Principles in Honour of Jean Pictet, ICRC/Martinus Nijhoff, Geneva/The Hague, 1984, P. 793

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Introduction.

The development in the last 50 years of the principles that comprise human rights law has had a major impact on international humanitarian law and indeed on international law generally 1 . In more recent years, the movement for recognition of the equal rights of women has been exerting its own influence on human rights law and to some effect 2 . In 1979, for example, the international community adopted the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), to which 155 States are now party. Consideration is currently being given to the adoption of an Optional Protocol that will allow for individual and group complaints to be brought before the CEDAW Committee. Governmental and non-governmental organizations have increasingly focused on womens human rights. As a result, a wide range of studies, reports a nd recommendations on various aspects of the issue is available. The topic of women is thus firmly established on the international human rights agenda. So much human suffering in todays world occurs, however, in situations of armed conflict, where to a large extent human righ ts are in abeyance, leaving individuals to rely solely on the protection offered by international humanitarian law 3. And women are major victims in these situations 4. There is now evidence, moreover, that women experience conflict in a different way to men 5, a phenomenon that is confirmed by those working in the field. This d istinctive experience, although its effects differ widely across cultures depending upon the role of women in each society, is related to the particular vulnerability of this group when armed conflict breaks out. War exacerbates the inequalities that exist in different forms and to varying degrees in all societies, and women make up 70 per cent of the worlds population living in poverty 6 They are, moreover, generally disadvantaged in terms of education and are considerably less mobile because of their traditional role in caring for others 7. Perhaps most significantly, women are generally excluded from access to power structures and participation in decision-making with regard to armed conflict. They are therefore unable to draw attention to the particular difficulties they experience in conflict situations and, moreover, are powerless to recommend any preventive action. Against that background, the present article considers the extent to which the focus on womens human rights and the advances made in the protection of women under human rights law has had an impact on international humanitarian law. As will become apparent, this impact can be seen primarily in developments regarding the criminalization and punishment of sexual violence against women in armed conflicts. Broader consideration has yet to be given to the question of women, armed conflict and humanitarian law. During this decade there has been a significant shift in approach to women's advancement and empowerment. While previously the advancement of women was regarded as important for outcomes such as economic development or population policies, more than ever the international community has come to consider the empowerment and autonomy of women and the improvement of their political, social, economic and health status as important ends in themselves. This shift in approach reflects a human rights approach to issues of concern to women.

1. See, for example, A. H. Robertson, Humanitarian law and human rights, in C. Swinarski (ed.), Studies and essays on international humanitarian law and Red Cross principles in honour of Jean Pictet, ICRC/Martinus Nijhoff, Geneva/The Hague, 1984, p. 793. 2. For an overview of the achievements of the last decade, see C. Chinkin, Feminist interventions in international law: Refl ections on the past and strategies for the future, Adelaide Law Review , Vol. 19, 1997, pp. 15-18. 3. For a discussion of the situation in relation to human rights in times of armed conflict, see Y. Dinstein, Human rights in armed conflict: International humanitarian law, in T. Meron (ed.), Human rights in international law: Legal and policy issues , Clarendon Press, Oxford, p. 345. 4. See the statement by Rene Guisan, head of the ICRC delegation to the Fourth World Conference on Women, Beijing, and Article 136 of the Beijing Platform for Action in Fourth World Conference on Women, Action for Equality, Development and Peace , Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, UN Doc. A/Conf. 177/20 (1995) (hereafter Beijing Platform for Action). 5. Ibid. and see Harv ard Study Team, Health and welfare in Iraq after the Gulf Crisis , Chapter 9, 1991. 6.The feminization of poverty was a key area of concern at the Beijing Conference, see Beijing Platform for Action, paras. 47 and 48, supra (note 4). 7. See ICRC (ed.), Women and war, 1995.

Parallel to this shift in approach to women's advancement has been an increased emphasis on the importance of a rights-based approach to planning and programming generally. In his reform proposals, the Secretary-General has made clear that human rights are a cross-cutting element that should be reflected in all United Nations policies and programmes. The High Commissioner for Human Rights is also stressing that human rights are integral to all activities, including peace-making, peace-keeping, peace-building, humanitarian assistance and development. Several United Nations entities, including UNICEF, UNFPA and UNDP have identified the securing of individuals' human rights as a critical first step in addressing global problems, and are now incorporating human rights into their policy making processes and operational activities. Several factors explain these developments. First, the framework of international human rights law provides a forum for asserting individual claims of human rights violation. Some victims of human rights violation, including women who have suffered discrimination on the basis of sex, for example, those denied citizenship on the same basis as men, have successfully sought relief in international tribunals. The approach and decisions at international level have shaped decisions of regional and domestic tribunals, which have also provided remedies for individuals, including women, who have encountered denial of their human rights. Perhaps more importantly, the language of human rights allows legitimate claims to be articulated with a moral authority which other approaches lack. It is a language which is recognized by the powerful, and which stimulates deep chords of response in many. It is a language which has the potential to empower individuals and communities at the grass-roots level to believe that they have a right to education, to health care or any other right. Human rights speak in broad terms about the fundamental entitlement of all human beings to live in dignity, and in conditions of social justice and thereby provide a foundation from which to establish a set of demands premised on the intrinsic worth of the individual. The human rights approach justifies legitimate claims, not because the realization of rights such as that to health or life is a means to another end, such as quality child care, environment, development or population policies, but because the realization of their rights is an important goal in itself. Human rights also promise the engagement of the responsibility of the State in a way that other approaches to claims cannot. The conceptualization of a claim as a human right immediately involves the recognition of State and international responsibility if that claim is denied or violated. Concerns, when conceived of as rights, are elevated from the realm of State and international promises premised on good faith, to a level of legal entitlement requiring national and international response. Concerns, when conceived of as claims of human rights, become fundamental, immutable and priority claims. Human rights not only create entitlements for rights-holders, but they also create duties for States. States are required to ensure the fulfilment of human rights by acting in a way that enables rights-holders to enjoy the rights to which they are entitled. Human rights require that actions - of a legislative, administrative, policy or programme nature are considered in light of the obligations inherent in human rights. Actions which violate or fail to support the realization of human rights contravene human rights obligations. A rights-based approach thus assumes the creation of an enabling environment in which human rights can be enjoyed. A rights-based approach also promises an environment which can prevent the many conflicts based on poverty, discrimination and exclusion. Despite the recent focus on the rights-based approach, the meaning and practical implications of such an approach for policy making processes and operational activities, particularly in the context of development and humanitarian assistance, require greater clarity. This paper seeks to provide an understanding of the international human rights framework, and the challenges that must be addressed in integrating it into these processes in order to realize gender equality. A number of premises underlie the paper. First, human rights bring to the development discussion a unifying set of standards, or a common reference, for setting objectives and assessing the value of action. Second, that if sustainable economic development and the eradication of poverty are to be achieved, economic growth has to be combined with the concept of human development and respect for human rights. As such, the `rights-based' approach is an inherent dimension of the concept of `people-centered sustainable development', with development constituting a comprehensive process directed towards the full realization of all human rights and fundamental freedoms. Third, central to the rights-based approach is the norm of gender equality, which resists, rather than accommodates, relativist approaches to the interpretation of human rights. The development of international human rights standards and their reflection in regional human rights systems and at the domestic level. It moves on to consider genderspecific norms and standards, concentrating on the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women. Critical issues relating to the scope and application of human rights are considered, including the identification of rights-holders and duty-holders and the nature of obligations of States as a result of human rights provisions. The role of civil society is discussed, as are challenges to a rights-based approach to gender-equality, including the impact of the public/private divide and competing rights. The paper then examines the role of multilateral and bilateral entities in realizing human rights at the national level and concludes by proposing elements, which are inherent in a rights-based approach. INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW AND GENDER EQUALITY: ELEMENTS OF A RIGHTS-BASED APPROACH A. The context of international human rights law (a) The development of international human rights standards Historically, international law was the law that regulated relations between kings and sovereigns, and developed into the legal regime governing relations between sovereign States that emerged from feudal kingdoms. States were the actors in international law, and the treatment of the individual human person was not part of this body of law. Exceptionally, international law addressed the State's responsibility to alien (foreign) subjects of another State living within its borders. In addition, several international treaties regulated the treatment of victims of war, and sought to combat slavery. Early major advances in the protection of the human rights are to be found in the mandates and minorities protection treaties of the League of Nations and the attempts to codify labour standards by the International Labour Organization, established in 1919. However, the conceptualization and development of human rights law originated in the middle of the twentieth century with the foundation of the United Nations. The 1945 Charter of the United Nations includes `promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms' as one of the four purposes of the Organization. The Charter's provisions on human rights and international co-operation form the basis of the view that membership in the United Nations carries with it a Member State's responsibility to promote and protect the human rights of individual human beings, and that national sovereignty cannot prevent scrutiny of conduct within national boundaries that infringes human rights. The principle of equality forms the core of the human rights vision of the Charter, which states that human rights and fundamental freedoms should be available to all human beings `without discrimination on the basis of race, sex, language or religion'. The principle of the equal rights of women and men is thus one of the pillars upon which the United Nations was founded. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), adopted in 1948, proclaims numerous rights to which people everywhere are entitled. A "common standard of achievement for all peoples and of all nations", the Declaration delineates civil and political rights such as the right to freedom from torture, illegal arrest, free speech and freedom of conscience. It also establishes "freedom from want" as an essential dimension of human rights and dignity. Consequently, it encompasses economic, social and cultural rights, including work-related rights, the right to social security, the right to education, and the right to an adequate standard of living.

Although technically a non-binding instrument, several commentators argue that the whole of the Declaration8 has acquired the status of universally recognized norms of customary international law that bind all Member States of the United Nations. There is consensus that some of the human rights in the UDHR, including the right to freedom from torture, slavery, and prohibition of racial discrimination form part of customary international law and thus bind all Member States. The UDHR was followed by other instruments, including the Convention against Genocide (1948) and the Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (1965). In 1966, two overarching human rights treaties - the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) - were adopted, which together with the UDHR form the International Bill of Human Rights providing the source of the core standards of international human rights law. The Covenants elaborate many of the rights in the UDHR, albeit with greater detail, and also address the protection of particular categories of people, including refugees and children. In contrast to the UDHR, however, they are multilateral treaties which, upon ratification or accession, create binding international legal obligations for the State concerned. Since the adoption of the Covenants, the United Nations has continued to elaborate international human rights standards. Other major treaties concern non-discrimination on the basis of sex, freedom from torture, the rights of children, and the rights of migrant workers and their families. The ILO has also continued its effort to define particular human rights standards relating to the rights of workers. Important amongst these efforts have been the ILO Conventions Concerning Equal Remuneration for Men and Women Workers for Work of Equal Value (100) (1951), on Discrimination in Respect of Employment and Occupation (111) (1958), and on Equal Opportunities and Equal Treatment for Men and Women Workers: Workers with Family Responsibilities (156) (1981). In addition, human rights standards concerning education, including the 1960 Convention on Non-Discrimination in Education, have been concluded under the auspices of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). Standards are also delineated in international humanitarian law - the body of international law governing the conduct of armed conflict between sovereign States, and internal conflicts within a State. The purpose of this branch of international law is to protect individuals who are affected by such conflicts and as such it is founded on core values familiar to international human rights law. Norms governing armed conflict that were meant to foster humanism and protect the rights of persons affected by such conflicts were developed in the nineteenth century, and thus pre-dated human rights law. These standards were codified in 1949 in the four Geneva Conventions, and developed further in their Additional Protocols of 1977. Specific provisions on the treatment of women are contained in the Geneva Convention relative to the protection of civilian persons in time of war9 while all four Geneva Conventions contain a `Common Article 3' concerning internal conflicts, which endorses some of the core standards of international human rights law. It establishes, inter alia, the right of non-combatants and civilians to be treated humanely, without distinction on grounds of race, sex, religion or faith. Relevant standards are also to be found in international refugee law, which although predominantly concerned with protection, incorporate minimum human rights principles for those meeting the definition of refugee in international law. These principles are codified in the 1951 Convention relating to the status of refugees, and its Protocol adopted in 1966. (b) Regional human rights instruments International human rights law has been reinforced by regional human rights regimes in Europe10, Latin America and Africa. While two separate instruments covering civil and political rights, and economic, social and cultural rights are in place in Europe, both the American Convention on Human Rights (1969) and the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights (1981) include civil and political rights, and social, economic and cultural rights. The Additional Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights in the Area of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (1988) expands on the coverage of these rights in the Convention. Several regional treaties also address particular problems. Thus, regional treaties concerning torture exist in the European and Inter-American human rights systems, while other regional Conventions may seek to set standards which go beyond those in international human rights instruments. Examples of these include, the Inter-American Convention on the Eradication of Violence against Women (the Convention of Belem do Para) and the proposed Convention of the South Asian regional body SAARC on cross-border trafficking and the sexual exploitation of women and children.11 (c) Domestic implementation of international human rights norms By their very nature, international and regional human rights standards require implementation at the national level. They require States parties to take necessary measures of a legislative, administrative or policy nature, and to provide appropriate remedies in case of violations, so as to ensure enjoyment of the established rights and freedoms. Many of the norms of the UDHR and of other instruments, especially civil and political rights, are incorporated in national Constitutions, or in domestic legislation. Constitutional jurisprudence is thus a vital source for clarifying the scope of international human rights standards. Social and economic rights are less commonly reflected in national Constitutions, or recognized by Courts, as fundamental human rights. Social and economic rights are often considered to be `basic needs' which a Government is required to satisfy through appropriate socio-economic policies. They are sometimes incorporated in separate chapters dealing with a Constitution's `directive principles (guidelines) of State Policy.12 However, several Constitutions including the new South African Constitution, those of several

Thomas Buergenthal in: Steiner, Henry J./Alston, Philip, International Human Rights in Context, Clarendon Press, Oxford (1996) p 143 9 E.g. Geneva Convention on Wounded and Sick, Art 3 (a)(c) (torture cruel and degrading treatment), Art 12, 16; Common Article 3, Geneva Conventions; Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, Art 27, 38. 10 The European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (1950), and the European Social Charter (1961). 11 SAARC Convention on Trafficking and Sexual Exploitation of Women and Children, adopted at the Ministerial Meeting in Colombo, July 1998 and due to be adopted at the next SAARC Summit, 1999. 12 Constitutions of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, drawing on the Constitution of Ireland have separate chapters on enforceable fundamental rights, and non-enforceable directive principles of state policy.

