Legal Profession
His Honour Geoffrey Kamil CBE
30 November 2011
There are many challenges obstructing the way toward guaranteeing the
rights of minority women. The most important of them all is access to
education, which is closely linked to effective participation in social,
economic and cultural life.
Minorities often face discrimination in employment, in the work place and in
gaining access to credit. In the current times of economic hardship minorities,
having struggled to obtain employment, are frequently the first to lose those
jobs.
This exclusion which is often based on discriminatory grounds has the
effect of maintaining the status quo, preventing upward mobility and
keeping minorities in the lower echelons of society.
It is well-established that in addition to providing some economic security
and advancement, education offers a greater likelihood of obtaining
employment and encourages broader social advancement.
However, education is not always enough. In order for minorities to
contribute and gain access to practice in the disciplines they are well trained
for, more needs to be done by States in discharging their obligations to
eliminate racial discrimination and ensuring equality of treatment
In some countries, access to a judicial position has often been seen as a bar
to those who did not fit a 'stereo-male-type', thus apparently ruling out
anyone who is a woman and particularly if belonging to an ethnic, religious or
linguistic minority group.
As set out in several human rights documents, measures such as affirmative
action also referred to as positive measures or positive action time bound,
monitored and specifically designed to address systematic, historic and
institutionalised