Minority groups are trying to address gender discrimination and MDGs 2 and 3 can complement
these efforts. MRG’s report on Gender, Minorities and Indigenous Peoples (2004) cites a programme
among the Khomani of Northern Cape, which involves the collection of oral histories recounting
stories of positive female role models who were successful hunter-gatherers in years past, to be
used in educational material for San children (p. 22). Such efforts can be very effective in helping
minority communities to do more to ensure girl children’s access to education while at the same
time improving the representation of minorities in national curricula.
It is notable that gender inequality could negatively affect minority men as well. Brazil’s MDG
progess report (2004) indicated that there were
marginal inequalities in access to primary school
by gender or race (3% difference by race) but that
Afro-Brazilian males were least likely to access
secondary and higher education. The report
notes, “although women are present in higher
education numbers regardless of race, among
the black and mulatto population the ratio
increases: it leaps to 125.9%, reaching 143.3% in
higher education.” The report attributed this to
“the even more increased dropout of black and
mulatto men to enter the labour market, and to
the phenomenon of discrimination, which affects
blacks and mulattos of both genders and ends
up moving them away from school” (Institute for
Applied Economic Research (IPEA) 2004, p. 35).
MDGs 4, 5 and 6: Reduce child mortality.
Improve maternal health. Combat
HIV/AIDS, malaria and other diseases.
The Human Development Index rate in many
countries is low and it is argued that minorities
are more likely to experience lower life expectancy due to unequal access to health care and a
higher incidence of some diseases than majority
groups. These disparities are related to several
causes. Health and sanitation conditions are often
worse in regions where minorities live. Existing
infrastructure for medical services might be more
limited in remote or impoverished areas where
minorities are based. In hospitals, lack of medical
professionals able to communicate in their languages. The cultural practices of minorities may
be unfamiliar to mainstream medical personnel,
which may inhibit the effective prescription of
pre- and post-natal care. All of these factors combine to reduce minorities’ access to good health
care, impacting negatively on their infant and
maternal mortality rates and causing minorities
in many countries to suffer disproportionately
from malnutrition, HIV/AIDS or other diseases (on
HIV/AIDS see also section 4.6 of this Guide).
Strategies to achieve the health-related MDGs
will need to take account of these circumstances
in order to be successful. According to the UN
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
(CESCR), this means ensuring that health facilities,
goods and services are within safe physical reach
for all sections of the population; that medical services and underlying determinants of health, such
as water and sanitation, are within safe physical
reach, including in rural areas; that health facilities,
goods and services are affordable for all; and that
the right to seek, receive and impart information
and ideas concerning health issues is assured.22
Reaching areas were some minorities live may
require special effort, as will the provision of primary health care services that are adapted to
minority cultures, environments and traditional
medical practices. In Thailand, the MDG Report
acknowledged that regions with a high proportion
CESCR, General Comment No. 14, The Right to the Highest Attainable Standard of Health, UN doc. E/C.12/2000/4.
22
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