A/74/255
(a) Adopting measures to ensure that all persons can effectively access,
enjoy and contribute freely to public spaces, and facilitating such opportunities
for groups facing obstacles in this regard;
(b) Adopting a gender approach to urban planning and systematically
accounting for the needs of women and girls, including by investing in public
infrastructure such as safe water and streets, adequate hygiene facilities and
better lighting, developing and implementing comprehensive laws and policies to
prevent and respond to gender-based violence in public spaces and carrying out
research to ensure understanding of sexual harassment and violence in public
spaces to inform the most effective policies to combat them;
(c) Abrogating de facto and de jure norms which exclude women from
public spaces;
(d) Encouraging data collection on how and why women use public spaces
to understand women’s relationship to public spaces and the cultural benefits
that result from such use;
(e)
Involving women in land use and physical planning committees;
(f) Adopting preventive measures, deterring and punishing all forms of
human rights violations, violence, threats and sexual harassment against women,
children, migrants, lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender persons or persons
with disabilities in the public arena, including on public transport, in educational
institutions, on streets and in cyberspace, whether perpetrated by State agents
or private persons;
(g) Providing training for relevant public officials on the concept of
inclusive public spaces.
90. Authorities must establish specialized, cross-disciplinary professional
teams responsible for the design, maintenance and conservation of public spaces
that are welcoming for all and create mechanisms for citizen participation in the
management of such spaces.
91. Decisions to nominate spaces for inscription on national and/or
international heritage lists should be the result of inclusive processes and be
taken with the free and informed consent of all relevant stakeholders.
92. Relevant authorities should consider legal recognition of the right to the
city and the right to public spaces as a means to develop human rights-based
public policies.
93. Further consideration should be given by States, international bodies and
experts to the question of adequate and accessible public spaces in rural areas,
which are equally important.
On natural spaces and the right to public space
94. Public authorities should take effective steps to protect natural spaces,
including from the effects of the climate emergency, and should facilitate access
to natural spaces for all, promoting environmentally sound practices and
expression in those spaces.
95. States should make sure protection policies include natural sites that are
important in the culture of specific parts of the population, including indigenous
peoples.
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