A/HRC/36/60
with human rights principles governing participation, disaggregation, selfidentification, transparency, privacy and accountability. The study will be followed by
an expert meeting on the importance of collecting data on people of African descent in
order to close the gaps and address the inequalities and discrimination that they face.
69.
The Working Group will conduct consultations with development and financial
institutions in countries of interest to its mandate on prevention of racial
discrimination against people of African descent. The consultations will be organized
in cooperation with Governments, United Nations country teams, national human
rights institutions, equality bodies and other civil society organizations and other
relevant national stakeholders. The purpose would be to field test the operational
guidelines on how to integrate the human rights concerns of people of African descent
into the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals.
B.
Recommendations
70.
States should make a genuine commitment to the standard of leaving no one
behind by collecting disaggregated data. To monitor the implementation of the
Sustainable Development Goals, it will be important to improve the availability of,
and access to, data and statistics disaggregated by income, gender, age, race, ethnicity,
migratory status, disability, geographic location and other characteristics relevant in
national contexts to support the monitoring of the implementation of the Goals. The
goal indicators should include the use of data from the existing mechanisms for
monitoring compliance with human rights standards, especially the universal periodic
review mechanism of the Human Rights Council and reviews of compliance with the
International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination.
71.
The Working Group encourages financial and development institutions to
support civil society and government programmes and projects which aim to
implement the Working Group’s recommendations.
72.
The Working Group urges Member States to allocate additional investments to
the health-care and education systems of people of African descent and to promote
equal opportunities in employment, as well as other positive measures and strategies
within the human rights framework.
73.
National, regional and international civil society organizations should produce
and submit reports on the progress achieved in implementing the Sustainable
Development Goals in countries for which they have the expertise and experience and
participate in intergovernmental review processes at the regional and international
levels.
74.
In order to eradicate poverty, particularly poverty affecting people of African
descent, it is essential to deconstruct all the elements of power and knowledge which
maintain and promote the ongoing structural racism of which people of African
descent are victims.
75.
In order to advance the Sustainable Development Goals, States must provide
effective, accountable and inclusive public institutions which must, inter alia,
effectively protect the human rights of people of African descent. The Working Group
recommends community-based monitoring of the Goals. Grass-roots organizations
can become active partners for change.
76.
The Working Group urges States to eradicate multiple forms of discrimination
and oppression faced by women and girls of African descent in accordance with the
concept of intersectionality in all areas of the Sustainable Development Goals.
77.
States must ensure that people of African descent have access to quality
education which enables them to compete on an equal footing with others in the
labour market. States must acknowledge the persistence of structural racism and
multiple forms of discrimination within the education system and must therefore put
in place appropriate legislation and affirmative action policies to tackle the problem.
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