Plan International - Girls' Rights Platform - Girls' rights are human rights: Positioning girls at the heart of the international agenda

Plan International - Girls' Rights Platform - Girls' rights are human rights: Positioning girls at the heart of the international agenda

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30 shown of 79 entities

Effective Implementation of the OPSC 2010, para. 40

Paragraph text
[Poverty takes an especially heavy toll on children, as evidenced by the following figures cited by UNICEF:] 101 million children are not attending primary school, with more girls than boys missing out.
Body
Special Rapporteur on the sale and sexual exploitation of children, including child prostitution, child pornography and other child sexual abuse material
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Boys
  • Children
  • Girls
Year
2010
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

SRSG on violence against children: Annual report 2014, para. 81

Paragraph text
Girls constitute a particularly vulnerable group, and their offending is often closely related to various forms of discrimination and deprivation: girls living in poverty may be easy targets and manipulated by criminal networks for sexual exploitation and drug dealing. Girls are also at risk of being arrested for prostitution or rounded up on the assumption that they are sex workers.
Body
Special Representative of the Secretary-General on violence against children
Document type
SRSG report
Topic(s)
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Poverty
  • Violence
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
Year
2014
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

SRSG on violence against children: Annual report 2014, para. 22

Paragraph text
The most vulnerable children are at the greatest risk of violence, including girls, children with disabilities, children who migrate, children who are confined to institutions, and children whose poverty and social exclusion expose them to deprivation, to neglect and, at times, to the inherent dangers of life on the streets.
Body
Special Representative of the Secretary-General on violence against children
Document type
SRSG report
Topic(s)
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Poverty
  • Social & Cultural Rights
  • Violence
Person(s) affected
  • Children
  • Girls
  • Persons with disabilities
Year
2014
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Women’s economic empowerment in the changing world of work 2017, para. 33

Paragraph text
The Commission recognizes the important role and contribution of rural women and girls to poverty eradication, sustainable development and food security and nutrition, especially in poor and vulnerable households. The Commission also recognizes the importance of the empowerment of rural women and their full, equal and effective participation at all levels of decision-making.
Body
Commission on the Status of Women
Document type
CSW Agreed Conclusions / Declaration
Topic(s)
  • Food & Nutrition
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2017
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Gender equality in the realization of the human rights to water and sanitation 2016, para. 41

Paragraph text
While taxes are a key source of financing for such gender responsive initiatives, they can have detrimental effects on the poorest women. Governments must therefore carefully screen the effects of different tax mechanisms. For example, while value-added taxes may appear gender-neutral, they may disproportionately affect those living in poverty. Certainly, applying value-added tax to menstrual hygiene products disproportionately affects women and girls.
Body
Special Rapporteur on the human rights to safe drinking water and sanitation
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Economic Rights
  • Gender
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2016
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Gender equality in the realization of the human rights to water and sanitation 2016, para. 39

Paragraph text
Women and girls need to have materials to manage their menstruation, which can be a particular burden for those living in poverty. The human rights to water and sanitation include the right of all to affordable, safe and hygienic menstruation materials, which should be subsidized or provided free of charge when necessary.
Body
Special Rapporteur on the human rights to safe drinking water and sanitation
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Health
  • Poverty
  • Water & Sanitation
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2016
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Gender equality in the realization of the human rights to water and sanitation 2016, para. 12

Paragraph text
Although women - at every economic level, all over the world - may suffer disproportionate disadvantages and discrimination, they cannot be seen as a homogenous group. Different women are situated differently and face different challenges and barriers in relationship to water, sanitation and hygiene. Gender-based inequalities are exacerbated when they are coupled with other grounds for discrimination and disadvantages. Examples include when women and girls lack adequate access to water and sanitation and at the same time suffer from poverty, live with a disability, suffer from incontinence, live in remote areas, lack security of tenure, are imprisoned or are homeless. In these cases, they will be more likely to lack access to adequate facilities, to face exclusion or to experience vulnerability and additional health risks. The effects of social factors such as caste, age, marital status, profession, sexual orientation and gender identity are compounded when they intersect with other grounds for discrimination. In some States, women sanitation workers are particularly vulnerable, as they are exposed to an extremely dirty environment and contamination, which have a far greater impact during pregnancy and menstruation. Women belonging to certain minorities, including indigenous peoples and ethnic and religious groups, may face exclusion and disadvantages on multiple grounds. Those factors are not exhaustive and may change over time.
Body
Special Rapporteur on the human rights to safe drinking water and sanitation
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Health
  • Poverty
  • Social & Cultural Rights
  • Water & Sanitation
Person(s) affected
  • Ethnic minorities
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2016
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination and violence against women 2011, para. 14