East Asian countries, the Finnish Constitution of 1995 as well as the draft Constitution of Sri Lanka influenced by South Africa, incorporate rights in regard to access to basic education and health services as enforceable fundamental rights.13 National courts may sometimes link the interpretation of civil and political rights with directive principles of state policy. For example, the Supreme Court of India has interpreted the fundamental right to life as linked to the Directive Principles of State policy elaborated in the Indian Constitution requiring the State to provide access to education and health.14Consequently, the Courts have developed concepts of legally enforceable fundamental rights to education and health. The South African Supreme Court is also developing a jurisprudence on socio-economic rights, and has interpreted the Constitutional guarantee of the right to health to include a right of access to health care services which will include reproductive health care. Access to health care services is considered dependent on resources, but the right of access to emergency treatment is unqualified.15 (d) Gender-specific norms and standards The principle of the equal rights of women and men is contained in the Charter of the United Nations, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and all subsequent major international human rights instruments. It is most comprehensively elaborated in the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, which codifies women's rights to non-discrimination on the basis of sex, and equality as self-standing norms in international law. It also establishes that women and men are entitled, on a basis of equality, to the enjoyment and exercise of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political, economic, social, cultural, civil or any other field and thus moves beyond the two Covenants by incorporating both families of rights in one instrument, establishing them as mutually reinforcing. Critical areas, such as political participation and access to equal opportunity in public life, and in the professions are covered comprehensively in CEDAW, as are standards on nationality. The Convention also addresses women's equal right to education and training, health and employment. The Convention underlines the equal responsibility of women and men in family life and stresses the social services needed for combining family responsibilities and participation in public life. The Convention calls for the introduction of temporary special measures to redress inequalities between women and men, and special attention is given to rural women and their equal involvement in development processes. Importantly, the Convention obliges States parties to take all appropriate measures to ensure that women do not experience discrimination in certain areas of private life. Thus States parties are required to ensure that all contracts and other private instruments which restrict the legal capacity of women "shall be deemed null and void", while they are also obliged to take steps to eliminate discriminatory practices in the family. Certain areas are not addressed by the Convention. It does not include specific provisions on the group right to self-determination, freedom of association or information, and participation in trade unions16 nor does it contain standards relating to refugee women or women in armed conflict. However, standards in other instruments, including the Refugee Convention and its Protocol and the Geneva Conventions and Protocols, are applicable in these contexts. Except for article 6, which requires States parties to take all appropriate measures to eliminate the exploitation of prostitution and trafficking in women, the Convention does not address violence against women. General recommendation 19 of 1992 of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women indicated that the full implementation of the Convention requires States parties to take positive measures to eliminate all forms of violence against women. It also established the links between violence against women and enjoyment of other rights protected by the Convention, and put forward a series of specific steps States parties must introduce in implementation of their treaty obligations . 17The provisions of other conventions on the right to life, freedom from slavery, protection against torture, inhuman and degrading treatment and illegal arrest are particularly relevant for the human rights of women in custodial situations, and protection against State violence including illegal detention . 18General recommendation no. 19, and the UN Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women (1993)19, which provides a comprehensive definition and set of measures for the prevention and eradication of violence against women, are useful in closing the gap with regard to international standards on violence. In instances where the CEDAW Convention is less specific than other instruments, or does not address certain rights explicitly, such gaps can be filled by reference to the general non-discrimination clause of other instruments, and/or their provisions of particular relevance to women, such as articles 3 of the ICESCR and ICCPR. The general recommendations/comments and concluding observations of human rights treaty bodies considerably strengthen a comprehensive human rights framework. Efforts at ensuring

13

Constitutions of Vietnam, Lao PDR, Cambodia and China. Also Constitution of South Africa, Art.27 (general), Art 28 (children). Sri Lanka Draft Constitution, Art. 22 (rights of children to basic nutrition, shelter, basic health care), Art. 24 (safe conditions of work), Art 25 (access to health care including emergency medical treatment, food and water, appropriate social assistance).

14

Unni Krishnan v State of Andhra Pradesh, JT 1993 474. Mohini Jain v State of Karnataka, 1992, 3 SCC 666 (education); Samity and Others v State of West Bengal, 1996, AIR SC 24,26 (emergency health care).

15 16

Art 27(3), 27(1); Soobramany v Minister of Health, (Kwazulu Natal) Case CC4 32/97 (1997). CESCR, art 1 (right of self determination), art 8 (trade unions); ICCPR, art 1 (right of self determination), art 21, 22, (freedom of association and right to join trade unions). 17 General recommendation No. 19 (eleventh session, 1992) on violence against women. UN Doc.HRI/GEN/1/Rev.3, 1997. 18 DHR, art 3, ICCPR, art 6 (right to life); UDHR, art 4; ICCPR, art 8 (slavery); UDHR, art 5; ICCPR, art 7 (torture etc); UDHR, art 9; ICCPR, art 9 (protection from arbitrary arrest). 19 General Assembly Resolution 48/104 of 20 December 1993.

that general human rights instruments and mechanisms more fully integrate gender considerations are therefore essential in achieving implementation of human rights standards and norms that is sensitive to the needs and experiences of women . 20 ILO Conventions on the protection of women workers are also important for realizing gender equality, non-discrimination and protection from gender based exploitation, harassment and violence in the world of work. In addition to creating legal obligations for States parties, they provide essential guidance in programming for particular situations of working women. As in the case of other international human rights instruments, courts in several jurisdictions, including Tanzania, Australia, New Zealand, Botswana, Nepal and India21have drawn on CEDAW to assist in the interpretation of domestic legal provisions. 30. The consensus documents emanating from global United Nations conferences, including the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action of the World Conference on Human Rights (1993) and the Beijing Platform for Action of the Fourth World Conference on Women (1995), are couched in terms of the UDHR and other international human rights instruments. These conference documents are directed to the realization of human rights and fundamental freedoms, civil, cultural, economic, political and social, including the right to development, for all. As they reflect present political, economic and social realities, they can provide useful guidance in clarifying the scope of international human rights standards, and related obligations of Governments. 31. The Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action restated that women's rights are an intrinsic dimension of human rights. It also identified gender-based violence as a subject of international human rights law. The Beijing Platform for Action builds on the Vienna results concerning the human rights of women. Among the critical areas of concern covered in the Platform are >human rights of women=, >violence against women=, and >women and armed conflict= The full range of rights is addressed in other sections of the document, in particular in areas such as >women and the economy=, >women and poverty=,>women and health=, and >the girl child=. The International Conference on Population and Development (1994, Cairo) and the World Summit for Social Development (1995, Copenhagen) also integrate human rights in general, and gender equality as a human right. B. Some critical issues relating to the scope and application of human rights 32. International human rights law has introduced a >people centred= dimension to international law. Concerned with the relations between Governments and their own subjects, it represents a body of rights and obligations, guaranteed to those subjects. Guaranteed rights are reinforced by international mechanisms of monitoring and supervision, including human rights treaty bodies, which seek to ensure governmental accountability for implementation at the national level. 33. Human rights are often described as non-communitarian and individualistic, but the UDHR and the two Covenants place the rights of the individual within the context of family and community, rather than as an entity that is isolated or antagonistic to the community. (15)The realization of human rights is perceived as both an individual right, and a community interest and commitment. The need to balance individual rights and the role of the State is recognized, and none of these entities are considered to have an exclusive role in realizing the human rights agenda. Indeed the concept of limitation and derogation of rights to preserve >public order= or >public welfare= introduces this communitarian dimension. However the balance suggests that neither governmental power or communitarian interest can justify the denial of the core importance of the dignity and rights of the individual human being. The balance between conflicting interests of State and community must be retained within the objective of realizing the core rights recognized in international human rights law. 34. >Human rights= are frequently misconceived as constituting only civil and political rights, with infringement of rights perceived as a matter of law and adversarial legal procedures. Often, rights are associated with the notion of negative action by the State and >protection=. >Human rights= and >protection= are distinguished from the socialwelfare centred delivery of services which seek to satisfy >basic needs=such as food, health and education. Inevitably international development agencies have debated whether to adopt a service delivery `welfare' approach, or a `human rights' based approach which focuses on infringement of rights. Since they have been traditionally working in the area of service delivery, they sometimes see a shift to a human rights approach as ignoring basic needs and therefore counterproductive. The development debate has often juxtaposed the `basic needs' or `basic rights' discourse, or the `humanitarian assistance' or `human rights' approach in relation to work in conflict zones. 35. However, the notion of sustainable development does not polarize human rights, basic needs, and humanitarian assistance. Eradication of illiteracy and achievement of high standards of health, participation of women and their empowerment so that they can fulfil their roles in the community, environmental protection, and respect for human rights are all aspects of sustainable development. While `human rights' are sometimes referred to, mistakenly, as one dimension of sustainable development, respect for social and economic rights, such as to education and health, as well as rights of gender equality, non-discrimination and environmental protection are now recognized as dimensions of human rights. 36. Nevertheless, critics of current developments in international law, and the new holistic vision of human rights, continue to argue that economic development requires the satisfaction of `needs' in an environment where individual human rights must give way to community welfare. They argue that an aggressive and adversarial agenda of individual claims and rights undermines economic growth, destabilizes harmonious social relations and the capacity of individuals to interact on the basis of their responsibilities and duties in the community. `Rights-based societies' are sharply contrasted with `duty-based societies.' Asian and African societies are then said to have their own concept of human equality and fundamental duties which challenge the basic assumptions that individuals have rights and claims on Governments and the community. Human rights are criticized as Eurocentric Western values, particularly because human rights are often associated exclusively with civil and political rights.

20

Copelon, Rhonda: Intimate Terror, in: Cook, Rebecca (ed.), Human Rights of Women, p 116.

21

Velasques Rodrigues Case (1988), Inter American Court of Human Rights; Ser.C, No 4. 9 Hum Rts., L J 212; Faiz v Attorney General, 1995, 1 Sri LR 372; Upaliratna v Tikiri Banda, 1995, Sri LR 165 Sri Lanka (illegal cover for private action); Airey v Ireland, 32 Eur.Ct. H R (Ser.A) 1979 (inaction); Vishaka v State of Rajasthan, Writ petition (Criminal), Nos 666-70 of 1992 India (inaction); Saheli Women's Resource Centre v Commissioner of Police Delhi, AIR 1990 SC 513 (collusion of police in private violence, state responsible); Padmini v State of Tamil Nadu, 1993 Crim.L J 29641 (India); Ratnasiri v Basnayake, SC/4/94 1995; Saman v Leelanda, 1989, 1 Sri LR 1; Karunasena v Sriyantha, SC 257/93 (1994) (State liability for violence by Sri Lanka law enforcement authorities in custodial situation); c.f. Ronda Copelon: Intimate Terror, ibid.

37. These criticisms impact on approaches to gender equality. There is invariably a consensus that women and men should be provided with equal life chances through policy programmes that focus on poverty alleviation, equal access to health and education, and opportunities for self-employment, access to credit and economic empowerment. However, there is an unwillingness to adopt a holistic approach to infringement of bodily security and gender based discrimination in a society, or address complex problems in regard to gender roles and relationships and their impact in imposing disadvantages upon women because of their sex. 38. Bilateral and multilateral agencies working at the national level sometimes find it difficult to integrate a rights-based approach into their work. There is sometimes a perception that the cause of human rights in general, and gender equality in particular, can be advanced as well, or even better by a social welfare-oriented `basic needs' approach that also impacts on the quality of life of people in general, and women in particular. Programmes by a consortium of international agencies may be developed to ensure that women receive humanitarian assistance in conflict areas or obtain access to services. Such programmes may hesitate to integrate aspects that are likely to be controversial or perceived as `politically sensitive,' because they raise `human rights' issues, such as discrimination or gender-based violence. For instance, an agency may have a programme on providing girls and women access to education, or adequate pre-natal and post-natal care, without addressing the issues of forced and early marriage, gang rape by law enforcement authorities or custodial violence. 39. However, the advantage of a human rights-based approach to development and governance including the realisation of gender equality, is that it encourages an inherently holistic vision of outcomes. It encourages people-centred and sustainable development approaches to planning and decision making, on the assumption that respect for individual human rights, dignity and gender equality must be the foundation of any civil, political, social and economic agenda. It thus provides a framework that encourages programming which takes account of the dynamics of civil and political, and socio-economic rights, and the need to find solutions that strike a balance so as to achieve the overall objectives of realising human rights. A rights-based approach adds a different dimension to service delivery for satisfaction of basic needs and humanitarian assistance. Since achievement of gender equality is a critical aspect of any human rights agenda, opportunities for mutual reinforcement need to be clearly understood so that the two agendas can be pursued in tandem. 40. The challenge remains to achieve international consensus in regard to the precise content of human rights, the duties of Governments vis-a-vis its people, and the means required for their implementation. The next section of this paper considers these issues. (a) Rights-holders and duty-holders 41. Human rights create entitlements for rights-holders. Unlike other societal aspirations or claims, human rights carry not only moral force, but also legal validity. They create obligations for duty-holders to act to enable rights-holders to exercise the rights to which they are entitled. They also require duty-holders to ensure the fulfilment of these rights. Human rights obligations require that actions - of a legislative, administrative, or policy/programme nature - be assessed in light of the obligation to protect and promote human rights. Actions that fail to support the realization of human rights are not in accordance with obligations resulting from a human rights perspective. While the State has a margin of discretion in choosing types of actions and measures, the implementation of obligations is not a matter of the good faith of the State, but constitutes a legal obligation for which the State is accountable to the international community. 42. The Charter places human rights within a system of international co-operation. This implies that national borders put no limits to human rights but that by their very nature, human rights represent transboundary values. It also entails that human rights are a legitimate concern of the international community, entitling it to raise such issues when human rights are in jeopardy. 43. Treaties usually create monitoring Committees or treaty bodies, to which States parties must regularly report on their progress in implementing their treaty obligations. The growing participation of NGOs in these monitoring processes is creating greater ownership of civil society in monitoring human rights implementation. (b) The nature of obligations of States 44. The United Nations Charter refers in declaratory language to the obligation of States `to promote and respect' human rights. These are general terms which do not indicate the content of the rights, or mandate effective enforcement. The terms `protect' and 'ensure' are also used in subsequent instruments. 45. A distinction is often drawn between State obligations imposed by civil and political rights, which must be `ensured', and socio-economic rights which must be `recognized', and realized `progressively' or `to the maximum extent of available resources.' It is sometimes argued that there is a hierarchy of rights according to which some rights (civil and political) are more important than others, guaranteed and immediately realizable. According to the same argument, other rights (socio-economic and cultural rights) are not immediately realizable, but may be postponed until adequate resources are available for their realization. Civil and political rights are characterized as `hard' rights, justiciable in courts, imposing negative duties on States of recognition, protection and non-interference. Socio-economic rights are then considered `soft' rights, imposing positive duties on States which can best be realized progressively through allocation of resources and administrative policy planning, rather than enforcement through the Courts. (16) 46. Asbjoern Eide, in his study on the right to adequate food as a human right,(17) developed a three level typology of State obligations, which has become a widely accepted framework for analyzing States' obligations with regard to human rights generally. These are: - The obligation to respect requires the State and thereby all its organs and agents, to abstain from doing anything that violates the integrity of the individual, or infringes on her or his freedom, including the freedom to use the material resources available to that individual in the way she or he finds best to satisfy basic needs. - The obligation to protect requires from the State and its agents the measures necessary to prevent other individuals or groups from violating the integrity, freedom of action, or other human rights of the individual, including the prevention of infringements of his or her material resources. - The obligation to fulfil requires the State to take the measures necessary to ensure for each person within its jurisdiction opportunities to obtain satisfaction of those needs, recognized in the human rights instruments, which cannot be secured by personal efforts. (18) 47. This framework of analysis of State obligations clarifies the indivisibility and interdependence of civil and political rights, and economic and social rights and supports the growing recognition of the similarity of the two families of rights in terms of the obligations of States for their implementation. Civil and political rights are no longer seen exclusively as `hard rights,' immediately claimable and requiring nothing but the State's non-interference in the individual's enjoyment of the right. `Socio-economic rights' are no longer seen as `needs' to be progressively satisfied at the will and pleasure of Governments through welfare benevolence, resource allocation, and administrative and policy planning. 48. In both families of rights, the State's obligations consist of a combination of all three levels to achieve the respect for, protection of, and promotion and fulfilment of human rights. The indivisibility and interdependence of rights in terms of the obligations they create for States, have been particularly understood in developing countries of Africa and Asia, as well as in the newly developed countries of East Asia. Structural and institutionalised discrimination, which results in inequalities of class, race and gender have been recognized in development studies as stemming from the absence of access to socio-economic and cultural rights such as basic health, nutrition, basic education and language.

