A/RES/48/108
Page 3
3.
Urges Governments, international organizations and
non-governmental organizations to implement the recommendations;
4.
Calls again upon Member States to give priority to policies and
programmes relating to the subtheme "Employment, health and education", in
particular to literacy, for self-reliance of women and the mobilization of
indigenous resources, as well as to issues relating to the role of women in
economic and political decision-making, population, the environment,
information and science and technology;
5.
Reaffirms the central role of the Commission on the Status of
Women in matters related to the advancement of women, and calls upon it to
continue promoting the implementation of the Forward-looking Strategies to the
year 2000, based on the goals of the United Nations Decade for Women:
Equality, Development and Peace and the subtheme "Employment, health and
education", and urges all relevant bodies of the United Nations system to
cooperate effectively with the Commission in this task;
6.
Requests the Commission, when considering the priority theme
relating to development during its thirty-eighth and subsequent sessions, to
ensure its early contribution to the preparatory work for forthcoming major
international conferences such as the International Conference on Population
and Development, to be held in 1994, the Fourth World Conference on Women:
Action for Equality, Development and Peace, to be held in 1995, and the World
Summit for Social Development, to be held in 1995, and to address the impact
of technologies on women;
7.
Also requests the Commission to give special attention to women in
developing countries, particularly in Africa and the least developed
countries, who suffer disproportionately from the effects of the global
economic crisis and the heavy external debt burden, and to recommend further
measures for the equalization of opportunity and for the integration of the
roles and perspective of women, as well as their needs, concerns and
aspirations, into the entire development process when considering the priority
theme of development;
8.
Emphasizes, in the framework of the Forward-looking Strategies,
the importance of the total integration of women of all ages in the
development process, bearing in mind the specific and urgent needs of the
developing countries, and calls upon Member States to establish specific
targets at each level in order to increase the participation of women in
professional, management and decision-making positions in their countries;
9.
Emphasizes once again the need to give urgent attention to
redressing socio-economic inequities at the national and international levels
as a necessary step towards the full realization of the goals and objectives
of the Forward-looking Strategies through meeting the practical and strategic
needs of women;
10.
Strongly urges that particular attention be given by the competent
United Nations organizations and Governments to the special needs of women
with disabilities, elderly women and also women in vulnerable situations such
as migrant and refugee women and children;
11.
Takes note of the report of the Secretary-General on the
improvement of the situation of women in rural areas 5/ and urges the
/...