Paragraph text
Building on the Vienna Declaration and its framework, both the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing (1995) and the Third World Conference against Racism, Racial Discrimination, Xenophobia and Related Intolerance in Durban (2001) addressed the multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination that cause intra-gender and intra-racial inequalities respectively. The Fourth World Conference on Women recognized the particular vulnerability to violence of "women belonging to minority groups, indigenous women, refugee women, women migrants, including women migrant workers, women in poverty living in rural or remote communities, destitute women, women in institutions or in detention, female children, women with disabilities, elderly women, displaced women, repatriated women, women living in poverty and women in situations of armed conflict, foreign occupation, wars of aggression, civil wars, terrorism, including hostage-taking." The World Conference against Racism included gender and racial discrimination among its five areas of focus. The Durban Declaration expressed the view "that racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance reveal themselves in a differentiated manner for women and girls, and can be among the factors leading to a deterioration in their living conditions, poverty, violence, multiple forms of discrimination, and the limitation or denial of their human rights."
Body
Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Humanitarian
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Ethnic minorities
  • Girls
  • Persons on the move
  • Women
Year
2011
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Servile marriage 2012, para. 49

Paragraph text
Studies show that servile marriage is most common in poor households. A UNICEF study shows that a girl from the poorest household is three times more likely to marry than a girl from the richest household. A United Nations Population Fund study on adolescents shows that, in Nigeria, 80 per cent of the poorest girls marry before the age of 18, compared to 22 per cent of the richest girls.
Body
Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery, including its causes and consequences
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Adolescents
  • Girls
Year
2012
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Manifestations and causes of domestic servitude 2010, para. 41

Paragraph text
Children on their own often accept domestic work for lack of other options, in particular as live-in arrangements entail a new home and often a (false) promise of education. Street children, including those who were abandoned or fled parental abuse, often seek domestic work to find shelter. Children who are orphaned as a result of AIDS also often end up in domestic servitude. Girls also increasingly migrate independently from impoverished rural areas in search of domestic work.
Body
Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery, including its causes and consequences
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Poverty
  • Violence
Person(s) affected
  • Children
  • Girls
Year
2010
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Unpaid care work and women's human rights 2013, para. 14

Paragraph text
The amount, intensity and drudgery of unpaid care work increase with poverty and social exclusion. Women and girls in poor households spend more time in unpaid work than in non-poor households, in all countries at all levels of development. This imbalance has a number of causes, including limited access to public services for people living in poverty, lack of adequate infrastructure in the regions and communities where they live, and lack of resources to pay for care services or time-saving technology.
Body
Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2013
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Violence against indigenous women and girls; rights of indigenous peoples in relation to extractive industries 2012, para. 27

Paragraph text
In a similar vein, combating violence against women and girls in the indigenous context must be achieved holistically; it cannot be addressed in isolation from the range of rights recognized for indigenous peoples in general. In this regard, violence against indigenous women and girls, which is distressingly all too common across the globe, cannot be seen as separate from the history of discrimination and marginalization that has been suffered invariably by indigenous peoples. This history manifests itself in continued troubling structural factors, such as conditions of poverty, lack of access to land and resources or other means of subsistence, or poor access to education and health services, which are all factors that bear on indigenous peoples with particular consequences for indigenous women. The history of discrimination against indigenous peoples has also resulted in the deterioration of indigenous social structures and cultural traditions, and in the undermining or breakdown of indigenous governance and judicial systems, impairing in many cases the ability of indigenous peoples to respond effectively to problems of violence against women and girls within their communities.
Body
Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Poverty
  • Social & Cultural Rights
  • Violence
Person(s) affected
  • Ethnic minorities
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2012
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Women’s right and the right to food 2013, para. 14

