E/2004/43
E/C.19/2004/23
(e)
Increasing outreach to indigenous women’s organizations worldwide;
(f) Increasing the outreach and information flow to and from the academic
community, including indigenous educational institutions, on indigenous women’s
issues.
9.
The Forum underlines the importance of technical cooperation and capacitybuilding programmes regarding and involving indigenous women, and in that
respect recommends that such programmes conducted by the Office of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, the Department of Economic and
Social Affairs, ILO, UNDP, among others, include projects regarding and involving
indigenous women.
10. The Forum recognizes the instrumental role of the Inter-Agency Network on
Women and Gender Equality (IANWGE) and welcomes the identification of
“indigenous women” as an emerging key issue, the creation of a task force on
indigenous women and the inclusion of an item on indigenous women in its 2005
agenda. The Forum requests its secretariat to transmit to it the results of the 2005
session of IANWGE on indigenous women.
11. The Forum urges the secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity, in
conjunction with other relevant United Nations entities, to convene a workshop on
the theme “Indigenous women, traditional knowledge and the Convention on
Biological Diversity” in collaboration with the Indigenous Women’s Biodiversity
Network and the Commission of Intellectual Property and Commercialization of the
Intercontinental Network of Indigenous Women of the Americas.
12. Given the large number of indigenous migrants within and beyond national
borders and the particular vulnerability of indigenous women migrants, as well as
the lack of adequate data and attention to their problems, the Forum recommends
launching a new initiative involving various stakeholders, including the InterAgency Support Group, the United Nations International Research and Training
Institute for the Advancement of Women and the International Organization for
Migration (IOM), in order to face this urgency. The Forum recommends, as a first
step, the convening of a workshop on the theme “Migration of indigenous women”
in order to highlight the urgency and scale of the issue, including the alarming trend
of trafficking indigenous women within and across national borders, and the
development of recommendations and guidelines for addressing the problems faced
by indigenous migrant women. Participants to the workshop should be a selected
number of members of the Forum, relevant United Nations departments, agencies,
funds and programmes, and experts from indigenous organizations, NGOs,
intergovernmental organizations, Governments and academia. The objectives of the
workshop should be:
(a)
To underscore the urgency and scale of the issue;
(b) To highlight and address the lack of reliable data on the issue and to
promote the systematic collection of data (of both quantitative and qualitative
nature) by relevant United Nations and other intergovernmental entities,
Governments, NGOs, indigenous organizations, and academia;
(c)
To review and analyse existing data;
(d)
To provide a report, including recommendations, to the Forum.
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