Torture, detention and violence have been discerned as fostered by lack of allocation of adequate resources for training of personnel and law enforcement. Lack of sufficient allocations in national development planning and budgets in the socio-economic areas of health, education and food security are often the result of denial of civil and political rights, such as the right of democratic elections, free speech and information dissemination. Authoritarian governments that deny freedom of speech and the right to vote do not provide adequate information on the causes of famine and lack of food security, or low levels of literacy and health. Due process rights cannot be satisfied without a Government's active establishment and maintenance of the physical infrastructure, and the training, appointment and remuneration of competent judges. 49. The links between families of rights have been clarified in recent years by several human rights treaty bodies, with, for example, the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, in its general comment no. 3, discussing the nature of States parties obligations under the Covenant(19) The right to non-discrimination was among the provisions considered by the Committee to be capable of immediate realization, and enforceable by judicial and other bodies in a national legal system. 50. The general comment also notes that the duty `to take steps' indicates that steps towards the goal of the realization of a right must be taken within a reasonably short time after the Covenant's entry into force. Such steps should be deliberate, concrete, and targeted as clearly as possible towards meeting the obligations in the Covenant. Legislation might be an indispensable element. But the general comment also noted that `the fact that realization over time, or in other words progressively, is foreseen under the Covenant should not be misinterpreted as depriving the obligation of meaningful content'. The Committee noted that the Covenant imposes `an obligation to move as expeditiously and effectively as possible towards that goal.' On this analysis, the Committee determined that each State party has a minimum core obligation to satisfy `minimum essential levels' of each right covered by the Covenant. This is a clear statement that the availability-of-resources argument does not reduce States parties' obligations to satisfy socio-economic rights by postponing them to a future time. C. The role of civil society 51. The recognition of the status of civil society in monitoring the implementation of human rights reinforces the understanding of individuals as rights-holders. This includes their right to participate actively, freely and meaningfully in the formulation of national human rights and development policies. The right to participation takes on particular force for those who remain, or have historically been marginalized. Indeed the general human rights norms relating to freedom of association and freedom of speech are critical for the women's human rights agenda so as to strengthen their ability to participate freely and meaningfully in the decisions that affect their enjoyment of all their human rights. Women's groups need to link with human rights groups in order to bridge both the human rights and the development agenda. Such links have intrinsic impact on the capacity of women's groups to engage in activism to realize gender equality as a rights issue in development. The activism of international NGOs networking with local NGOs has helped to promote incorporation of international human rights norms into national law, policy and into public debate. D. Challenges to a rights-based approach to gender equality 52. Challenges to the rights-based approach are inherent in the structure of international human rights law as it addresses mainly relations between the individual and the State and its agents, rather than relations among individuals. A second challenge lies in the fact that realization of various equally valid rights inevitably creates situations of conflicts between them. These two issues will be addressed in turn. (a) The public/private divide 53. Through the State's obligation to protect individuals against infringement of their rights by other individuals or non-State actors, the State is responsible for putting in place effective forms of prevention of violations and/or for holding non-State actors accountable for violations of other individuals' rights. Consequently, the State must bring the acts of private individuals within the `norms and regulatory framework of rights by legislation and effective law enforcement. 54. Many violations of the rights of women occur in situations that remain outside the regulatory framework of the State. Examples include the family, or the existence of religious law, as well as traditional and customary law. Likewise, many economic activities performed predominantly by women are not regulated by the State, such as work in family farms or businesses, caring work and work in the informal sector, and are thus not subject to regulations concerning social security, health and safety standards, minimum pay or protection against exploitation. 55. As human rights continue to be perceived in international law as rights enforceable only against the State or its agents, a large area of gender discrimination and genderbased violence will continue to fall outside the area of effective enforcement. Increasingly, infringements of human rights take place because of the actions of non-State actors. Gender-based violence occurs in the family and in the community, and the perpetrators are often non-State actors or private individuals. Economic policies have resulted in increased privatization in both developed and developing countries, especially also in the social sector (health care), and in cuts in Government programmes and spending. 56. Gender equality and human rights, if they are to be realized, must be respected, protected and fulfilled in both the public and the private realm. The distinction between the `public' and `private' divide in international human rights law has been criticized, and there have been efforts to shift towards a recognition of responsibility and accountability for private action. The challenge to this divide is sharpest in the discourse on gender-based violence(20) but the field of work also provides opportunities for softening the divide. The UN Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women (1993), although not binding in international law, encompasses standards that apply to both State and nonState (private) actors. A jurisprudence has developed in both regional and national human rights law which recognizes that a State can be liable for an infringement of human rights by a private actor when the State fails to act with due diligence in implementing its legislative or regulatory obligations to protect individuals from the actions of third parties. The State is also being held liable, quite distinctly, for inaction in law enforcement.(21) (b) Competing rights 57. Competition between rights is inevitable in the very process of recognition of individual human rights. If one right or set of rights is interpreted absolutely, it will `trump' other rights. However the experience of legal systems throughout the world indicates that regulation, law and policy-making continuously involves `social engineering' or a balancing of conflicting interests. A legal norm or policy is rarely absolute. Consequently the existence of the prospect of conflicting human rights should not be a reason for rejecting the rights-based approach. Rather, efforts are needed to understand the potential for conflict, and a commitment to developing strategies for resolving them so as not to undermine the core agenda of gender equality and non-discrimination. 58. Gender-equality rights compete for recognition with a number of other, equally valid, human rights. For instance, the human right of freedom of speech may compete with controls on pornography that may encourage gender-based violence(22). Freedom of conscience, religion and the right to manifest religious belief in practice and observance, and cultural rights may foster particularities that challenge the universality of human rights, and purport to limit equality rights. Conflicts between women's human rights and religious rights illustrate the philosophical, legal, and political difficulties of reconciling competing human rights values. The right to religious freedom, custom or religion may therefore have to be interpreted not absolutely, but so as to strike a balance, and achieve the norms of gender justice.

59. It may be argued that the concept of violence differs according to religion or custom, clothing an infringement of the human right to bodily integrity with the legitimacy of custom and religion. Practices such as Sathi or wife immolation, or female genital mutilation, or early marriage under parental authority infringing reproductive health rights and denying education, may be legitimized on the argument that these practices are deeply rooted in religious belief, custom or culture. 60. A `particularistic', or culturally relativist justification is frequently given by States which, at the time of ratification, enter general reservations, or reservations on particular articles of treaties which result in a particular treaty provision being inapplicable in a national context, or being interpreted in a local context. The number of reservations entered to CEDAW has been of great concern to the Committee and to other States parties, as these are perceived as undermining the legal standard of gender equality.(23) 61. National courts have pioneered approaches that seek to balance competing human rights so that they are not interpreted absolutely and undermine one another. Canadian jurisprudence recognizes that limits must be placed on free speech where it runs counter to the right to equality(24) South Africa's Constitution recognizes the right to limit rights, but requires courts to consider the purpose of the limitations, its nature and extent, and the overarching goal of ensuring that it is `reasonable and justifiable in a society..... based on human dignity, equality and freedom.=(25) This has encouraged the Constitutional Court to adopt what is called `a purposive interpretation' of competing rights, so as not to construe different rights out of context and in isolation, but with recognition of the need for a balance, bearing in mind the core human rights values the Constitution seeks to achieve. 62. Jurisprudence on the interpretation of limitations to the right of freedom of religion indicates that litigation has focussed in the main on aspects which have not presented the courts with hard choices. The Indian courts, as well as the European Court of Human Rights have often been faced with recognizing the right of freedom of conscience and religion, and manifestation of religion, in situations where the practices and activities in question had no impact on the right to gender equality or freedom from gender discrimination. However in those instances where the Supreme Court of India has been faced with recognizing personal laws based on religion resulting in gender-based discrimination, it has been unwilling to recognise that a personal law undermines a conflicting statutory provision. The Shah Bano Case(26) considered a Muslim wife's right to maintenance under a generally applicable family support statute, and was an effort to prevent the application of a religious law that denied maintenance. 63. In the Mudgal Case (1995), an Indian court decided that a man's unilateral conversion to Islam did not give him the right to contract polygamous marriages, and to reject his statutory obligations as a result of an earlier monogamous marriage. Similarly, a Sri Lankan Court arrived at the same conclusion, overturning a Privy Council decision which had been followed as a precedent for thirty years.(27) However, Indian Courts have decided that personal laws based on religion cannot be challenged, in the absence of a conflicting statutory principle, via the Constitution. They have shown a reluctance to adopt an activist approach to changing personal law, perceiving this as the responsibility of Parliament. (28) 64. South Asian and African countries have already a body of common jurisprudence, sometimes derived from colonial statute law, which applies to all communities. Retaining and developing this common body of law to conform with human rights standards, and recognizing the right of individuals to govern their personal and family relations according to their general norms by choice, even where plural legal traditions based on religion and ethnicity also exist, provides one strategy for working towards universal human rights standards. In this regard, however, particular care needs to be applied to ensure that international norms of gender equality are incorporated into, and reflected in this body of law and jurisprudence. 65. In countries where a religious or customary tradition is recognized as an absolute one, there is a clear problem of conflict of norms. It is in these countries that Constitutional guarantees on freedom of religion can be used to reject secularism and move towards a religion based system of rights and responsibilities. (c ) Human rights of women vs. other claims 66. Once the primacy of rights has been established, the question of a potential conflict between development or humanitarian assistance, and a human rights approach no longer arises. Once socio-economic rights are recognized as human rights, service delivery is only one dimension of human rights. 67. In situations of armed conflict, agencies providing humanitarian assistance naturally prioritize the delivery of basic services to victims, and are neutral and discreet in their dealings with the parties to the conflict. However since humanitarian law is closely anchored to human rights standards, the challenge is to recognize that human rights today encompass both humanitarian assistance and protection from infringement of human rights. The international standards in the area of humanitarian law and the Refugee Convention and Protocol are themselves based on the recognition of the human right to equality and non-discrimination, and other rights relating to personal security. It is therefore important to ensure that a humanitarian assistance agenda does not displace the priority given to a human rights agenda. 68. A humanitarian assistance agenda can no longer be seen in isolation as an effort to provide `assistance' rather than realize human rights for access to these services as part of the protection afforded for civil and political rights. Humanitarian agencies working in conflict areas, including UNHCR, are recognizing this dimension of rights. A view that humanitarian assistance should be primarily oriented towards service delivery can no longer be sustained. (d) Allocation of resources and human rights education 69. Rights are often perceived as only requiring lawyers, laws and legal procedures. Strengthening the process of implementation of gender equality rights through international complaints procedures, and national laws and a Court system is clearly relevant for a rights-based approach. Monitoring violations through national and international processes is equally critical. 70. However, a rights-based approach also requires the development of human rights action plans and strategies covering all areas of national development, and the allocation of human and financial resources. The rights contained in the CEDAW Convention require policy measures and resources beyond laws and legal procedures for full implementation. 71. Human rights education and gender-sensitization at all levels are also a critical dimension of a rights-based approach. This is perhaps the easiest aspect of a rights-based approach, since there are many partners in the human rights arena, and programmes can be strengthened by linking and networking. It is important that gender-sensitization programmes are linked to human rights education. An environment that is not open in regard to education, diversification of information, participation of civil society including in the political process cannot be receptive to efforts at gender sensitization. Women's groups therefore need to network and make these connections so as to strengthen their own capacity and also impact on the wide range of State and private actors who can be catalysts for creating an environment conducive to realizing gender equality. E. The role of multilateral and bilateral entities in realizing human rights at the national level (a) The role of multilateral entities 72. To varying degrees, international human rights treaties establish a role for international organizations in support of implementation of the treaty at the national level. They also foresee a role for such entities in providing treaty bodies with information essential to the monitoring process.

