A/RES/64/139
3.
Takes note of the report of the Special Rapporteur of the Human Rights
Council on violence against women, its causes and consequences entitled “Political
economy of women’s human rights”, submitted to the Council at its eleventh
session, 12 in particular her elaboration in that report of the current issues of the
exploitation and violence that women migrants face in the context of the current
global economic trends and crises;
1F
Encourages all United Nations special rapporteurs on human rights
4.
whose mandates touch on the issues of violence against women migrant workers to
improve the collection of information on and analysis of the current challenges
facing women migrant workers, and also encourages Governments to cooperate with
the special rapporteurs in this regard;
Calls upon all Governments to incorporate a human rights and gender
5.
perspective in legislation and policies on international migration and on labour and
employment, consistent with their human rights obligations and commitments under
human rights instruments, for the prevention of and protection of migrant women
against violence and discrimination, exploitation and abuse, and to take effective
measures to ensure that such migration and labour policies do not reinforce
discrimination and bias against women;
Calls upon Governments to adopt or strengthen measures to protect the
6.
human rights of women migrant workers, regardless of their immigration status,
including in policies that regulate the recruitment and deployment of women
migrant workers, and to consider expanding dialogue among States on devising
innovative methods to promote legal channels of migration, inter alia, in order to
deter illegal migration;
Urges Governments to enhance bilateral, regional, interregional and
7.
international cooperation to address violence against women migrant workers, fully
respecting international law, including international human rights law, as well as to
strengthen efforts in reducing the vulnerability of women migrant workers,
including by fostering sustainable development alternatives to migration in
countries of origin;
Also urges Governments to take into account the best interests of the
8.
child, by adopting or strengthening measures to promote and protect the human
rights of migrant girls, including unaccompanied girls, regardless of their
immigration status, so as to prevent labour and economic exploitation,
discrimination, sexual harassment, violence and sexual abuse in the workplace,
including in domestic work;
Further urges Governments, in cooperation with international
9.
organizations, civil society, including non-governmental organizations, and the
private sector, to strengthen the focus on and funding support for the prevention of
violence against women migrant workers, in particular by promoting the access of
women to meaningful and gender-sensitive information and education on, inter alia,
the costs and benefits of migration, rights and benefits to which they are entitled in
the countries of origin and employment, overall conditions in countries of
employment and procedures for legal migration, as well as to ensure that laws and
policies governing recruiters, employers and intermediaries promote adherence to
and respect for the human rights of migrant workers, particularly women;
_______________
12
4
A/HRC/11/6.