Economic advancement for women

The Commission on the Status of Women,

PP1 Deeply convinced that the Beijing Declaration and
Platform for Action and the outcome of the twenty-third
special session of the General Assembly entitled "Women
2000: gender equality, development and peace for the
twenty-first century", are important contributions to the
advancement of women worldwide in the achievement of gender
equality and must be translated into effective action by all
States, the United Nations system and other organizations
concerned, (pp2, A/C.3/58/L.85)
(from PP0, PP1bis, PP2, PP2bis, PP2bis alt, PP2ter, PP2ter
alt, PP2 quart, PP2quint, PP2 quint alt, PP2 sex, PP2
sept)Reaffirming the goals, objectives, and commitments of
the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, and the
outcome document of the twenty-third special session of the
General Assembly, "Gender Equality, Development and Peace
for the 21st Century";

PP2 Recalling the goals and commitments of all other
relevant major United Nations conferences and summits;

PP3 Recalling also the Convention on the Elimination of all
forms of Discrimination against Women;

PP4 Recalling GA resolution 58/142 of 22 December 2003, on
Women and Political Participation; GA resolution 58/206 of
11 February 2004, on Women in Development; and GA resolution
59/246 of November 2004, on 2005 the International Year of
Microcredit;

PP5 Recalling its Agreed Conclusions on eradicating poverty,
including through the empowerment of women throughout their
life cycle, in a globalizing world, and its Agreed
Conclusions on the participation and access of women to the
media, and information and communication technologies and
their impact on and use as an instrument for the advancement
and empowerment of women;

PP6 Noting the Report of the Commission on the Private
Sector and Development entitled "Unleashing
Entrepreneurship: Making Business Work for the Poor";

Noting the Report of the World Commission on the Social
Dimension of Globalization; "A Fair Globalization: creating
opportunities for all";

PP7 Noting that hundreds of millions of women and girls,
worldwide, live in poverty, and that the majority of these
live in rural areas where their livelihoods are dependent on
subsistence and small-holder agriculture, and employment in
the informal sector, including forest and common property
resources.

PP8 Emphasizing that the empowerment of women is a critical
factor in the eradication of poverty and that implementation
of special measures aimed at empowering women can help to
achieve this;

PP9 Recognizing that improving women's economic status also
improves the economic status of their families and their
communities, and thereby creates a multiplier effect for
economic growth;

PP10 Recognizing that women should have equal opportunities
to achieve economic independence, as discrimination against
women and lack of equal access to education, training,
financial services, employment and entrepreneurial
opportunities and other economic resources, property and
inheritance rights, and other legal protections, pose a
major obstacle to sustainable economic growth, sustainable
development and the sustainable economic advancement of
women;

PP11 Emphasizing that full representation and full and equal
participation of women in political, social, and economic
decision-making in their societies enhances socio-economic
development policies;

PP12 Recognizing that diligent and transparent application
of the rule of law at the national, regional, and
international levels, access to justice, democracy, the
promotion of women's economic autonomy, and of
non-discrimination policies are necessary elements to
promote sustainable economic growth and sustainable
development;

PP13 Reaffirming that the full realization of all human
rights and fundamental freedoms is essential for the
empowerment of women and girls;

Aware that while globalization and liberalization processes
have created employment opportunities for women in many
countries, they have also made women, in particular in
developing countries and least developed countries, more
vulnerable to problems caused by increased economic
volatility;

PP14 Recognizing that women's social and economic
marginalization, and unequal rights can hamper their ability
to fully and effectively participate in the economic life of
their communities and societies and that women may need
special support and legal empowerment to address the
challenges, and take full advantage of the opportunities of
globalization and market liberalization;

PP15 Highlighting that enhanced trade opportunities and
market access for developing countries, including through
trade liberalization, will improve the economic condition of
those societies, including for women, which is of particular
importance in rural communities;

PP16 Recognizing that the difficult socio-economic
conditions that exist in many developing countries, in
particular the least developed countries (LDCs), are linked
to the feminization of poverty;

PP17 Recognizing and expressing concern that, the gender
division of labour, especially the persistent unequal
sharing of remunerated and unremunerated labour between
women and men, and lack of support services continues to
limit women's ability to benefit from economic
opportunities, to gain economic autonomy, to access social
security systems, and to build economic stability, including
to withstand adverse economic environments and to preserve
livelihoods, assets and revenue in times of crisis.

PP18 Acknowledging that people living in poverty,
particularly women, need better access to financial
services, including savings, insurance, remittance
transfers, payment services, and credit, and that women have
the proven ability to be diligent savers, prudent borrowers
and investors, and successful entrepreneurs;

PP19 Recognizing that information and communications
technology (ICT) can be a vital tool for training and
empowering women;

PP21 Recognizing that access to basic affordable health care
services, preventative health information and the highest
standard of healthcare, including sexual and reproductive
health, is critical to women's economic advancement and that
lack of economic empowerment and independence increases
women's vulnerability to a range of negative health
consequences, including the risk of contracting HIV/AIDS and
that the neglect of women's reproductive rights severely
limits their opportunities in public and private life,
including the opportunity for education and economic and
political empowerment;

PP22 Noting with concern that lack of economic empowerment
increases women's vulnerability to all forms of violence;

PP23 Recognizing with appreciation all regional and national
efforts in mainstreaming a gender perspective and
empowerment of women towards the implementation of the
Beijing Platform for Action and the outcome document of the
twenty-third special session of the General Assembly,
including the increasing efforts of the African countries in
the implementation of the NEPAD;