Paragraph text
Women's access to employment in the industry or the services sectors of the economy requires improved access to education for girls; and infrastructural and services investments that relieve women from part of the burden of the household chores that women shoulder disproportionately. Millennium Development Goal 1, on the eradication of extreme poverty and hunger, includes a target (1.B) to "achieve full and productive employment and decent work for all, including women and young people," an implicit recognition that women, due to discrimination and lack of educational opportunities, are generally disadvantaged in access to employment. In September 2010, Heads of State and Government at the High-level Plenary Meeting on the Millennium Development Goals pledged to invest in "infrastructure and labour-saving technologies, especially in rural areas, benefiting women and girls by reducing their burden of domestic activities, affording the opportunity for girls to attend school and women to engage in self-employment or participate in the labour market," as well as to remove "barriers and expanding support for girls' education through measures such as providing free primary education, a safe environment for schooling and financial assistance such as scholarships and cash transfer programmes".
Body
Special Rapporteur on the right to food
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Gender
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Women
  • Youth
Year
2013
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

The right of the child to rest, leisure, play, recreational activities, cultural life and the arts 2013, para. 16

Paragraph text
Article 2 (non-discrimination): The Committee emphasizes that States parties shall take all appropriate measures to ensure that all children have the opportunity to realize their rights under article 31 without discrimination of any kind, irrespective of the child's or his or her parent's or legal guardian's race, colour, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national, ethnic or social origin, property, disability, birth or other status. Particular attention should be given to addressing the rights of certain groups of children, including, inter alia, girls, children with disabilities, children living in poor or hazardous environments, children living in poverty, children in penal, health-care or residential institutions, children in situations of conflict or humanitarian disaster, children in rural communities, asylum-seeking and refugee children, children in street situations, nomadic groups, migrant or internally displaced children, children of indigenous origin and from minority groups, working children, children without parents and children subjected to significant pressure for academic attainment.
Body
Committee on the Rights of the Child
Document type
General Comment / Recommendation
Topic(s)
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Humanitarian
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Children
  • Ethnic minorities
  • Girls
  • Persons on the move
Year
2013
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Violence against women 1992, para. 15

Paragraph text
Poverty and unemployment force many women, including young girls, into prostitution. Prostitutes are especially vulnerable to violence because their status, which may be unlawful, tends to marginalize them. They need the equal protection of laws against rape and other forms of violence.
Body
Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women
Document type
General Comment / Recommendation
Topic(s)
  • Gender
  • Poverty
  • Violence
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Women
  • Youth
Year
1992
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Challenges and achievements in the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals for women and girls 2014, para. 42k

Paragraph text
[The Commission urges Governments, at all levels [...] to take the following actions:] [Realizing women's and girls' full enjoyment of all human rights]: Address the multiple and intersecting factors contributing to the disproportionate impact of poverty on women and girls over their life cycle, as well as intra-household gender inequalities in the allocation of resources, opportunities and power, by realizing women's and girls' civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights, including the right to development, and ensure women's and girls' inheritance and property rights, equal access to quality education, equal access to justice, social protection and an adequate standard of living, including food security and nutrition, safe drinking water and sanitation, energy and fuel resources and housing, as well as women's and adolescent girls' access to health, including sexual and reproductive health-care services, and women's equal access to full and productive employment and decent work, women's full participation and integration in the formal economy, equal pay for equal work or work of equal value, and equal sharing of unpaid work;
Body
Commission on the Status of Women
Document type
CSW Agreed Conclusions / Declaration
Topic(s)
  • Poverty
  • Water & Sanitation
Person(s) affected
  • Adolescents
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2014
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Challenges and achievements in the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals for women and girls 2014, para. 32

