Women in development
A/RES/70/219
young people, unsustainable debt in some countries and widespread fiscal strains,
which pose challenges for global economic recovery and reflect the need for
additional progress towards sustaining and rebalancing global demand, and stressing
the need for continuing efforts to address systemic fragilities and imbalances and to
reform and strengthen the international financial system while implementing the
reforms agreed upon to date,
Reaffirming the provisions concerning the pursuit of full and productive
employment and access to decent work and social protection for all in the outcome
document of the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, and
calling upon States to adopt forward-looking macroeconomic policies that promote
sustainable development and lead to sustained, inclusive and equitable economic
growth, increase productive employment opportunities and promote agricultural and
industrial development,
Recognizing that men and women workers should have equal access to
education, skills training, health care, social security, fundamental rights at work,
social and legal protections, including occupational safety and health, and decent
work opportunities,
Recognizing also that achieving the highest attainable standard of health,
through, inter alia, equitable and universal access to affordable and quality health care services and preventive health-care information, including in the area of sexual
and reproductive health, is critical to women’s economic advancement and
empowerment, that a lack of economic empowerment and independence increases
women’s vulnerability to a range of negative consequences, including the risk of
contracting HIV/AIDS, and that the neglect of women’s full enjoyment of human
rights severely limits their opportunities in public and private life, including the
opportunities for receiving an education and for achieving economic and political
empowerment,
Reaffirming that equal access to quality and inclusive education and training at
all levels, in particular in business, trade, administration, information and
communications technology, science, technology, engineering and mathematics and
other new technologies, and fulfilment of the need to eliminate gender inequalities
at all levels are essential for gender equality, the empowerment of women and
poverty eradication and to allowing women’s full and equal contribution to, and
equal opportunity to benefit from, development,
Reaffirming also that women are key contributors to the economy and to
combating poverty and inequalities, through both paid and unpaid work, at home, in
the community and in the workplace and that the empowerment of women is a
critical factor in the eradication of poverty,
Recognizing that unremunerated work, including unpaid care and domestic
work, plays an essential role in improving well-being in the household and in the
functioning of the economy as a whole, and acknowledging the need to recognize
and consider, where appropriate, policies and programmes that would contribute to
reducing the unequal burden of unremunerated work, including care work, for which
women and girls continue to carry an unequal level of responsibility, and to promote
shared responsibility within the household,
Emphasizing the need to address disaster risk reduction and the building of
resilience in the case of disasters with a renewed sense of urgency in the context of
sustainable development and poverty eradication, and noting with concern in this
regard that women and girls are disproportionately affected by natural disasters,
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