73. The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, in its general comment no. 2 (1990), has given detailed guidance to entities of the United Nations system, and in particular those involved in development activities, on the integration of human rights concerns into development activities. In order to assist such entities in the operationalization of article 22 of the Covenant,(29) the Committee provided a list of specific measures for consideration by the relevant bodies. The Committee noted, inter alia, that: - As a matter of principle, the appropriate United Nations organs and agencies should specifically recognize the intimate relationship which should be established between development activities and efforts to promote respect for human rights in general, and economic, social and cultural rights in particular; - Consideration should be given to require the preparation of a `human rights impact statement' in connection with all major development cooperation activities; - Training for United Nations project personnel in human rights standards and norms; - Ensure at each phase of a development project that human rights are duly taken into account. This would apply in the initial assessment of priority needs of a particular country, in the identification of particular projects, in project design, in the implementation of projects, and in its final evaluation. (30) 74. International agencies can use their specific role to adopt a pro-active role in the realization of gender-equality rights. They have both a mandate and a duty to adopt a stand on gender-equality issues in the regular country programmes that they enter into with Government. As human rights are ends in themselves, all programming efforts should be critically analyzed to assess their impact with regard to realization of gender equality. 75. Agencies' mission statements and guidelines for programming can incorporate a rights approach by referring to international instruments, and the agency's status and responsibilities under human rights treaties. Indeed, UNICEF's mission statement has clarified that the Convention on the Rights of the Child will be the foundation of programming. UNHCR has also made similar statements on the importance of a rights approach, and adopted guidelines on the place of human rights in general, and women's human rights in particular in their work on refugee issues. Discussions are ongoing on how to strengthen capacity to programme from a rights-based approach in situation of internally displaced persons who do not come directly within UNHCR's mandate. (31) (b) The role of bilateral entities 76. Bilateral entities focussing on gender-equality have opportunities to create an understanding of the rights-based approach within their organizations, and strengthen their mandate by reference to the international standards that Governments have committed themselves to realize. They must understand the scope of the various international standards that countries have ratified in regard to gender equality, whether generally or specifically in relation to their areas of expertise. They can also study and use the conference documents such as the Vienna Declaration, the Beijing Platform for Action, the Cairo Population Conference and the Stockholm Conference Reports which recognise the importance of international co-operation in realizing human rights. Most of these conference reports envisage action by multilaterals and bilaterals.(32) Creating an awareness of the legitimacy of a human rights agenda and gender equality as a human right is critical to impacting through programming at the national level. (c ) Common efforts of multilaterals and bilaterals in the realization of a rights-based approach 77. A rights-based approach requires a shift from an approach focussed on basic needs to a recognition of the importance of claims to equality and non-discrimination. Strengthening women's position by providing life chances, access to health and education, and opportunities for career development or income generation and employment, are only one part of a rights agenda. Bilaterals and multilaterals need to be concerned with the design and implementation of a women's rights agenda that encompasses civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights as ends in themselves. 78. Developments in the area of women's human rights are reinforcing the need to move beyond the basic/needs basic/rights debate. As the links between law, policy planning and allocation of national and international resources for realizing human rights are becoming clearer, the requirements for implementation of human rights in general, as well as the right of gender equality are also becoming more obvious. All of them create, to varying degrees, obligations for States to respect, protect, promote and fulfil human rights. Therefore, a human rights agenda requires not only responding to infringements, but an agenda that establishes connections between law, policy planning, resource allocations, advocacy and community mobilization to support rights. 79. The significance of international human rights law, and the manner in which it has legitimized the scope for State accountability and scrutiny must be understood so as to confront arguments of State sovereignty. Bilaterals and multilaterals must understand the legitimacy of that scrutiny, and the fact that they are partners in enabling the State to perform its own obligations under international law. 80. It is no longer appropriate for multilateral and bilateral agencies to distinguish between provision of assistance and protection of rights, as if only the latter aspect concerns human rights. Consequently, specific elements of international co-operation such as humanitarian or emergency assistance, or the delivery of basic services can no longer occur outside, or above, a human rights framework. 81. Bilaterals and multilaterals should take advantage of the increasing participation of NGOs and civil society in the realization of a rights-based approach to gender equality. International human rights and women's NGOs have linked with local NGOs to bring the voice of civil society to international forums. They have influenced the agenda of world conferences on a range of women's rights issues. Human rights treaty bodies are formalizing the status of NGOs in the treaty monitoring procedures. Working with NGOs at the national and local level enables bilaterals and multilaterals to support the transfer of the results of global monitoring processes back to the national level, and its incorporation into legislative and policy processes. 82. Monitoring efforts need to focus on denial of rights as well as inattention to rights, law and law enforcement, complaints procedures on infringement of rights, and monitoring of policy processes. Bilaterals and multilaterals need to network with new partners such as legislators, lawyers and judges who can also carry through the agenda, while sustaining their links to Government and others engaged in policy planning and implementation, and in the provision of services. There is also a need to network with each other in gender sensitization programmes and human rights education, in the context of their area of interest. Such links are important in order to reinforce the human rights messages and advocacy. 83. Bilaterals and multilaterals need to network with each other to articulate a common commitment to a human rights approach. An awareness of the central importance and legitimacy of rights in terms of international cooperation and of their own mandate can strengthen their hand in dealing with Governments bound to follow international norms that apply to them. An awareness of the legitimacy of the involvement of people and civil society in realizing rights under international law and their own States in working on rights must help them in community-based work. It can also help them to give protection and legitimacy to the work of NGOs and civil society. Gender equality can become a

central and core norm in policy planning and programmes if Governments, people and the international community connect with the idea that `men and women should have the equal chance to make their contribution and find their creativity in a society which neither own, and both share=. (33) 84. Such co-operation requires an open dialogue of bi/multilaterals with both Government and civil society, and the provision of opportunities for local NGOs to truly participate in programming. The perception that bilaterals or multilaterals are non-participatory, and set the agenda for programmes in a non-consultative manner, promotes insecurities in civil society itself, and encourages Government to be suspicious. It is the task of multilaterals and bilaterals to carry the experience from the field back to their own headquarters so they acquire sensitivity to the dynamics of a local situation and how best to programme to realize a rights agenda. 85. A rights-based approach to gender equality must also be used consistently by all agencies so that they do not give conflicting messages. This is why it is important that some do not continue to adopt an exclusively humanitarian or development assistance or service delivery approach, while others combine them and integrate it into a rights approach. Co-ordination on issues such as women's work and child care, gender-based violence, trafficking, child labour and humanitarian work in conflict zones at the national level will strengthen the capacity to impact at the national level and also ensure that international developments on human rights are not out of touch with local and regional realities, particularly in developing countries. The new administrative arrangements under which all UN agencies will operate under a Resident Co-ordinator may facilitate this cooperation. Bilateral agencies should link with multilaterals in adopting a co-ordinated approach when they work on issues of gender equality at the national level. F. Elements of a rights-based approach 86. Reflecting on the Vienna Conference on Human Rights and on the crisis in development one commentator asked whether development cooperation had any other legitimate task at all beyond that of the fulfilment of human rights. If the fulfilment of human rights(34) is indeed the foremost task of development cooperation, the principles of international human rights law as they pertain to rights-holders, the nature of obligations of duty-holders, implementation, and participation need to be translated into practically applicable concepts for bilateral and multilateral development co-operation.

The provisions of the law of armed conflict relating to women at the time of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights There were occasional references to the protection of women in some of the earliest documents of the law of armed conflict. For example, Article XLVII of the Lieber Code punished those responsible for the rape of inhabitants of a hostile country [8 ] . Until recently, however, sexual violence against women was never taken seriously. Rape was not listed as a war crime at Nuremberg, despite the high incidence of sexual violence during the Second World War. Indictments before the Tokyo Tribunal did contain charges of rape and some individuals were convicted for their failure to ensure that subordinates complied with the law. Moreover, the occupying powers included rape as a war crime in the charters of their national courts set up to try offences committed in Germany, although no prosecutions were ever undertaken on this basis [9 ] . Generally, however, rape and sexual violence against women were regarded as an inevitable aspect of armed conflict and seldom if ever prosecuted. [10 ] The four 1949 Geneva Conventions [11 ] , which at the time of their adoption were the major instruments protecting the victims of armed conflict (and with their two 1977 Protocols [12 ] remain so today), contain some 19 provisions that are specifically relevant to women. The scope of these rules is somewhat limited and many of them are in fact designed to protect children [13 ] . Overall, the aim of the Conventions is to provide special protection for pregnant women, nursing mothers and mothers in general and to address the vulnerability of women to sexual violence in times of armed conflict. Significantly, Article 27(2) of the Fourth Geneva Convention contains the first provision specifically dealing with rape and requires that [w ] omen shall be especially protected against any attack on their honour, in particular against rape, enforced prostitution, or any form of indecent assault. Alth ough this article constitutes a long overdue recognition that rape is unacceptable in times of armed conflict, the extent and gravity of the practice are not acknowledged since the provision falls outside the system of grave breaches of international humanitarian law (under this system States are obliged to seek out and punish persons responsible for failing to observe certain designated provisions of the Conventions). Article 27(2) has also been crit icized on the grounds that, like many of the provisions relating to women, it categorizes rape as an attack on the victims honour and thus does not reflect the seriousness of the offence of sexual violence [14 ] . Apart from the protection afforded under such articles, which is clearly valuable as far as it goes, any indication that the difficulties women experience in armed conflicts might be distinctive and encompass wider issues than their roles as mothers and victims of sexual violence is not discernible in the provisions of the Geneva Conventions. To what extent were the provisions of the 1977 Protocols relating to women influenced by the human rights movement? The movement to bring about further improvements in international humanitarian law that culminated in the adoption by States of the 1977 Protocols owed a great deal to developments in the area of human rights. Gerald Draper wrote that progress in the law of armed conflict had come perilously close to stagnation before the impact of the movement for a regime of human rights was brought to bear [15 ] . As early as 1956, the ICRC had completed a set of Draft Rules for the limitation of dangers incurred by the civilian population in time of war. No action was taken on these rules. The question of further revision of the law of armed conflict was shelved by the international community until the work on human rights in peacetime undertaken by the United Nations Commission on Human Rights and the UN General Assembly began to expand logically into concern for human rights in armed conflict. The International Conference on Human Rights held in Tehran in 1968 can be seen as a watershed in this relationship [16 ] . The final outcome of these initiatives was the adoption of the two 1977 Protocols, which have a distinct human rights flavour. The Protocols merge the respective principles of the socalled law of The Hague and law of Geneva and fo cus on the protection of civilians. [17 ] What is the approach of the Protocols to women victims of armed conflict? Does the emphasis on protection that underpinned the negotiations leading up to the adoption of these instruments and is reflected in their final text extend to a recognition of the distinctive difficulties women experience in times of armed conflict? Overall, the approach to women remains unchanged in the provisions of the Protocols. The focus continues to be on protection for pregnant women and mothers. In the context of sexual violence, Article 76 of Protocol I contains the important comprehensive provision specifically protecting women against rape, although this practice is still not designated as a grave breach. There is no recognition, either in the travaux prparatoires or in the provisions themselves, of the other distinctive problems women face in armed conflicts. Women and human rights It would be misleading to represent the existing body of human rights law as a satisfactory regime from the perspective of women. Commentators have convincingly demonstrated the limitations of this law, which does not adequately take into account the reality of womens experience of th e world [18 ] . However, it is in the context of human rights law rather than humanitarian law that more progress has been made in recognizing and attempting to meet the as yet unaddressed needs of women. [19 ]

This attention to womens human rights has had substantial implications for international humanitarian law. Indeed, the fact that violence against women and strategies to contain it have been the focus of much of the work of human rights agencies concerned with this group has led to a consideration of the issue in connection with armed conflicts, where so much of t he violence against women occurs. What have been some of the results of this work? The 1993 Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, adopted by the United Nations World Conference on Human Rights, confirme d that violations of the human rights of women in situations of armed conflict are violations of the fundamental principles of human rights and humanitarian law and that they require a particularly effective response [20 ] . The Programme of Action also stressed that the equal status of women and the human rights of women should be integrated into the mainstream of United Nations system-wide activity and form an integral part of United Nations human rights activities. [21 ] This growing movement to address the problem saw the adoption by the General Assembly in December 1993 of the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women. The Declaration expressly recognizes that women in situations of armed conflict are especially vulnerable to violence. [22 ] Another important development in the context of women and human rights during armed conflicts has been the appointment of Special Rapporteurs with mandates covering certain aspects of womens experience of armed conflict. In 1994 the United Nations Commiss ion on Human Rights appointed Radhika Coomaraswamy as the Special Rapporteur on violence against women, with a mandate covering situations of armed conflict. In January 1998 the Special Rapporteur submitted her report on the subject, in which she recommended, in the context of international wars, that the Geneva Conventions be re-examined and re-evaluated so as to incorporate developing norms against women during armed conflict [23 ] . Additionally, in 1995 the United Nations Sub -Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities appointed Linda Chavez as Special Rapporteur on the situation of systematic rape, sexual slavery and slavery-like practices during periods of armed conflict. [24 ] The Fourth UN World Conference on Women, held in Beijing in 1995, recognized the seriousness of armed conflict and its impact on the lives of women. The Beijing Declaration referred to the determination of the participating States to ensure respect for international law, including humanitarian la w, in order to protect women and girls in particular. The Conferences Platform for Action identified women and armed conflict as one of the twelve critical areas of concern to be addressed by Member States, the international community and civil society. A remedial strategy identified in the Platform was to increase the participation of women in conflict resolution at decision -making levels and protect women living in situations of armed and other conflicts or under foreign domination. The process of identifying womens particular difficulties and demonstrating the failure of the law to acknowledge them is thus considerably more advanced within human rights bodies than within organizations focusing solely on armed conflict. Of course action plans, recommendations and proposals need to be implemented if they are to be of lasting value. Progress is slow and at times disheartening [25 ] . There are, however, positive signs. Of particular significance in this context is the very effective work at the grass roots level of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees in relation to refugee women. [26 ] All these efforts, whilst groundbreaking in nature, have focused almost exclusively on sexual violence [27 ] . The broader context of the problem has been largely ignored. However, an exception to this limited view is evident, for example, in the work of the Economic and Social Council, particularly in relation to Palestinian women and children in occupied territories. [28 ] The impact on international humanitarian law o f developments in womens human rights There is no doubt that the work of human rights organizations has had a considerable impact on the approach taken to the protection of women in times of armed conflict. A change of emphasis over recent years can be discerned in the work of the ICRC in this context. The protection of women victims of conflict has always been part of the IC RCs mandate. Traditionally, however, women have been subsumed under the general category of civilians or under the separate category of women and children. This has occurred despite the fact that the needs of these various categories of victims are not identical. Over the years, the ICRC has been active in attempts to mitigate the horrors of conflict for women. For example, efforts were made during the Second World War to ensure the lawful treatment of women prisoners of war [29 ] . In the post-war period as well, from time to time the ICRC made efforts to ensure that women were treated humanely in various conflict situations [30 ] . However, in the context of sexual violence the most obvious way in which women experience conflict the silence was deafening, despite the appalling reality of this practice in all armed struggles. The invisibility of women and sexual violence rapidly came to an end with the events that took place during the armed conflict in the former Yugoslavia. Although sexual violence against women had been on the agenda of human rights bodies for some years, it was this conflict that galvanized the international community into action and led to the most significant development of humanitarian law attributable to the growing emphasis on womens human rights: the inclusion of ra pe within the system of grave breaches. In 1993, as a response to the findings of widespread violations of international humanitarian law in the former Yugoslavia, including rape and many other forms of sexual violence against women, the Security Council set up the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) to prosecute persons responsible for such acts. One of the issues to be resolved was the place of rape within the Statute of the ICTY. In 1992, in the context of what constituted a grave breach of international humanitarian law, the ICRC had declared that the phrase common to the Geneva Conventions and their Protocols, wilfully causing great suffering or serious injury to body or health, ob viously covered not only rape but also any other attack on a womans dignity [31 ] . This added weight to the argument that prevail ed with the Commission of Experts set up by the Security Council to consider the question of the establishment of the ICTY, namely that rape and other sexual assaults, although not specifically designated as grave breaches in the Conventions and Protocols, constituted torture or inhumane treatment and acts that wilfully caus[ed ] great suffering or serious injury to body or health and were thus punishable as grave breaches under the Conventions. [32 ] In the Statute of the ICTY, however, rape is only specifically punishable as a crime against humanity and, to constitute such a crime, it must be directed against the civilian population as a whole: for it to occur on an individual basis is not sufficient. The practice of the Office of the Prosecutor has nevertheless been to charge defendants with sexual violence as a war crime and a grave breach. [33 ] Although the precedential value of the ICTY is limited both by its origin as a Security Council measure and by its geographical scope, the normative effect of these initiatives is much more widespread. Consequently, it will now be difficult to maintain that rape and various forms of sexual violence against women committed in international armed conflicts are not grave breaches of treaty rules. This is a major development of humanitarian law and it can be attributed to the growing recognition that womens human rights c all for the prosecution of crimes of sexual violence committed in armed conflicts. Doubts have nevertheless been expressed, in the context of the Rwandan conflict, as to whether the Yugoslav experience indicates a lasting reversal of the long tradition of silence and inaction in relation to sexual violence against women in armed conflicts. The Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women, after hearing of the levels of sexual violence in the Rwandan conflict was, in her words, absolutely appalled that the first indictment on the grounds of sexual v iolence at the International Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR) was issued only in August 1997, and then on ly after heavy international pressure from womens groups. [34 ]

