A/74/255
gender-based approaches to new urban planning projects have been developed in 27
cities participating in the “Safe cities and safe public spaces” initiative of UNWomen. 39
42. Women’s roles in and their contributions to public spaces should be recognized
and encouraged. 40 For example, in the United Republic of Tanzania, women market
vendors came together to form associations and unions to make markets safer for
women vendors. 41 In rural areas, women may use access to farmlands to promote
cultural rights, such as efforts in Guatemala to develop health and nutrition projects
that preserve cultural identity through the Mayan-Achi food system. 42 Through
participation in policy development, public art, planning and design, or event
programming, women can feel they too actually “own” the public spaces and claim
their rights to be in and use them.
Persons with disabilities
43. Accessibility is a precondition for the enjoyment of human rights and a means
for economic, social, cultural and political empowerment, participation and inclusion.
For persons with disabilities, lack of accessibility in built environments, from roads
and housing, to public buildings and spaces, directly affect s their capacity to live
independently and to fully participate in all aspects of life, including cultural life.
44. Recent evidence reveals a widespread lack of accessibility to public spaces for
persons with disabilities, 43 even in countries where a reasonable adaptation of
infrastructure to meet their needs is embedded in legislation. 44 Accessibility or
inclusive “universal design” principles, including tactile and audio cues for blind
persons, should be used from the initial stages of designing, as well as in building and
restructuring public infrastructures, facilities and services. Successful efforts have
been documented 45 and studies have shown that, if integrated from the initial stages,
universal design adds almost no or only 1 per cent in additional costs. 46 It is also the
responsibility of States to guarantee that public spaces are not fragmented and that
persons with disabilities can transit from one built environment or public service area
to another without physical obstacles. 47
__________________
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
19-13014
See UN-Women, “Safe cities and safe public spaces: global results report ”, for examples from
these participant cities. Montevideo received a 2018 special mention of the jury for “cultural
policies with a perspective on gender equality” (see www.agenda21culture.net/award/awardeditions/3rd-edition-2017-2018). See also Women Public Space Prague, a network of women
experts in urban planning, www.wpsprague.com/about-the-project.
See International Action Network for Gender Equity and Law, “Women, cultural rights and
public spaces”, p. 15.
UN-Women, “Case study: Tanzania – making markets safer for women traders”, 8 March 2017,
available at http://untf.unwomen.org/en/news-and-events/stories/2017/03/tanzania-makingmarkets-safer-for-women-traders.
Groundswell International, “Women’s project preserves cultural heritage of Mayan food system
in Guatemala”, 8 June 2018; see also A/67/287.
See Good Practices of Accessible Urban Development: Making Urban E nvironments Inclusive
and Fully Accessible to All (ST/ESA/364).
See contributions by Collectif des experts et entrepreneurs culturels on Cameroon and by Escola
de Gente on Brazil.
See, e.g., the adaptation of children’s games in the Parque de la Amistad, Uruguay, to follow
inclusive design. Information available at www.montevideo.gub.uy/areas-tematicas/personas-yciudadania/personas-con-discapacidad/accesibilidad/parque-de-la-amistad.
“Accessibility and disability inclusion in urban development ”, paper prepared by the Secretariat
for the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (2015), p. 2.
See contribution by Janett Jimenez Santos.
13/24