OP1 Calls on Member States to strengthen efforts to
implement national and international commitments that will
advance women's equality;

OP2 Calls on Member States to promote gender mainstreaming
in the design, implementation, monitoring and evaluation
phases of all economic and social policies;

OP3 Calls on Member States to improve, promote and build
capacity for the collection, dissemination and analysis of
gender-sensitive statistical indicators, and reliable
statistics that are disaggregated by sex and other relevant
factors in order to facilitate better policy development,
monitoring, and evaluation of the economic and social
advancement of women;

OP4 Urges Member States to eliminate discrimination, ensure
equal rights and access, and actively enable participation
by women and girls in education and training at all levels
including by developing programmes with the aim of equipping
women with business, trade, ICT, and entrepreneurship
skills;

OP5 Calls on Member States to undertake legislative,
administrative and financial measures to create a strong
enabling environment for all women entrepreneurs and women
participating in the labour market, which includes a sound
macro-economic framework; accountable systems for managing
public resources; a business climate that attracts
investment and promotes movement from the informal to the
formal sector through, inter alia, competitive markets,
enforceable contracts, the absence of corruption, regulatory
policies that promote public confidence in the market, and
reducing barriers to international trade within an
appropriate time frame;

OP6 Urges Member States to design and revise laws to ensure
that women are accorded full and equal rights to own land
and other property, including through inheritance, and to
undertake administrative reforms and other necessary
measures to give women the right to credit, capital,
appropriate technologies, and access to markets and
information;

OP7 Calls on Member States to facilitate further development
of the financial sector to increase women's access to and
control over savings, credit, and other financial services,
through incentives and development of intermediaries that
serve the needs of women entrepreneurs on an equal
opportunity basis in both rural and urban areas, and to
fully include women in management, planning, and
decision-making processes;

OP8 Calls on Member States to adopt policies and consider
allocating resources, as appropriate, that support business
and professional organizations, public agencies,
non-governmental organizations, cooperatives, revolving loan
funds, such as micro-finance funds, credit unions, and other
women's grass-roots and self-help groups, in order to meet
the needs of women entrepreneurs in rural and urban areas;

OP9 Calls on Member States to enhance access for women to
information and communication technology (ICT)-based
economic activities in all sectors, such as small and
medium-sized business and home-based employment, information
systems, and improved technologies, and to further develop
tele-centers, community access points and business
incubators;

OP10 Calls on Member States to enhance rural women's
income-generating potential, noting the importance of the
agricultural sector, particularly in the developing
countries, and the importance of greater security of land
tenure and property ownership for resource mobilization and
environmental management; and consider special temporary
measures to empower women in the rural sector to meet the
challenges and take advantage of the opportunities of
agricultural market liberalization;

OP11 Urges Member States to eliminate discrimination against
women in labour markets, employment practices, and the work
place, providing equal access for women in occupational
categories and sectors where they are underrepresented, and
providing equal opportunities with respect to the right to
organize and participate in labour unions and collective
bargaining, employment conditions, career development
opportunities, and equal pay for equal work or work of equal
value, and take action to remove structural and legal
barriers, as well as stereotypical attitudes to gender in
work and training; and to eliminate pay differences based on
gender through a multifaceted approach addressing underlying
factors including sectoral and occupational segregation,
education and training, job classification, and payment
systems;

Calls on Member States to respect, promote and realize the
principles contained in the ILO Declaration on Fundamental
Principles and the Rights at Work and its Follow-up, and to
consider ratification and full implementation of the
International Labour Organizations Conventions which are
particularly relevant to ensuring women's rights at work;

Calls on Member States to adopt temporary special measures
where needed, aimed at accelerating de facto equality of
opportunity between men and women in all economic and
employment sectors and occupational categories and recognize
the need for special supports for women to take advantage of
the opportunities afforded by international trade and, where
necessary, introduce preventive policy measures to avoid
further marginalization of women;

OP13 Calls on Member States to recognize, develop and
promote policies, including workplace policies and other
supports such as maternity and parental benefits and leave,
child care, and care for other dependents, that facilitate
the reconciliation of employment and family responsibilities
that recognize the importance of the value of non-market
contributions that individuals and families make to society
and the economy, ensuring the rights for women and men to
decide freely and responsibly on the number, timing, and
spacing of their children; encouraging men to share equally
with women household, child care and other care-giving
responsibilities, and also ensuring that women have equal
rights to social security and other entitlements;

OP14 Call on Member States to strengthen the incentive role
of the public sector as employer in order to develop an
environment that effectively affirms and empowers women;

OP15 Calls on Member States and international organizations
to promote policies and programmes that enhance economic and
networking opportunities, develop and provide support
services to specific groups of women who are disadvantaged
or in a position of vulnerability;

OP16 Calls on Member States to recognize the significant
contribution of migrant women to the economic development of
both their country of origin and that of destination and, in
accordance with national legislation, enhance their
employment opportunities, taking into account their skills,
and establish practices to reduce transfer costs of migrant
workers' remittances;

OP17 Encourages all relevant United Nations funds,
programmes and specialized agencies, in accordance with
their respective mandates, to assist Governments at their
request, in strengthening their capacity to promote and
support the economic advancement of women through, inter
alia, employment and entrepreneurship practices and
programmes that affirm and empower women;

OP18 Urges donors, and invites international financial
institutions and regional development banks, within their
respective mandates, to review and implement policies that
support national efforts to increase resources to women, in
particular in rural and remote areas;

OP19 Requests the Secretary-General to report on the
implementation of the present resolution to the Commission
on the Status of Women at its 50th session.

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