Despite these reservations, the criminalization of sexual violence against women in internal armed conflicts by the Statute of the ICTR is an important development, and owes much to the work of human rights activists and commentators. International humanitarian law has traditionally distinguished between international and internal armed conflicts, concentrating on the former. However, the redrawing of the boundaries of human rights law has be en integral to the implementation of womens human rights and the influence of this approach is now being felt in humanitarian law. Any consideration of violence against women naturally encompasses international and internal armed conflicts without distinction (an increasingly unreal division in any context). The Statute of the ICTR reflects this view by providing both that rape is punishable as a crime against humanity and that the practice falls within the Tribunals jurisdiction since, in common with enf orced prostitution and indecent assault, it is specifically designated as a crime under Articl e 3 common to the Geneva Conventions. Breaches of Article 3, the so-called mini code for internal armed conflicts, have traditionally not been regarded as constituting war crimes. Fu rther developments in humanitarian law relating to the enforcement of the provisions protecting women against sexual violence have their genesis in the Yugoslav conflict and the practice of the ICTY. It has long been recognized in the context of womens human rights that, to be effective, any enforcement regime for prohibitions on sexual violence in armed conflicts must incorporate procedural reforms. This view is slowly gaining broader acceptance within the international community and some progress has been made in taking into account the particular concerns of women in the prosecution of sexual offences. Such matters as the anonymity of witnesses and victims in trials for sexual assault and provision for their support and counseling have been addressed by the ICTY [35 ] . However, these changes have not been readily accepted. For example, there is a perceived conflict between the demands of a fair trial and the protection of women as victims and witnesses [36 ] . The two are not necessarily inconsistent: what is required is an appropriate balance between them [37 ] . Recognition has also been given to the importance of equal gender distribution in the composition of enforcement tribunals and their support staff. The scrutiny by human rights groups of sexual violence against women in armed conflicts has translated into a new perception that such acts must be addressed by mainstream bodies dealing with the enforcement of international humanitarian law. The inclusion, within the definition of war crimes and as serious violations of Article 3 common to the Geneva Conventions, of several forms of sexual violence against women was considered during the negotiations of the Statute for the International Criminal Court. Other issues of concern to women in relation to the enforcement process in general were also discussed in this context, such as the gender balance of the Court, protection for witnesses and victims, and the investigation of crimes of sexual violence. The Commission on the Status of Women, at its March 1988 meeting called on States to support these initiatives in relation to the future International Criminal Court. The ICRC has given increasing recognition to the fact that the situation of women in armed conflicts poses distinctive challenges for humanitarian law. In 1993 the Final Declaration of the International Conference for the Protection of War Victims expressed alarm at the marked increase in acts of sexual violence directed notably against women and children and reiterated that such acts constitute[d ] grave breaches of international humanitarian law [38 ] . In 1995 the 26th International Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent adopted by consensus a resolution dealing separately with sexual violence against women [39 ] , which condemned this practice, reaffirmed that rape in the conduct of hostilities was a war crime and highlighted the importance of enforcing the relevant provisions and the need to train those involved in such processes. Moreover, there is growing acknowledgement of the broader nature of the problem, which has not previously been apparent in the work of human rights bodies. For example, recent ICRC publications emphasize that armed conflict exacerbates inequalities which already exist in different forms and to varying degrees in all societies. [40 ] Conclusion After years on the fringe of human rights law, the topic of women and human rights is nowadays gaining increasing respect as a separate area of concern within the mainstream of international law. Moreover, although womens human rights are very much in the developmental stage as regards both framework and substance, each passing year sees the further elaboration of their guiding principles. Yet the new concern being paid to womens human rights and the impact, albeit small, that the issue has so far made on humanitarian law have not led to the genera l acknowledgement that womens human rights warrant a special place within the fi eld of international humanitarian law. This is, however, only a matter of time. Let us hope that such acknowledgement, when it comes, will be accompanied by a reassessment of humanitarian law that takes into account the actual ways in which women experience armed conflict. Notes 1. See, for example, A. H. Robertson, Humanitarian law and human rights, in C. Swinarski (ed.), Studies and essays on international humanitarian law and Red Cross principles in honour of Jean Pictet, ICRC/Martinus Nijhoff, Geneva/The Hague, 1984, p. 793. 2. For an overview of the achievements of the last decade, see C. Chinkin, Feminist interventions in international law: Reflections on the past and strategies for the future, Adelaide Law Review , Vol. 19, 1997, pp. 15-18. 3. For a discussion of the situation in relation to human rights in times of armed conflict, see Y. Dinstein, Human rights in armed conflict: International humanitarian law, in T. Meron (ed.), Human rights in international law: Legal and policy issues , Clarendon Press, Oxford, p. 345. 4. See the statement by Rene Guisan, head of the ICRC delegation to the Fourth World Conference on Women, Beijing, and Article 136 of the Beijing Platform for Action in Fourth World Conference on Women, Action for Equality, Development and Peace , Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, UN Doc. A/Conf. 177/20 (1995) (hereafter Beijing Platform for Action). 5. Ibid. and see Harv ard Study Team, Health and welfare in Iraq after the Gulf Crisis , Chapter 9, 1991. 6.The feminization of poverty was a key area of concern at the Beijing Conference, see Beijing Platform for Action, paras. 47 and 48, supra (note 4). 7. See ICRC (ed.), Women and war, 1995. 8. See, for example, Article XLIV of the Lieber Code: Instructions for the government of armies of the United States in the field, General Orders No. 100, April 24, 1863, reprinted in L. Friedman, The laws of war: A documentary history , 1972, p. 158. 9. See Control Council Law No. 10 of 1945, Control Council for Germany, Official Gazette, 31 January 1946, reprinted in Friedman,ibid. p. 908. 10. See generally C. Chinkin, Rape and sexual abuse of women in international law, European Journal of International Law , 1994, p. 326. 11. Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of the Wounded and Sick in Armed Forces in the Field; Geneva Convention for the Amelioration of the Condition of Wounded, Sick and Shipwrecked Members of Armed Forces at Sea; Geneva Convention relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War; Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War (hereafter referred to as the Fourth Geneva Convention), of 12 August 1949. For a description of the system of international

humanitarian law in relation to women generally, see M. Tabory, The status of women in humanitarian law, in Yoram Dinstein (ed.), International law at a time of perplexity , 1989, p. 941; and F. Krill, The protection of women in international humanitarian law, IRRC , No. 249, November-December 1985, p. 337. 12. Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and relating to the Protection of Victims ofInternational Armed Conflicts (Protocol I), of 8 June 1977, and Protocol Additional to the Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949, and relating to the Protection of Victims of Non-International Armed Conflicts (Protocol II), of 8 June 1977. 13. See Articles 50 and 132 of the Fourth Geneva Convention. 14. See J. Gardam, Women and the law of armed conflict, International and Comparative Law Quarterly , Vol. 46, 1997, p. 74. 15. G. I. A. D. Draper, Human rights and the law of war, Virginia Journal of International Law, Vol. 12, 1972, p. 336. 16. See Resolution XXIII, Human rights in armed conflict, adopted by the International Conference on Human Rights, Tehran, 12 May 1968. 17. See generally, J. G. Gardam, Non-combatant immunity as a norm of international humanitarian law, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, Dordrecht/Boston/London, 1993. 18. See, for example, C. Bunch, Womens rights as human rights: Towards a revision of human rights, Human Rights Quarterly , Vol. 12, 1990, p. 486; and H. Charlesworth, What are womens human rights?, in R. Cook (eds), Human rights of women: National and international perspectives, 1994, p. 58. 19. See Chinkin, supra (note 2). 20. See Article 38 of the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, UN Doc. A/CONF.157/24 (Part 1), 13 October 1993. 21. For a description of what amounts to mainstreaming, see UNHCR, Policy on refugee women, and UNHCR, Guidelines o n the protection of refugee women , 1991, pp. 5-7. For an account of the initiatives taken to achieve this end, see generally A. Gallagher, Ending the marginalization: Strategies for incorporating women into the United Nations human rights system, Human Rights Quarterly , Vol. 19, 1997, p. 283. 22. Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women , UN GA/Res/48/104, 20 December 1993, preamble, para. 7 and Art. 2. 23. See R. Coomaraswamy, Report of the Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences , UN Doc. E/CN.4/1998/54. 24. See Preliminary Report of the Special Rapporteur on the situation of systematic rape, sexual slavery and slavery-like practices during periods of armed conflict, UN Doc. E/CN.4/Sub.2/1996/26, 16 July 1996. 25. See Chinkin, supra (note 2). 26. See UNHCR, Policy on refugee women, supra (note 21) and UNHCR, Sexual violence against refugees: Guidelines on prevention and response , 1995. 27. See, for example, Human Rights Watch (Helsinki Watch), War crimes in Bosnia-Herzegovina, 1993, pp. 18, 163-186; Final report of the Commission of experts established pursuant to Security Council Resolution 780, UN Doc. S/1994/674 (considering the issue of rape and sexual assault at paras. 58-60 and 232-253); Human Rights Watch, Global report on womens human rights , 1995 (at paras. 100-138 in relation to sexual assault of refugees and displaced women); Human Rights Watch , Shattered lives: Sexual violence during the Rwandan genocide and its aftermath, 1996. 28. See, for example, E/RES/1991/19 of 30 May 1991; E/RES/1992/16 of 30 July 1992; E/RES/1993/15 of 27 July 1993; and E/RES/1995/30 of 25 July 1995. See also ECOSOC resolutions dealing with women and children in Namibia, and women and children living under apartheid. 29. See Krill, supra (note 11), p. 356. 30. Ibid ., p. 357. 31. ICRC, Update on Aide-Memoire of 3 December 1992. This was a view shared by a number of States, see T. Meron, Rape as a crime under international humanitarian law, American Journal of International Law , Vol. 87, 1993, p. 427. 32. See Final Report of the Commission of experts established pursuant to Security Council Resolution 780, supra, (note 27). 33. See R. Coomaraswamy, supra (note 23). 34. Ibid . 35. See Prosecutor v. Tadic, Decision on the Prosecutors motion requesting protective measures f or victims and witnesses , UN Doc. IT-94-1-T (10 August 1995). See also C. Chinkin, Due process and witness anonymity , American Journal of International Law , Vol. 91, 1997, p. 75. 36. See Monroe Leigh, The Yugoslav Tribunal: Use of unnamed witnesses against accused, American Journal of International Law, Vol. 90, 1996, p. 235. 37. Chinkin, supra (note 35), pp. 78-79. 38. Final Declaration of the International Conference for the Protection of War Victims, para. I.3, reprinted in IRRC , No. 296, September-October 1993, p. 377. 39. Resolution 2(B), reprinted in IRRC , No. 310, January-February 1996, p. 63. 40. See ICRC, Women and war, 1995.

A RIGHTS-BASED APPROACH TO REALIZING GENDER EQUALITY

Table of contents Introduction International human rights law and gender equality: elements of a rights-based approach A.The context of international human rights law (a) The development of international human rights standards (b) Regional human rights instruments (c) Domestic implementation of international human rights norms (d) Gender-specific norms and standards B. Some critical issues relating to the scope and application of human rights (a) Rights-holders and duty-holders (b) The nature of obligations of States C. The role of civil society D. Challenges to a rights-based approach to gender equality (a) The public/private divide

(b) Competing rights (c) Human rights of women vs. other claims (d) Allocation of resources and human rights education E. The role of multilateral and bilateral entities in realizing human rights at the national level (a) The role of multilateral entities (b) The role of bilateral entities (c) Common efforts of multilateral and bilateral entities in realizing a rights-based approach F. Elements of a rights-based approach * This paper was prepared by Professor Goonesekere, in co-operation with the UN Division for the Advancement of Women. INTRODUCTION 1. During this decade there has been a significant shift in approach to women's advancement and empowerment. While previously the advancement of women was regarded as important for outcomes such as economic development or population policies, more than ever the international community has come to consider the empowerment and autonomy of women and the improvement of their political, social, economic and health status as important ends in themselves. This shift in approach reflects a human rights approach to issues of concern to women. 2. Parallel to this shift in approach to women's advancement has been an increased emphasis on the importance of a rights-based approach to planning and programming generally. In his reform proposals, the Secretary-General has made clear that human rights are a cross-cutting element that should be reflected in all United Nations policies and programmes. The High Commissioner for Human Rights is also stressing that human rights are integral to all activities, including peace-making, peace-keeping, peace-building, humanitarian assistance and development. Several United Nations entities, including UNICEF, UNFPA and UNDP have identified the securing of individuals' human rights as a critical first step in addressing global problems, and are now incorporating human rights into their policy making processes and operational activities.

