A/71/297
limited. It was agreed that some action in that area was necessary, in cooperation
with the Working Group and the internal groups at the World Bank, with a view to
promoting the aims of the Decade.
24. At the Inter-American Development Bank, the delegation discussed ways of
possible cooperation and sharing of experiences in promoting visibility and
development policies aimed at improving the well-being of people of African
descent in Latin America and the Caribbean region. The Working Group noted the
efforts of the Inter-American Development Bank in collecting disaggregated data on
people of African descent and in organizing projects that promoted development
with the identity of indigenous people and people of African descent at its core.
25. The Working Group also planned to undertake a mission to meet with
representatives of operational programmes and specialized agencies of the United
Nations system and to continue to explore ways in which it could make proposals
and contribute to development programmes intended to bene fit people of African
descent.
E.
Thematic research combating racial stereotypes
26. During the period under review, the Working Group began thematic research
on the issue of racial stereotyping of people of African descent, as an area of work
for continued efforts to combat negative racial stereotypes.
27. The Working Group studied racial stereotypes faced by people of African
descent around the world including the role of blackface in public events, such as
Black Pete in the Sinterklaas festival in the Netherlands, and the prevalence of such
racial stereotypes in the media and advertisements.
28. The blackface phenomenon, which portrays people of African descent in a
negative light, remains a global concern. It dehumanizes people of African descen t
and attacks their dignity and rights. The contemporary manifestation of blackface is
indicative of the increasing prevalence of racial stereotypes . Among other things, it
is a product of past inhumane practices such as enslavement, colonialism and
apartheid. It was perpetrated by Jim Crow and nurtured by those who refused to
acknowledge that people of African descent were victims of slavery, the slave trade,
colonialism and apartheid.
29. Racial stereotyping of people of African descent is taking place around the
world and must be addressed as an unacceptable phenomenon. Stereotypes are the
result of limited knowledge, misinterpretations, shortcomings of education and the
negative portrayal of people of African descent in the media and works of art. For
example, people of African descent are rarely present in films, and when they are
present have secondary or supporting roles only.
30. Ignorance of the world and of Africans does not help efforts to address the
matter of stereotyping. There is a failure to consider the African perspective and a
lack of an awareness of the African contribution to society. A purist attitude
prevents a more inclusive society that is open to diversity. A history of colonization
has also introduced values that do not take into account the African view of the
world. Global media in its pervasiveness has reinforced such values, which give
little importance to African characteristics.
16-13578
7/11