Eliminating discrimination against women in economic and social life with a focus on economic crisis 2014, para. 72
Párrafo- Paragraph text
- Extractive industries, as well as, increasingly, biofuel, agribusiness and real estate projects, are land intensive, and land dispossession has disproportionately displaced women. Women, who make up 70-80 per cent of the world's small-scale farmers, lose their livelihood, often do not receive compensation paid to landowners, who are male, and are the last in line for formal employment in the industries. As primary carers, they are deprived of shelter and the ability to feed their families. The arrival of a transient, largely male workforce also increases prostitution, sexual violence and sexually transmitted disease. Mismanagement of extractive projects can also lead to severe violations of human rights that are manifested in unique ways for women, including murder, torture, rape and sexual violence at the hands of security forces brought in to impose order.
- Condicón jurídica
- Non-negotiated soft law
- Organismo
- Working Group on the issue of discrimination against women in law and practice
- Tipo de documento
- Special Procedures' report
- Medio de adopción
- N.A.
- Temas
- Economic Rights
- Environment
- Gender
- Personas afectadas
- Persons on the move
- Women
- Año
- 2014
- Tipo de párrafo
- Other
- Reference
- WG Discrimination Against Women, Report to the HRC (2014), A/HRC/26/39, para. 72.
- Paragraph number
- 72
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Fecha de adición
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