3. Several factors explain these developments. First, the framework of international human rights law provides a forum for asserting individual claims of human rights violation. Some victims of human rights violation, including women who have suffered discrimination on the basis of sex, for example, those denied citizenship on the same basis as men, have successfully sought relief in international tribunals. The approach and decisions at international level have shaped decisions of regional and domestic tribunals, which have also provided remedies for individuals, including women, who have encountered denial of their human rights. 4. Perhaps more importantly, the language of human rights allows legitimate claims to be articulated with a moral authority which other approaches lack. It is a language which is recognized by the powerful, and which stimulates deep chords of response in many. It is a language which has the potential to empower individuals and communities at the grass-roots level to believe that they have a right to education, to health care or any other right. Human rights speak in broad terms about the fundamental entitlement of all human beings to live in dignity, and in conditions of social justice and thereby provide a foundation from which to establish a set of demands premised on the intrinsic worth of the individual. The human rights approach justifies legitimate claims, not because the realization of rights such as that to health or life is a means to another end, such as quality child care, environment, development or population policies, but because the realization of their rights is an important goal in itself. 5. Human rights also promise the engagement of the responsibility of the State in a way that other approaches to claims cannot. The conceptualization of a claim as a human right immediately involves the recognition of State and international responsibility if that claim is denied or violated. Concerns, when conceived of as rights, are elevated from the realm of State and international promises premised on good faith, to a level of legal entitlement requiring national and international response. Concerns, when conceived of as claims of human rights, become fundamental, immutable and priority claims. 6. Human rights not only create entitlements for rights-holders, but they also create duties for States. States are required to ensure the fulfilment of human rights by acting in a way that enables rights-holders to enjoy the rights to which they are entitled. Human rights require that actions - of a legislative, administrative, policy or programme nature - are considered in light of the obligations inherent in human rights. Actions which violate or fail to support the realization of human rights contravene human rights obligations. A rights-based approach thus assumes the creation of an enabling environment in which human rights can be enjoyed. A rights-based approach also promises an environment which can prevent the many conflicts based on poverty, discrimination and exclusion.

7. Despite the recent focus on the rights-based approach, the meaning and practical implications of such an approach for policy making processes and operational activities, particularly in the context of development and humanitarian assistance, require greater clarity. This paper seeks to provide an understanding of the international human rights framework, and the challenges that must be addressed in integrating it into these processes in order to realize gender equality. A number of premises underlie the paper. First, human rights bring to the development discussion a unifying set of standards, or a common reference, for setting objectives and assessing the value of action. Second, that if sustainable economic development and the eradication of poverty are to be achieved, economic growth has to be combined with the concept of human development and respect for human rights. As such, the `rightsbased' approach is an inherent dimension of the concept of `people-centered sustainable development', with development constituting a comprehensive process directed towards the full realization of all human rights and fundamental freedoms. Third, central to the rights-based approach is the norm of gender equality, which resists, rather than accommodates, relativist approaches to the interpretation of human rights. the development of international human rights standards and their reflection in regional human rights systems and at the domestic level. It moves on to consider gender-specific norms and standards, concentrating on the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women. Critical issues relating to the scope and application of human rights are considered, including the identification of rights-holders and duty-holders and the nature of obligations of States as a result of human rights provisions. The role of civil society is discussed, as are challenges to a rights-based approach to gender-equality, including the impact of the public/private divide and competing rights. The paper then examines the role of multilateral and bilateral entities in realizing human rights at the national level and concludes by proposing elements, which are inherent in a rights-based approach.

INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW AND GENDER EQUALITY: ELEMENTS OF A RIGHTS-BASED APPROACH A. The context of international human rights law (a) The development of international human rights standards 9. Historically, international law was the law that regulated relations between kings and sovereigns, and developed into the legal regime governing relations between sovereign States that emerged from feudal kingdoms. States were the actors in

international law, and the treatment of the individual human person was not part of this body of law. Exceptionally, international law addressed the State's responsibility to alien (foreign) subjects of another State living within its borders. In addition, several international treaties regulated the treatment of victims of war, and sought to combat slavery. 10. Early major advances in the protection of the human rights are to be found in the mandates and minorities protection treaties of the League of Nations and the attempts to codify labour standards by the International Labour Organization, established in 1919. However, the conceptualization and development of human rights law originated in the middle of the twentieth century with the foundation of the United Nations. The 1945 Charter of the United Nations includes `promoting and encouraging respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms' as one of the four purposes of the Organization. The Charter's provisions on human rights and international co-operation form the basis of the view that membership in the United Nations carries with it a Member State's responsibility to promote and protect the human rights of individual human beings, and that national sovereignty cannot prevent scrutiny of conduct within national boundaries that infringes human rights. 11. The principle of equality forms the core of the human rights vision of the Charter, which states that human rights and fundamental freedoms should be available to all human beings `without discrimination on the basis of race, sex, language or religion'. The principle of the equal rights of women and men is thus one of the pillars upon which the United Nations was founded. 12. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), adopted in 1948, proclaims numerous rights to which people everywhere are entitled. A "common standard of achievement for all peoples and of all nations", the Declaration delineates civil and political rights such as the right to freedom from torture, illegal arrest, free speech and freedom of conscience. It also establishes "freedom from want" as an essential dimension of human rights and dignity. Consequently, it encompasses economic, social and cultural rights, including work-related rights, the right to social security, the right to education, and the right to an adequate standard of living. 13. Although technically a non-binding instrument, several commentators argue that the whole of the Declaration(1) has acquired the status of universally recognized norms of customary international law that bind all Member States of the United Nations. There is consensus that some of the human rights in the UDHR, including the right to freedom from torture, slavery, and prohibition of racial discrimination form part of customary international law and thus bind all Member States.

14. The UDHR was followed by other instruments, including the Convention against Genocide (1948) and the Convention on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (1965). In 1966, two overarching human rights treaties - the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR), and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) - were adopted, which together with the UDHR form the International Bill of Human Rights providing the source of the core standards of international human rights law. The Covenants elaborate many of the rights in the UDHR, albeit with greater detail, and also address the protection of particular categories of people, including refugees and children. In contrast to the UDHR, however, they are multilateral treaties which, upon ratification or accession, create binding international legal obligations for the State concerned. 15. Since the adoption of the Covenants, the United Nations has continued to elaborate international human rights standards. Other major treaties concern nondiscrimination on the basis of sex, freedom from torture, the rights of children, and the rights of migrant workers and their families. The ILO has also continued its effort to define particular human rights standards relating to the rights of workers. Important amongst these efforts have been the ILO Conventions Concerning Equal Remuneration for Men and Women Workers for Work of Equal Value (100) (1951), on Discrimination in Respect of Employment and Occupation (111) (1958), and on Equal Opportunities and Equal Treatment for Men and Women Workers: Workers with Family Responsibilities (156) (1981). In addition, human rights standards concerning education, including the 1960 Convention on Non-Discrimination in Education, have been concluded under the auspices of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). 16. Standards are also delineated in international humanitarian law - the body of international law governing the conduct of armed conflict between sovereign States, and internal conflicts within a State. The purpose of this branch of international law is to protect individuals who are affected by such conflicts and as such it is founded on core values familiar to international human rights law. Norms governing armed conflict that were meant to foster humanism and protect the rights of persons affected by such conflicts were developed in the nineteenth century, and thus pre-dated human rights law. These standards were codified in 1949 in the four Geneva Conventions, and developed further in their Additional Protocols of 1977. Specific provisions on the treatment of women are contained in the Geneva Convention relative to the protection of civilian persons in time of war(2) while all four Geneva Conventions contain a `Common Article 3' concerning internal conflicts, which endorses some of the core standards of international human rights law. It establishes, inter alia, the right of non-combatants and civilians to be treated humanely, without distinction on grounds of race, sex, religion or faith.

17. Relevant standards are also to be found in international refugee law, which although predominantly concerned with protection, incorporate minimum human rights principles for those meeting the definition of refugee in international law. These principles are codified in the 1951 Convention relating to the status of refugees, and its Protocol adopted in 1966. (b) Regional human rights instruments 18. International human rights law has been reinforced by regional human rights regimes in Europe(3), Latin America and Africa. While two separate instruments covering civil and political rights, and economic, social and cultural rights are in place in Europe, both the American Convention on Human Rights (1969) and the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights (1981) include civil and political rights, and social, economic and cultural rights. The Additional Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights in the Area of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (1988) expands on the coverage of these rights in the Convention. Several regional treaties also address particular problems. Thus, regional treaties concerning torture exist in the European and Inter-American human rights systems, while other regional Conventions may seek to set standards which go beyond those in international human rights instruments. Examples of these include, the Inter-American Convention on the Eradication of Violence against Women (the Convention of Belem do Para) and the proposed Convention of the South Asian regional body SAARC on cross-border trafficking and the sexual exploitation of women and children.(4) (c) Domestic implementation of international human rights norms 19. By their very nature, international and regional human rights standards require implementation at the national level. They require States parties to take necessary measures of a legislative, administrative or policy nature, and to provide appropriate remedies in case of violations, so as to ensure enjoyment of the established rights and freedoms. 20. Many of the norms of the UDHR and of other instruments, especially civil and political rights, are incorporated in national Constitutions, or in domestic legislation. Constitutional jurisprudence is thus a vital source for clarifying the scope of international human rights standards. 21. Social and economic rights are less commonly reflected in national Constitutions, or recognized by Courts, as fundamental human rights. Social and economic rights are often considered to be `basic needs' which a Government is required to satisfy through appropriate socio-economic policies. They are sometimes incorporated in separate chapters dealing with a Constitution's `directive principles (guidelines) of State

Policy.(5) However, several Constitutions including the new South African Constitution, those of several East Asian countries, the Finnish Constitution of 1995 as well as the draft Constitution of Sri Lanka influenced by South Africa, incorporate rights in regard to access to basic education and health services as enforceable fundamental rights.(6) 22. National courts may sometimes link the interpretation of civil and political rights with directive principles of state policy. For example, the Supreme Court of India has interpreted the fundamental right to life as linked to the Directive Principles of State policy elaborated in the Indian Constitution requiring the State to provide access to education and health.(7) Consequently, the Courts have developed concepts of legally enforceable fundamental rights to education and health. The South African Supreme Court is also developing a jurisprudence on socio-economic rights, and has interpreted the Constitutional guarantee of the right to health to include a right of access to health care services which will include reproductive health care. Access to health care services is considered dependent on resources, but the right of access to emergency treatment is unqualified.(8) (d) Gender-specific norms and standards 23. The principle of the equal rights of women and men is contained in the Charter of the United Nations, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and all subsequent major international human rights instruments. It is most comprehensively elaborated in the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women, which codifies women's rights to non-discrimination on the basis of sex, and equality as self-standing norms in international law. It also establishes that women and men are entitled, on a basis of equality, to the enjoyment and exercise of human rights and fundamental freedoms in the political, economic, social, cultural, civil or any other field and thus moves beyond the two Covenants by incorporating both families of rights in one instrument, establishing them as mutually reinforcing. 24. Critical areas, such as political participation and access to equal opportunity in public life, and in the professions are covered comprehensively in CEDAW, as are standards on nationality. The Convention also addresses women's equal right to education and training, health and employment. The Convention underlines the equal responsibility of women and men in family life and stresses the social services needed for combining family responsibilities and participation in public life. The Convention calls for the introduction of temporary special measures to redress inequalities between women and men, and special attention is given to rural women and their equal involvement in development processes. Importantly, the Convention obliges States parties to take all appropriate measures to ensure that women do not experience discrimination in certain areas of private life. Thus States parties are required to

ensure that all contracts and other private instruments which restrict the legal capacity of women "shall be deemed null and void", while they are also obliged to take steps to eliminate discriminatory practices in the family. 25. Certain areas are not addressed by the Convention. It does not include specific provisions on the group right to self-determination, freedom of association or information, and participation in trade unions(9) nor does it contain standards relating to refugee women or women in armed conflict. However, standards in other instruments, including the Refugee Convention and its Protocol and the Geneva Conventions and Protocols, are applicable in these contexts. 26. Except for article 6, which requires States parties to take all appropriate measures to eliminate the exploitation of prostitution and trafficking in women, the Convention does not address violence against women. General recommendation 19 of 1992 of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women indicated that the full implementation of the Convention requires States parties to take positive measures to eliminate all forms of violence against women. It also established the links between violence against women and enjoyment of other rights protected by the Convention, and put forward a series of specific steps States parties must introduce in implementation of their treaty obligations . (10)The provisions of other conventions on the right to life, freedom from slavery, protection against torture, inhuman and degrading treatment and illegal arrest are particularly relevant for the human rights of women in custodial situations, and protection against State violence including illegal detention . (11)General recommendation no. 19, and the UN Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women (1993)(12), which provides a comprehensive definition and set of measures for the prevention and eradication of violence against women, are useful in closing the gap with regard to international standards on violence. 27. In instances where the CEDAW Convention is less specific than other instruments, or does not address certain rights explicitly, such gaps can be filled by reference to the general non-discrimination clause of other instruments, and/or their provisions of particular relevance to women, such as articles 3 of the ICESCR and ICCPR. The general recommendations/comments and concluding observations of human rights treaty bodies considerably strengthen a comprehensive human rights framework. Efforts at ensuring that general human rights instruments and mechanisms more fully integrate gender considerations are therefore essential in achieving implementation of human rights standards and norms that is sensitive to the needs and experiences of women . (13) 28. ILO Conventions on the protection of women workers are also important for realizing gender equality, non-discrimination and protection from gender based

exploitation, harassment and violence in the world of work. In addition to creating legal obligations for States parties, they provide essential guidance in programming for particular situations of working women. 29. As in the case of other international human rights instruments, courts in several jurisdictions, including Tanzania, Australia, New Zealand, Botswana, Nepal and India(14) have drawn on CEDAW to assist in the interpretation of domestic legal provisions. 30. The consensus documents emanating from global United Nations conferences, including the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action of the World Conference on Human Rights (1993) and the Beijing Platform for Action of the Fourth World Conference on Women (1995), are couched in terms of the UDHR and other international human rights instruments. These conference documents are directed to the realization of human rights and fundamental freedoms, civil, cultural, economic, political and social, including the right to development, for all. As they reflect present political, economic and social realities, they can provide useful guidance in clarifying the scope of international human rights standards, and related obligations of Governments. 31. The Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action restated that women's rights are an intrinsic dimension of human rights. It also identified gender-based violence as a subject of international human rights law. The Beijing Platform for Action builds on the Vienna results concerning the human rights of women. Among the critical areas of concern covered in the Platform are >human rights of women=, >violence against women=, and >women and armed conflict= The full range of rights is addressed in other sections of the document, in particular in areas such as >women and the economy=, >women and poverty=,>women and health=, and >the girl child=. The International Conference on Population and Development (1994, Cairo) and the World Summit for Social Development (1995, Copenhagen) also integrate human rights in general, and gender equality as a human right. B. Some critical issues relating to the scope and application of human rights 32. International human rights law has introduced a >people centred= dimension to international law. Concerned with the relations between Governments and their own subjects, it represents a body of rights and obligations, guaranteed to those subjects. Guaranteed rights are reinforced by international mechanisms of monitoring and supervision, including human rights treaty bodies, which seek to ensure governmental accountability for implementation at the national level.

