A/HRC/59/62
framework within anti-discrimination law.64 The Special Rapporteur received information
from stakeholders articulating the lack of legal recognition of intersectional discrimination
within national legal frameworks across multiple countries and regions. 65 The Special
Rapporteur welcomes information from some States on efforts to include multiple and
intersecting forms of discrimination within relevant legal frameworks.66
45.
The lack of action to integrate multiple and intersectional discrimination into many
national legal frameworks is a significant challenge in implementing an intersectional
approach. A related challenge is weak implementation of existing anti-discrimination
legislation in many countries around the world.67 Amending anti-discrimination legislation
to include intersectional forms of discrimination will not be effective unless it is
accompanied by correlative action to more rigorously implement such legislation. Another
challenge is complexity in defining intersectional discrimination for the purpose of legal
recognition and prohibition. The Special Rapporteur stresses the importance of ensuring
that the process of defining intersectional discrimination is grounded in the lived
experiences of affected groups and individuals and encourages the full and effective
participation of all marginalized racial and ethnic groups in all relevant legislative
processes. Systemic, racial and historical analysis is also important to the process of
codification and legal interpretation of intersectionality. As stated by one academic: “What
an intersectional approach to discrimination law would result in is not the creation of
endless new discrete identity categories for every possible permutation of identity, but
rather an open-textured legal approach that would examine underlying structures of
inequality when assessing discrimination claims.”68
Intersectional remedies
46.
The impact of single-axis approaches within non-discrimination law on access to
remedy has been included in intersectionality discourse since its emergence. Kimberlé
Crewshaw’s seminal work explores the barriers that Black women face in accessing judicial
remedies for intersectional discrimination. Her work cites specific cases in the United
States whereby the claims of Black women of intersecting forms of discrimination within
employment were explicitly denied by courts based on a lack of legal recognition of
intersectionality.69
47.
Significant barriers in accessing intersectional remedies persist. Many courts in
different countries and regions continue to interpret and adjudicate discrimination claims
according to singular grounds.70 For example, the European Court of Human Rights has
reportedly not explicitly recognized intersectionality in any of its judgments, despite the
extensive lived experiences of intersectional discrimination among marginalized racial and
ethnic groups in Europe.71 Other complaint bodies also may offer narrow remedies that do
not reflect intersectional experiences. 72 The Special Rapporteur did not receive any
information about effective access to intersectional remedies.
48.
Lack of access to intersectional remedies is fundamentally linked to the single-axis
framework that persists in much anti-discrimination law, as discussed above, but other
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
GE.25-07755
Submission from Sexual Rights Initiative.
Submissions from Switzerland, European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights, African
Sovereignty and Reparations Representatives, RacismoMX, Coming Out and Zagros Centre for
Human Rights.
Submissions from Germany and Spain.
See A/HRC/57/67; and submissions from Zagros Centre for Human Rights and National Council for
Women Leaders and Dalit Human Rights Defenders Network.
Ben Smith, “Intersectional discrimination and substantive equality: a comparative and theoretical
perspective”, The Equal Rights Review, vol. 16 (2018).
“Demarginalizing the intersection of race and sex”.
Smith, “Intersectional discrimination and substantive equality”; and OHCHR, Protecting Minority
Rights.
Center for Intersectional Justice, “Intersectional discrimination in Europe”; and submission from
European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights.
See A/HRC/57/67.
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