A/HRC/19/71
75.
Political parties should consider establishing such measures as mentoring
programmes through which successful minority women politicians may act as role models.
They should identify minority women with potential and encourage them to run for office,
raising awareness on minority women’s political participation while also reaching out to the
majority population to ensure continuous dialogue among all groups in society.
3.
National human rights institutions
76.
National human rights institutions should consider developing outreach programmes
and civic education aimed at increasing the effective political participation of women
belonging to minorities.
4.
Civil society
77.
Civil society should seek to play a role in breaking down the barriers preventing the
effective political participation of minority women, including by drawing on different
approaches, such as capacity-building and training.
78.
Civil society should develop civic education projects targeted at minority and
majority communities, highlighting a citizen’s rights, roles and responsibilities, and train
young women belonging to minorities in the skills of negotiation, communication,
advocacy, policymaking and governance.
79.
Support should be given to minority women’s organizations to elevate their status in
decision-making in general and also to increase their participation in traditional decisionmaking structures that are all too often male-dominated. It is also necessary to involve male
leaders in activities undertaken to increase the participation of minority women and develop
their leadership skills in order to also help in changing men’s perceptions of these women
in certain societies.
C.
Effective participation in economic, social and cultural life
80.
Minority women are often restricted in their access to the labour market or at higher
risk of unemployment. Barriers to minority women’s access to labour markets include lack
of education, lack of awareness of job opportunities, remoteness of the work location, lack
of public infrastructure for child care, cultural traditions and gendered societal roles,
gender- and minority-based discrimination in hiring, promotion and pay. Many working
minority women are involved in low-income earning activities, frequently in the informal
sector. In such informal labour markets, women are often excluded from basic labour
protection and employed under not only poor but also insecure, difficult, harmful or even
dangerous working conditions. The full and effective participation of minority women in
economic life is a prerequisite for the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals,
especially with regard to Goal 1, target 1 (a), on halving extreme poverty, and target 1 (b),
on the achievement of full, productive and decent work for all, and with regard to Goal 3,
on the promotion of gender equality.
81.
In some societies, minority women experience even more complex burdens of
poverty, ethnic, religious or descent-based prejudice and gender-based restrictions that can
frequently result in increased challenges relating to the right to an adequate standard of
living, including adequate housing. Access to and use and ownership of land and property
are central to women’s economic independence, social status and political influence.
Existing legislation and practices may, however, disadvantage minority women, while
entrenched gender roles leave them highly vulnerable, particularly with regard to ownership
of land or property, inheritance rights and access to credit, technology or markets.
Displacement as a result of any of a wide range of reasons, such as war, men having been
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