be subjected.
13. Governments should review, reform as appropriate and make transparent any
legislation, policy or practice that has a disproportionately negative effect on women
from particular minority groups, for example, by restricting their access to public and
work places, employment opportunities and educational institutions.
14. In addition to adopting domestic legislation preventing direct and indirect
discrimination against minority women and girls, Governments should ensure the
implementation of such legislation and that adequate penalties exist for acts of
discrimination.
15. Minority women’s access to justice should be evaluated and barriers
identified. Governments should consider appropriate safeguards, including those
aimed at guaranteeing the right of minority women and girls to non-discrimination
and their equal access to remedies in cases of violation of their rights. The justice
system, in particular at the local level, should be equipped to help ensure that minority
women have full and effective access to justice and comprehensive reparation. For
example, legal aid could be targeted at and made more easily accessible to women
from minority groups, including by means of outreach and the provision of translation
services in minority languages.
16. Governments should take all necessary measures to ensure protection of
minority women’s rights defenders and minority women who fulfil leadership roles
and may be at greater risk of violence.
17. Governments should recognize the need for special measures, policies and
programmes in order to address entrenched situations of discrimination and
exclusion experienced by certain women belonging to national or ethnic, religious
and linguistic minorities. They should ensure that policies equally benefit minority
women by adopting targeted approaches devised to eliminate gaps and inequality
between them and others in society. Such measures should be time-bound, monitored
and evaluated to assess their impact on the situation of disadvantaged minority
women and girls.
18. Accurate data disaggregated by ethnicity, gender, nationality, religion and
language allows for a greater understanding of the issues affecting minority women
and their circumstances, including their socio-economic situations, and enable
targeted interventions to be considered. A crucial prerequisite for this data collection
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Compilation of Recommendations of the First Four Sessions 2008 to 2011