A/76/202 overrepresented among the working poor. 27 According to ILO, indigenous peoples represent only 27.9 per cent of global wage and salaried workers, compared with 49.1 per cent of their non-indigenous counterparts, and when they are engaged in wage and salaried work they tend to earn less. 28 ILO also estimates that indigenous peoples are 20 per cent more likely to be in the informal economy than the non-indigenous population. Indigenous women are especially vulnerable to exploitation as underpaid domestic workers, 29 in some cases receiving less than half of the legal minimum wage. 30 Barriers to employment and wealth generation can also stem from a lack of access to health and disability services. 31 2. Housing 22. The income disparities and economic marginalization experienced by indigenous peoples are often due to land dispossession and forced evictions, which, in turn, result in housing insecurity. Indigenous peoples who migrate to urban areas disproportionately live in substandard housing that is neither traditional nor culturally adequate. Reports indicate that a significant segment of the urban indigenous population lives in marginalized areas and informal settlements with limited access to basic services such as sanitation, drinking water and public transportation. 32 Many indigenous households do not own their urban homes 33 and are vulnerable to forced evictions with no enforceable rights to due process, which leads to homelessness and extreme pove rty. 34 23. In Latin America, 36 per cent of indigenous peoples in urban areas are reported to live in poor neighbourhoods. They tend to live in extreme poverty and unsafe and unhealthy conditions, with limited access to water and sanitation, in addition t o being vulnerable to natural disasters. 35 24. The Special Rapporteur on adequate housing as a component of the right to an adequate standard of living, and the right to non -discrimination in this context, reported that, in Canada, 25 per cent of reserves had substandard water/sewage systems and more than 10,000 on-reserve homes were without indoor plumbing. In that context, that mandate holder also reported that there were 75 per cent of Canadian reserves with contaminated water and referred to the case of the Attawapiskat community, which declared “a state of emergency because of toxic chemical levels in the water”. 36 25. That mandate holder has documented examples of indigenous peoples living in inadequate housing in urban areas. In Indonesia, the kampung (village) is a densely populated indigenous urban settlement mostly inhabited by low -income populations. __________________ 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 21-10081 ILO, Implementing the ILO Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention No. 169 , p. 20; submission by the Thompson School of Social Work and Public Health, University of Hawaii at Manoa (March 2021); and Minerva C. Rivas Velarde, Indigenous Persons with Disabilities: Access to Training and Employment (Geneva, ILO, 2015), p. 28. ILO, Implementing the ILO Indigenous and Tribal Peoples Convention No. 169 . E/C.19/2021/6, paras. 12 and 21. A/HRC/30/41. Rivas Velarde, Indigenous Persons with Disabilities, p. 28. A/74/183; E/C.19/2021/6; A/HRC/EMRIP/2019/2/Rev.1; and information provided by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in Brazil and the Consejo Nacional para la Igualdad de Pueblos y Nacionalidades (virtual consultations). UN-Habitat, Housing Indigenous Peoples Living in Cities, p. 25; submission by the UNICEF Latin America and Caribbean Regional Office, UNICEF country offices in Bolivia (Plurinational State of), Brazil and Guyana and UNICEF New Zealand, p. 10; and E/C.19/2021/6, para. 9. A/74/183, paras. 25–26 and 37; E/C.19/2021/6, para. 20; and Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Situation of Human Rights of the Indigenous and Tribal Peoples of the Pan-Amazon Region (OAS/Ser.L./V/II, 2019). ECLAC, Guaranteeing Indigenous People’s Rights in Latin America; and A/74/183, paras. 11–13. A/74/183, paras. 11–13 and 15. 9/20

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