Intersectionality:
Women
and
Children
Women
A
total
of
106
recommendations
are
labelled
both
under
minorities
and
women’s
rights.
However,
74
of
them
addressed
minorities
and
women
as
two
separate
groups,
usually
as
part
of
a
general
list
of
vulnerable
groups
(for
example
women,
minorities,
migrants,
indigenous
communities,
rural
communities
etc.)
so
cannot
be
taken
into
account
as
recommendations
on
intersectionality.
The
other
32
recommendations
addressed
minority
women
indeed
and
used
expression
such
as:
minority
women;
Roma
women;
Muslim
women;
vulnerable
groups
of
women,
such
as
Roma;
minorities,
particularly
women
etc.
so
these
are
analyzed
below.
Concerns
about
minority
women
in
general
were
addressed
in
15
recommendations.
(Recommendations
referring
to
minority
girls
appear
in
the
next
section
of
intersectionality
examining
minorities
and
children’s
rights.)
They
were
the
following:
! Australia
accepted
to
end
discrimination
on
the
basis
of
race
in
particular
against
women
of
certain
vulnerable
groups
(from
Iran).
! Germany
accepted
to
respect
and
promote
the
rights
of
minority
women,
including
their
freedom
or
religion
and
expression
+
eliminate
discrimination
against
minority
women,
in
particular
in
employment
and
education
(from
Malaysia).
! Hungary
accepted
to
ensure
disaggregated
data
collection
by
ethnicity
and
gender
as
proposed
by
the
Independent
Expert
on
minority
issues
(from
the
Russian
Federation).
! Ireland
accepted
to
continue
efforts
to
ensure
that
women
belonging
to
minorities
continue
to
be
the
focus
of
government
programmes
(from
Argentina)
! Japan
accepted
to
address
the
problems
faced
by
women
belonging
to
minorities
(from
Germany).
! Macedonia
accepted
to
step
up
efforts
to
ensure
access
to
education,
health,
employment
and
participation
in
political
public
life
for
women,
in
particular
ethnic
minority
women
(from
Malaysia).
! Myanmar
noted
to
end
sexual
violence
committed
against
ethnic
minority
women
(from
the
United
States).
! The
Netherlands
accepted
to
strengthen
measures
to
increase
the
participation
by
ethnic
minority
women
in
line
with
CEDAW
recommendations
(from
Ghana).
! Norway
accepted
to
continue
its
advancement
to
ensure
that
the
representation
of
women
in
political
and
public
organs
fully
reflects
the
diversity
of
people
in
Norway,
including
women
belong
to
minorities
(from
Cuba
and
Israel).
27