33. Human rights are often described as non-communitarian and individualistic, but the UDHR and the two Covenants place the rights of the individual within the context of family and community, rather than as an entity that is isolated or antagonistic to the community. (15)The realization of human rights is perceived as both an individual right, and a community interest and commitment. The need to balance individual rights and the role of the State is recognized, and none of these entities are considered to have an exclusive role in realizing the human rights agenda. Indeed the concept of limitation and derogation of rights to preserve >public order= or >public welfare= introduces this communitarian dimension. However the balance suggests that neither governmental power or communitarian interest can justify the denial of the core importance of the dignity and rights of the individual human being. The balance between conflicting interests of State and community must be retained within the objective of realizing the core rights recognized in international human rights law. 34. >Human rights= are frequently misconceived as constituting only civil and political rights, with infringement of rights perceived as a matter of law and adversarial legal procedures. Often, rights are associated with the notion of negative action by the State and >protection=. >Human rights= and >protection= are distinguished from the social-welfare centred delivery of services which seek to satisfy >basic needs=such as food, health and education. Inevitably international development agencies have debated whether to adopt a service delivery `welfare' approach, or a `human rights' based approach which focuses on infringement of rights. Since they have been traditionally working in the area of service delivery, they sometimes see a shift to a human rights approach as ignoring basic needs and therefore counterproductive. The development debate has often juxtaposed the `basic needs' or `basic rights' discourse, or the `humanitarian assistance' or `human rights' approach in relation to work in conflict zones. 35. However, the notion of sustainable development does not polarize human rights, basic needs, and humanitarian assistance. Eradication of illiteracy and achievement of high standards of health, participation of women and their empowerment so that they can fulfil their roles in the community, environmental protection, and respect for human rights are all aspects of sustainable development. While `human rights' are sometimes referred to, mistakenly, as one dimension of sustainable development, respect for social and economic rights, such as to education and health, as well as rights of gender equality, non-discrimination and environmental protection are now recognized as dimensions of human rights. 36. Nevertheless, critics of current developments in international law, and the new holistic vision of human rights, continue to argue that economic development requires the satisfaction of `needs' in an environment where individual human rights must give way to community welfare. They argue that an aggressive and adversarial agenda of

individual claims and rights undermines economic growth, destabilizes harmonious social relations and the capacity of individuals to interact on the basis of their responsibilities and duties in the community. `Rights-based societies' are sharply contrasted with `duty-based societies.' Asian and African societies are then said to have their own concept of human equality and fundamental duties which challenge the basic assumptions that individuals have rights and claims on Governments and the community. Human rights are criticized as Eurocentric Western values, particularly because human rights are often associated exclusively with civil and political rights. 37. These criticisms impact on approaches to gender equality. There is invariably a consensus that women and men should be provided with equal life chances through policy programmes that focus on poverty alleviation, equal access to health and education, and opportunities for self-employment, access to credit and economic empowerment. However, there is an unwillingness to adopt a holistic approach to infringement of bodily security and gender based discrimination in a society, or address complex problems in regard to gender roles and relationships and their impact in imposing disadvantages upon women because of their sex. 38. Bilateral and multilateral agencies working at the national level sometimes find it difficult to integrate a rights-based approach into their work. There is sometimes a perception that the cause of human rights in general, and gender equality in particular, can be advanced as well, or even better by a social welfare-oriented `basic needs' approach that also impacts on the quality of life of people in general, and women in particular. Programmes by a consortium of international agencies may be developed to ensure that women receive humanitarian assistance in conflict areas or obtain access to services. Such programmes may hesitate to integrate aspects that are likely to be controversial or perceived as `politically sensitive,' because they raise `human rights' issues, such as discrimination or gender-based violence. For instance, an agency may have a programme on providing girls and women access to education, or adequate pre-natal and post-natal care, without addressing the issues of forced and early marriage, gang rape by law enforcement authorities or custodial violence. 39. However, the advantage of a human rights-based approach to development and governance including the realisation of gender equality, is that it encourages an inherently holistic vision of outcomes. It encourages people-centred and sustainable development approaches to planning and decision making, on the assumption that respect for individual human rights, dignity and gender equality must be the foundation of any civil, political, social and economic agenda. It thus provides a framework that encourages programming which takes account of the dynamics of civil and political, and socio-economic rights, and the need to find solutions that strike a balance so as to achieve the overall objectives of realising human rights. A rightsbased approach adds a different dimension to service delivery for satisfaction of basic

needs and humanitarian assistance. Since achievement of gender equality is a critical aspect of any human rights agenda, opportunities for mutual reinforcement need to be clearly understood so that the two agendas can be pursued in tandem. 40. The challenge remains to achieve international consensus in regard to the precise content of human rights, the duties of Governments vis-a-vis its people, and the means required for their implementation. The next section of this paper considers these issues. (a) Rights-holders and duty-holders 41. Human rights create entitlements for rights-holders. Unlike other societal aspirations or claims, human rights carry not only moral force, but also legal validity. They create obligations for duty-holders to act to enable rights-holders to exercise the rights to which they are entitled. They also require duty-holders to ensure the fulfilment of these rights. Human rights obligations require that actions - of a legislative, administrative, or policy/programme nature - be assessed in light of the obligation to protect and promote human rights. Actions that fail to support the realization of human rights are not in accordance with obligations resulting from a human rights perspective. While the State has a margin of discretion in choosing types of actions and measures, the implementation of obligations is not a matter of the good faith of the State, but constitutes a legal obligation for which the State is accountable to the international community. 42. The Charter places human rights within a system of international co-operation. This implies that national borders put no limits to human rights but that by their very nature, human rights represent transboundary values. It also entails that human rights are a legitimate concern of the international community, entitling it to raise such issues when human rights are in jeopardy. 43. Treaties usually create monitoring Committees or treaty bodies, to which States parties must regularly report on their progress in implementing their treaty obligations. The growing participation of NGOs in these monitoring processes is creating greater ownership of civil society in monitoring human rights implementation. (b) The nature of obligations of States 44. The United Nations Charter refers in declaratory language to the obligation of States `to promote and respect' human rights. These are general terms which do not indicate the content of the rights, or mandate effective enforcement. The terms `protect' and 'ensure' are also used in subsequent instruments.

45. A distinction is often drawn between State obligations imposed by civil and political rights, which must be `ensured', and socio-economic rights which must be `recognized', and realized `progressively' or `to the maximum extent of available resources.' It is sometimes argued that there is a hierarchy of rights according to which some rights (civil and political) are more important than others, guaranteed and immediately realizable. According to the same argument, other rights (socioeconomic and cultural rights) are not immediately realizable, but may be postponed until adequate resources are available for their realization. Civil and political rights are characterized as `hard' rights, justiciable in courts, imposing negative duties on States of recognition, protection and non-interference. Socio-economic rights are then considered `soft' rights, imposing positive duties on States which can best be realized progressively through allocation of resources and administrative policy planning, rather than enforcement through the Courts. (16) 46. Asbjoern Eide, in his study on the right to adequate food as a human right,(17) developed a three level typology of State obligations, which has become a widely accepted framework for analyzing States' obligations with regard to human rights generally. These are: - The obligation to respect requires the State and thereby all its organs and agents, to abstain from doing anything that violates the integrity of the individual, or infringes on her or his freedom, including the freedom to use the material resources available to that individual in the way she or he finds best to satisfy basic needs. - The obligation to protect requires from the State and its agents the measures necessary to prevent other individuals or groups from violating the integrity, freedom of action, or other human rights of the individual, including the prevention of infringements of his or her material resources. - The obligation to fulfil requires the State to take the measures necessary to ensure for each person within its jurisdiction opportunities to obtain satisfaction of those needs, recognized in the human rights instruments, which cannot be secured by personal efforts. (18) 47. This framework of analysis of State obligations clarifies the indivisibility and interdependence of civil and political rights, and economic and social rights and supports the growing recognition of the similarity of the two families of rights in terms of the obligations of States for their implementation. Civil and political rights are no longer seen exclusively as `hard rights,' immediately claimable and requiring nothing but the State's non-interference in the individual's enjoyment of the right. `Socio-economic rights' are no longer seen as `needs' to be progressively satisfied at

the will and pleasure of Governments through welfare benevolence, resource allocation, and administrative and policy planning. 48. In both families of rights, the State's obligations consist of a combination of all three levels to achieve the respect for, protection of, and promotion and fulfilment of human rights. The indivisibility and interdependence of rights in terms of the obligations they create for States, have been particularly understood in developing countries of Africa and Asia, as well as in the newly developed countries of East Asia. Structural and institutionalised discrimination, which results in inequalities of class, race and gender have been recognized in development studies as stemming from the absence of access to socio-economic and cultural rights such as basic health, nutrition, basic education and language. Torture, detention and violence have been discerned as fostered by lack of allocation of adequate resources for training of personnel and law enforcement. Lack of sufficient allocations in national development planning and budgets in the socio-economic areas of health, education and food security are often the result of denial of civil and political rights, such as the right of democratic elections, free speech and information dissemination. Authoritarian governments that deny freedom of speech and the right to vote do not provide adequate information on the causes of famine and lack of food security, or low levels of literacy and health. Due process rights cannot be satisfied without a Government's active establishment and maintenance of the physical infrastructure, and the training, appointment and remuneration of competent judges. 49. The links between families of rights have been clarified in recent years by several human rights treaty bodies, with, for example, the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, in its general comment no. 3, discussing the nature of States parties obligations under the Covenant(19) The right to non-discrimination was among the provisions considered by the Committee to be capable of immediate realization, and enforceable by judicial and other bodies in a national legal system. 50. The general comment also notes that the duty `to take steps' indicates that steps towards the goal of the realization of a right must be taken within a reasonably short time after the Covenant's entry into force. Such steps should be deliberate, concrete, and targeted as clearly as possible towards meeting the obligations in the Covenant. Legislation might be an indispensable element. But the general comment also noted that `the fact that realization over time, or in other words progressively, is foreseen under the Covenant should not be misinterpreted as depriving the obligation of meaningful content'. The Committee noted that the Covenant imposes `an obligation to move as expeditiously and effectively as possible towards that goal.' On this analysis, the Committee determined that each State party has a minimum core obligation to satisfy `minimum essential levels' of each right covered by the Covenant. This is a clear statement that the availability-of-resources argument does not reduce

States parties' obligations to satisfy socio-economic rights by postponing them to a future time. C. The role of civil society 51. The recognition of the status of civil society in monitoring the implementation of human rights reinforces the understanding of individuals as rights-holders. This includes their right to participate actively, freely and meaningfully in the formulation of national human rights and development policies. The right to participation takes on particular force for those who remain, or have historically been marginalized. Indeed the general human rights norms relating to freedom of association and freedom of speech are critical for the women's human rights agenda so as to strengthen their ability to participate freely and meaningfully in the decisions that affect their enjoyment of all their human rights. Women's groups need to link with human rights groups in order to bridge both the human rights and the development agenda. Such links have intrinsic impact on the capacity of women's groups to engage in activism to realize gender equality as a rights issue in development. The activism of international NGOs networking with local NGOs has helped to promote incorporation of international human rights norms into national law, policy and into public debate. D. Challenges to a rights-based approach to gender equality 52. Challenges to the rights-based approach are inherent in the structure of international human rights law as it addresses mainly relations between the individual and the State and its agents, rather than relations among individuals. A second challenge lies in the fact that realization of various equally valid rights inevitably creates situations of conflicts between them. These two issues will be addressed in turn. (a) The public/private divide 53. Through the State's obligation to protect individuals against infringement of their rights by other individuals or non-State actors, the State is responsible for putting in place effective forms of prevention of violations and/or for holding non-State actors accountable for violations of other individuals' rights. Consequently, the State must bring the acts of private individuals within the `norms and regulatory framework of rights by legislation and effective law enforcement. 54. Many violations of the rights of women occur in situations that remain outside the regulatory framework of the State. Examples include the family, or the existence of religious law, as well as traditional and customary law. Likewise, many economic activities performed predominantly by women are not regulated by the State, such as

work in family farms or businesses, caring work and work in the informal sector, and are thus not subject to regulations concerning social security, health and safety standards, minimum pay or protection against exploitation. 55. As human rights continue to be perceived in international law as rights enforceable only against the State or its agents, a large area of gender discrimination and gender-based violence will continue to fall outside the area of effective enforcement. Increasingly, infringements of human rights take place because of the actions of non-State actors. Gender-based violence occurs in the family and in the community, and the perpetrators are often non-State actors or private individuals. Economic policies have resulted in increased privatization in both developed and developing countries, especially also in the social sector (health care), and in cuts in Government programmes and spending. 56. Gender equality and human rights, if they are to be realized, must be respected, protected and fulfilled in both the public and the private realm. The distinction between the `public' and `private' divide in international human rights law has been criticized, and there have been efforts to shift towards a recognition of responsibility and accountability for private action. The challenge to this divide is sharpest in the discourse on gender-based violence(20) but the field of work also provides opportunities for softening the divide. The UN Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women (1993), although not binding in international law, encompasses standards that apply to both State and non-State (private) actors. A jurisprudence has developed in both regional and national human rights law which recognizes that a State can be liable for an infringement of human rights by a private actor when the State fails to act with due diligence in implementing its legislative or regulatory obligations to protect individuals from the actions of third parties. The State is also being held liable, quite distinctly, for inaction in law enforcement.(21) (b) Competing rights 57. Competition between rights is inevitable in the very process of recognition of individual human rights. If one right or set of rights is interpreted absolutely, it will `trump' other rights. However the experience of legal systems throughout the world indicates that regulation, law and policy-making continuously involves `social engineering' or a balancing of conflicting interests. A legal norm or policy is rarely absolute. Consequently the existence of the prospect of conflicting human rights should not be a reason for rejecting the rights-based approach. Rather, efforts are needed to understand the potential for conflict, and a commitment to developing strategies for resolving them so as not to undermine the core agenda of gender equality and non-discrimination.