Paragraph text
The Commission emphasizes that the empowerment of women is a critical factor in the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals, including the eradication of poverty and hunger, and that the implementation of special measures, as appropriate, aimed at empowering women can help accomplish this. It recognizes that inequality is a concern for all countries and that it represents an urgent challenge with multiple implications for the realization of the economic, social and cultural rights of women and girls. It also emphasizes that women's poverty is directly related to the absence of economic opportunities and autonomy, lack of access to economic and productive resources, quality education and support services, and women's minimal participation in the decision-making process. The Commission further recognizes that women's poverty and lack of empowerment as well as their exclusion from social and economic policies can place them at increased risk of violence and that violence against women impedes social and economic development, as well as the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals.
Body
Commission on the Status of Women
Document type
CSW Agreed Conclusions / Declaration
Topic(s)
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2014
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Elimination and prevention of all forms of violence against women and girls 2013, para. 27

Paragraph text
The Commission reaffirms that indigenous women often suffer multiple forms of discrimination and poverty which increase their vulnerability to all forms of violence; and stresses the need to seriously address violence against indigenous women and girls.
Body
Commission on the Status of Women
Document type
CSW Agreed Conclusions / Declaration
Topic(s)
  • Gender
  • Poverty
  • Violence
Person(s) affected
  • Ethnic minorities
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2013
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Elimination of all forms of discrimination and violence against the girl child 2007, para. 14.1.b

Paragraph text
[The Commission [...] urges Governments [...] to:] [14.1. Poverty] (b) Integrate a gender perspective, giving explicit attention to the girl child, in national development strategies, plans and policies, and provide support to developing countries in the implementation of these development strategies, policies and plans;
Body
Commission on the Status of Women
Document type
CSW Agreed Conclusions / Declaration
Topic(s)
  • Gender
  • Governance & Rule of Law
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Children
  • Girls
Year
2007
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Eradicating poverty, including through the empowerment of women throughout their life cycle, in a globalizing world 2002, para. 5k

Paragraph text
[The Commission urges Governments [...] to take the following actions to accelerate implementation of these strategic objectives to address the needs of all women:] Take the strongest measures to eliminate all forms of discrimination and violence against women and girls;
Body
Commission on the Status of Women
Document type
CSW Agreed Conclusions / Declaration
Topic(s)
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Gender
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2002
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Women, the girl child and human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome 2001, para. 1d

Paragraph text
[Actions to be taken by Governments, the United Nations system and civil society, as appropriate]: Focus national and international policies towards the eradication of poverty in order to empower women to better protect themselves from the spread of the pandemic and to more effectively deal with the adverse effects of HIV/AIDS;
Body
Commission on the Status of Women
Document type
CSW Agreed Conclusions / Declaration
Topic(s)
  • Health
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Children
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2001
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

African Youth Charter 2006, para. l

Paragraph text
RECALLING the United Nations World Programme of Action for Youth to the Year 2000 and beyond and the ten priority areas identified for youth (education, employment, hunger and poverty, health, environment, drug abuse, juvenile delinquency, leisure-time activities, girls and young women and youth participating in decision-making), and the five additional areas (HIV/AIDS, ICT, Inter- generational dialogue,..) adopted at the 2005 UN General assembly;
Body
African Union
Document type
Regional treaty
Topic(s)
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Gender
  • Health
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Women
  • Youth
Year
2006
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Violence against women as a barrier to the effective realization of all human rights 2014, para. 43

Paragraph text
Millennium Development Goal 6 commits Governments to combating HIV/AIDS, but exposure to HIV is positively correlated with gender-based violence and poverty. For example in Sub-Saharan Africa, women in the 19-24 age group are twice as likely to be infected as men, owing to sexual violence and related inequality in decision-making and autonomy. Rates of girls being infected have also increased owing to sexual assaults related to myths about preventing the transmission of HIV or curing AIDS.
Body
Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Gender
  • Health
  • Poverty
  • Violence
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Men
  • Women
Year
2014
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Adolescents and youth 2012, para. 21

Paragraph text
Calls upon Member States to ensure the right to education of good quality for women and girls, on an equal basis with men and boys, and that they complete a full course of primary education, and to renew their efforts to improve and expand the education of girls and women at all levels, including at the secondary and higher levels, as well as vocational education and technical training, in order to, inter alia, achieve gender equality, the empowerment of women and poverty eradication;
Body
Commission on Population and Development
Document type
Resolution
Topic(s)
  • Education
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Gender
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Adolescents
  • Boys
  • Girls
  • Men
  • Women
  • Youth
Year
2012
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

