Violence against women migrant workers
A/RES/70/130
growth and human development for countries of origin and destination, migrants
and their families, and in this regard recognizing the potential role of women
migrant workers in contributing to the implementation of the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development,
Concerned that many migrant women who are employed in the informal
economy and in less skilled work are especially vulnerable to abuse and
exploitation, underlining in this regard the obligation of States to protect the human
rights of migrants so as to prevent and address abuse and exploitation, observing
with concern that many women migrant workers take on jobs for which they may be
overqualified and in which, at the same time, they may be more vulnerable because
of poor pay and inadequate social protection, and in this regard taking note of the
adoption by the International Labour Conference on 12 June 2015, at its
104th session, of Recommendation No. 204 concerning the transition from the
informal to the formal economy,
Emphasizing the need for objective, comprehensive and broad-based
information, including sex- and age-disaggregated data and statistics, and gendersensitive indicators for research and analysis, and a wide exchange of experience
and lessons learned by individual Member States and civil society in the formulati on
of targeted policies and concrete strategies to specifically address violence against
women migrant workers, including in the context of discrimination,
Realizing that the movement of a significant number of women migrant
workers may be facilitated and made possible by means of fraudulent or irregular
documentation and sham marriages with the object of migration, that this may be
facilitated through, inter alia, the Internet and that those women migrant workers are
more vulnerable to abuse and exploitation,
Recognizing the importance of exploring the link between migration and
trafficking in persons in order to further efforts towards protecting women migrant
workers from violence, discrimination, exploitation and abuse,
Recognizing also that the vulnerabilities documented for women migrant
workers highlight increasingly complex migration contexts and channels, where
migrant workers may find themselves in life-threatening situations when entering
other countries,
Encouraged by some measures adopted by some countries of destination to
alleviate the plight of women migrant workers residing in their areas of jurisdiction
and to promote access to justice, such as the establishment of gender -sensitive
protection mechanisms for migrant workers, facilitating t heir access to mechanisms
for reporting complaints or providing assistance during legal proceedings,
Underlining the important role of relevant United Nations treaty bodies in
monitoring the implementation of human rights conventions and of the relevant
special procedures, as well as of the supervisory mechanisms of the International
Labour Organization in monitoring the implementation of labour rights instruments,
within their respective mandates, in addressing the problem of violence against
women migrant workers and in protecting and promoting their human rights and
welfare,
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