SRSG on violence against children: Annual report 2013, para. 96

Paragraph text
Poverty, vulnerability and economic hardship are factors of stress in the community and the home, generating higher incidence of violence, including domestic violence. As families struggle to meet their basic needs, children may be pressed to drop out from school to contribute to household income; girls may be placed at risk of involvement in hazardous economic activities, including domestic service, begging and sexual exploitation, or forced to marry - the risk of getting married before 18 years is three times higher amongst poor girls.
Body
Special Representative of the Secretary-General on violence against children
Document type
SRSG report
Topic(s)
  • Poverty
  • Violence
Person(s) affected
  • Children
  • Families
  • Girls
Year
2013
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

SRSG on violence against children: Annual report 2012, para. 84

Paragraph text
Poverty, vulnerability and economic hardship are factors of stress in the community and in the home, generating a higher incidence of violence, including domestic violence. As families struggle to meet their basic needs, children may be pressed to drop out from school to contribute to household income; girls may be placed at risk of involvement in hazardous economic activities, including domestic service, begging and sexual exploitation; or forced to marry, the risk of getting married before the age of 18 being three times higher among poor girls.
Body
Special Representative of the Secretary-General on violence against children
Document type
SRSG report
Topic(s)
  • Poverty
  • Violence
Person(s) affected
  • Children
  • Families
  • Girls
Year
2012
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Women’s economic empowerment in the changing world of work 2017, para. 20

Paragraph text
The Commission expresses concern that the feminization of poverty persists, and emphasizes that the eradication of poverty in all its forms and dimensions, including extreme poverty, is an indispensable requirement for women's economic empowerment and sustainable development. The Commission acknowledges the mutually reinforcing links between the achievement of gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls and the eradication of poverty, and the need to ensure an adequate standard of living for women and girls throughout the life cycle, including through social protection systems.
Body
Commission on the Status of Women
Document type
CSW Agreed Conclusions / Declaration
Topic(s)
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Gender
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2017
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Challenges and lessons in combating contemporary forms of slavery 2013, para. 9

Paragraph text
Women are also more often in charge of children, which adds pressure on them to work and provide for their households. Owing to the need to work, women may be financially obliged to remain in undesirable jobs and thus forced to endure less than ideal working conditions. In many countries, women are also at a disadvantage due to cultural traditions. Finally, women and girls are often denied equal access to education, which makes them less attractive in the labour market and fuels the cycle of poverty and vulnerability to slavery.
Body
Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery, including its causes and consequences
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Poverty
  • Social & Cultural Rights
Person(s) affected
  • Children
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2013
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Integrating a gender perspective in the right to food 2016, para. 3

Paragraph text
Notwithstanding the legal framework designed to protect them, women experience poverty and hunger at disproportionate levels. Institutionalized gender discrimination and violence still impose barriers that prevent women from enjoying their economic, social and cultural rights and specifically the right to adequate food and nutrition, and the status of women and girls has not substantially improved, despite recurrent calls for the inclusion of a gender perspective to development programs and to social policies.
Body
Special Rapporteur on the right to food
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Equality & Inclusion
  • Food & Nutrition
  • Gender
  • Health
  • Poverty
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2016
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

Priorities of the new mandate holder 2014, para. 25

Paragraph text
While the profit motive drives the demand for forced labour and other contemporary forms of slavery, it is underpinned by "push" factors such as increasing household vulnerability to income shocks, which push more households below the absolute poverty line; lack of education and illiteracy; as well as loss of work and deprivation of land, which force increased informal-sector work, migration and trafficking. The disproportionate impact of those factors on women and girls, who constitute more than half of the victims of forced labour, has been widely documented.
Body
Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of slavery, including its causes and consequences
Document type
Special Procedures' report
Topic(s)
  • Movement
  • Poverty
  • Violence
Person(s) affected
  • Girls
  • Women
Year
2014
Date added
Aug 19, 2019
Paragraph
View

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