58. Gender-equality rights compete for recognition with a number of other, equally valid, human rights. For instance, the human right of freedom of speech may compete with controls on pornography that may encourage gender-based violence(22). Freedom of conscience, religion and the right to manifest religious belief in practice and observance, and cultural rights may foster particularities that challenge the universality of human rights, and purport to limit equality rights. Conflicts between women's human rights and religious rights illustrate the philosophical, legal, and political difficulties of reconciling competing human rights values. The right to religious freedom, custom or religion may therefore have to be interpreted not absolutely, but so as to strike a balance, and achieve the norms of gender justice. 59. It may be argued that the concept of violence differs according to religion or custom, clothing an infringement of the human right to bodily integrity with the legitimacy of custom and religion. Practices such as Sathi or wife immolation, or female genital mutilation, or early marriage under parental authority infringing reproductive health rights and denying education, may be legitimized on the argument that these practices are deeply rooted in religious belief, custom or culture. 60. A `particularistic', or culturally relativist justification is frequently given by States which, at the time of ratification, enter general reservations, or reservations on particular articles of treaties which result in a particular treaty provision being inapplicable in a national context, or being interpreted in a local context. The number of reservations entered to CEDAW has been of great concern to the Committee and to other States parties, as these are perceived as undermining the legal standard of gender equality.(23) 61. National courts have pioneered approaches that seek to balance competing human rights so that they are not interpreted absolutely and undermine one another. Canadian jurisprudence recognizes that limits must be placed on free speech where it runs counter to the right to equality(24) South Africa's Constitution recognizes the right to limit rights, but requires courts to consider the purpose of the limitations, its nature and extent, and the overarching goal of ensuring that it is `reasonable and justifiable in a society..... based on human dignity, equality and freedom.=(25) This has encouraged the Constitutional Court to adopt what is called `a purposive interpretation' of competing rights, so as not to construe different rights out of context and in isolation, but with recognition of the need for a balance, bearing in mind the core human rights values the Constitution seeks to achieve. 62. Jurisprudence on the interpretation of limitations to the right of freedom of religion indicates that litigation has focussed in the main on aspects which have not presented the courts with hard choices. The Indian courts, as well as the European Court of Human Rights have often been faced with recognizing the right of freedom

of conscience and religion, and manifestation of religion, in situations where the practices and activities in question had no impact on the right to gender equality or freedom from gender discrimination. However in those instances where the Supreme Court of India has been faced with recognizing personal laws based on religion resulting in gender-based discrimination, it has been unwilling to recognise that a personal law undermines a conflicting statutory provision. The Shah Bano Case(26) considered a Muslim wife's right to maintenance under a generally applicable family support statute, and was an effort to prevent the application of a religious law that denied maintenance. 63. In the Mudgal Case (1995), an Indian court decided that a man's unilateral conversion to Islam did not give him the right to contract polygamous marriages, and to reject his statutory obligations as a result of an earlier monogamous marriage. Similarly, a Sri Lankan Court arrived at the same conclusion, overturning a Privy Council decision which had been followed as a precedent for thirty years.(27) However, Indian Courts have decided that personal laws based on religion cannot be challenged, in the absence of a conflicting statutory principle, via the Constitution. They have shown a reluctance to adopt an activist approach to changing personal law, perceiving this as the responsibility of Parliament. (28) 64. South Asian and African countries have already a body of common jurisprudence, sometimes derived from colonial statute law, which applies to all communities. Retaining and developing this common body of law to conform with human rights standards, and recognizing the right of individuals to govern their personal and family relations according to their general norms by choice, even where plural legal traditions based on religion and ethnicity also exist, provides one strategy for working towards universal human rights standards. In this regard, however, particular care needs to be applied to ensure that international norms of gender equality are incorporated into, and reflected in this body of law and jurisprudence. 65. In countries where a religious or customary tradition is recognized as an absolute one, there is a clear problem of conflict of norms. It is in these countries that Constitutional guarantees on freedom of religion can be used to reject secularism and move towards a religion based system of rights and responsibilities. (c ) Human rights of women vs. other claims 66. Once the primacy of rights has been established, the question of a potential conflict between development or humanitarian assistance, and a human rights approach no longer arises. Once socio-economic rights are recognized as human rights, service delivery is only one dimension of human rights.

67. In situations of armed conflict, agencies providing humanitarian assistance naturally prioritize the delivery of basic services to victims, and are neutral and discreet in their dealings with the parties to the conflict. However since humanitarian law is closely anchored to human rights standards, the challenge is to recognize that human rights today encompass both humanitarian assistance and protection from infringement of human rights. The international standards in the area of humanitarian law and the Refugee Convention and Protocol are themselves based on the recognition of the human right to equality and non-discrimination, and other rights relating to personal security. It is therefore important to ensure that a humanitarian assistance agenda does not displace the priority given to a human rights agenda. 68. A humanitarian assistance agenda can no longer be seen in isolation as an effort to provide `assistance' rather than realize human rights for access to these services as part of the protection afforded for civil and political rights. Humanitarian agencies working in conflict areas, including UNHCR, are recognizing this dimension of rights. A view that humanitarian assistance should be primarily oriented towards service delivery can no longer be sustained. (d) Allocation of resources and human rights education 69. Rights are often perceived as only requiring lawyers, laws and legal procedures. Strengthening the process of implementation of gender equality rights through international complaints procedures, and national laws and a Court system is clearly relevant for a rights-based approach. Monitoring violations through national and international processes is equally critical. 70. However, a rights-based approach also requires the development of human rights action plans and strategies covering all areas of national development, and the allocation of human and financial resources. The rights contained in the CEDAW Convention require policy measures and resources beyond laws and legal procedures for full implementation. 71. Human rights education and gender-sensitization at all levels are also a critical dimension of a rights-based approach. This is perhaps the easiest aspect of a rightsbased approach, since there are many partners in the human rights arena, and programmes can be strengthened by linking and networking. It is important that gender-sensitization programmes are linked to human rights education. An environment that is not open in regard to education, diversification of information, participation of civil society including in the political process cannot be receptive to efforts at gender sensitization. Women's groups therefore need to network and make these connections so as to strengthen their own capacity and also impact on the wide

range of State and private actors who can be catalysts for creating an environment conducive to realizing gender equality. E. The role of multilateral and bilateral entities in realizing human rights at the national level (a) The role of multilateral entities 72. To varying degrees, international human rights treaties establish a role for international organizations in support of implementation of the treaty at the national level. They also foresee a role for such entities in providing treaty bodies with information essential to the monitoring process. 73. The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, in its general comment no. 2 (1990), has given detailed guidance to entities of the United Nations system, and in particular those involved in development activities, on the integration of human rights concerns into development activities. In order to assist such entities in the operationalization of article 22 of the Covenant,(29) the Committee provided a list of specific measures for consideration by the relevant bodies. The Committee noted, inter alia, that: - As a matter of principle, the appropriate United Nations organs and agencies should specifically recognize the intimate relationship which should be established between development activities and efforts to promote respect for human rights in general, and economic, social and cultural rights in particular; - Consideration should be given to require the preparation of a `human rights impact statement' in connection with all major development cooperation activities; - Training for United Nations project personnel in human rights standards and norms; - Ensure at each phase of a development project that human rights are duly taken into account. This would apply in the initial assessment of priority needs of a particular country, in the identification of particular projects, in project design, in the implementation of projects, and in its final evaluation. (30) 74. International agencies can use their specific role to adopt a pro-active role in the realization of gender-equality rights. They have both a mandate and a duty to adopt a stand on gender-equality issues in the regular country programmes that they enter into with Government. As human rights are ends in themselves, all programming efforts should be critically analyzed to assess their impact with regard to realization of gender equality.

75. Agencies' mission statements and guidelines for programming can incorporate a rights approach by referring to international instruments, and the agency's status and responsibilities under human rights treaties. Indeed, UNICEF's mission statement has clarified that the Convention on the Rights of the Child will be the foundation of programming. UNHCR has also made similar statements on the importance of a rights approach, and adopted guidelines on the place of human rights in general, and women's human rights in particular in their work on refugee issues. Discussions are ongoing on how to strengthen capacity to programme from a rights-based approach in situation of internally displaced persons who do not come directly within UNHCR's mandate. (31) (b) The role of bilateral entities 76. Bilateral entities focussing on gender-equality have opportunities to create an understanding of the rights-based approach within their organizations, and strengthen their mandate by reference to the international standards that Governments have committed themselves to realize. They must understand the scope of the various international standards that countries have ratified in regard to gender equality, whether generally or specifically in relation to their areas of expertise. They can also study and use the conference documents such as the Vienna Declaration, the Beijing Platform for Action, the Cairo Population Conference and the Stockholm Conference Reports which recognise the importance of international co-operation in realizing human rights. Most of these conference reports envisage action by multilaterals and bilaterals.(32) Creating an awareness of the legitimacy of a human rights agenda and gender equality as a human right is critical to impacting through programming at the national level. (c ) Common efforts of multilaterals and bilaterals in the realization of a rights-based approach 77. A rights-based approach requires a shift from an approach focussed on basic needs to a recognition of the importance of claims to equality and non-discrimination. Strengthening women's position by providing life chances, access to health and education, and opportunities for career development or income generation and employment, are only one part of a rights agenda. Bilaterals and multilaterals need to be concerned with the design and implementation of a women's rights agenda that encompasses civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights as ends in themselves. 78. Developments in the area of women's human rights are reinforcing the need to move beyond the basic/needs basic/rights debate. As the links between law, policy

planning and allocation of national and international resources for realizing human rights are becoming clearer, the requirements for implementation of human rights in general, as well as the right of gender equality are also becoming more obvious. All of them create, to varying degrees, obligations for States to respect, protect, promote and fulfil human rights. Therefore, a human rights agenda requires not only responding to infringements, but an agenda that establishes connections between law, policy planning, resource allocations, advocacy and community mobilization to support rights. 79. The significance of international human rights law, and the manner in which it has legitimized the scope for State accountability and scrutiny must be understood so as to confront arguments of State sovereignty. Bilaterals and multilaterals must understand the legitimacy of that scrutiny, and the fact that they are partners in enabling the State to perform its own obligations under international law. 80. It is no longer appropriate for multilateral and bilateral agencies to distinguish between provision of assistance and protection of rights, as if only the latter aspect concerns human rights. Consequently, specific elements of international co-operation such as humanitarian or emergency assistance, or the delivery of basic services can no longer occur outside, or above, a human rights framework. 81. Bilaterals and multilaterals should take advantage of the increasing participation of NGOs and civil society in the realization of a rights-based approach to gender equality. International human rights and women's NGOs have linked with local NGOs to bring the voice of civil society to international forums. They have influenced the agenda of world conferences on a range of women's rights issues. Human rights treaty bodies are formalizing the status of NGOs in the treaty monitoring procedures. Working with NGOs at the national and local level enables bilaterals and multilaterals to support the transfer of the results of global monitoring processes back to the national level, and its incorporation into legislative and policy processes. 82. Monitoring efforts need to focus on denial of rights as well as inattention to rights, law and law enforcement, complaints procedures on infringement of rights, and monitoring of policy processes. Bilaterals and multilaterals need to network with new partners such as legislators, lawyers and judges who can also carry through the agenda, while sustaining their links to Government and others engaged in policy planning and implementation, and in the provision of services. There is also a need to network with each other in gender sensitization programmes and human rights education, in the context of their area of interest. Such links are important in order to reinforce the human rights messages and advocacy.

83. Bilaterals and multilaterals need to network with each other to articulate a common commitment to a human rights approach. An awareness of the central importance and legitimacy of rights in terms of international cooperation and of their own mandate can strengthen their hand in dealing with Governments bound to follow international norms that apply to them. An awareness of the legitimacy of the involvement of people and civil society in realizing rights under international law and their own States in working on rights must help them in community-based work. It can also help them to give protection and legitimacy to the work of NGOs and civil society. Gender equality can become a central and core norm in policy planning and programmes if Governments, people and the international community connect with the idea that `men and women should have the equal chance to make their contribution and find their creativity in a society which neither own, and both share=. (33) 84. Such co-operation requires an open dialogue of bi/multilaterals with both Government and civil society, and the provision of opportunities for local NGOs to truly participate in programming. The perception that bilaterals or multilaterals are non-participatory, and set the agenda for programmes in a non-consultative manner, promotes insecurities in civil society itself, and encourages Government to be suspicious. It is the task of multilaterals and bilaterals to carry the experience from the field back to their own headquarters so they acquire sensitivity to the dynamics of a local situation and how best to programme to realize a rights agenda. 85. A rights-based approach to gender equality must also be used consistently by all agencies so that they do not give conflicting messages. This is why it is important that some do not continue to adopt an exclusively humanitarian or development assistance or service delivery approach, while others combine them and integrate it into a rights approach. Co-ordination on issues such as women's work and child care, gender-based violence, trafficking, child labour and humanitarian work in conflict zones at the national level will strengthen the capacity to impact at the national level and also ensure that international developments on human rights are not out of touch with local and regional realities, particularly in developing countries. The new administrative arrangements under which all UN agencies will operate under a Resident Co-ordinator may facilitate this co-operation. Bilateral agencies should link with multilaterals in adopting a co-ordinated approach when they work on issues of gender equality at the national level. F. Elements of a rights-based approach 86. Reflecting on the Vienna Conference on Human Rights and on the crisis in development one commentator asked whether development cooperation had any other legitimate task at all beyond that of the fulfilment of human rights. If the fulfilment of

human rights(34) is indeed the foremost task of development cooperation, the principles of international human rights law as they pertain to rights-holders, the nature of obligations of duty-holders, implementation, and participation need to be translated into practically applicable concepts for bilateral and multilateral development co-operation. 87. It is possible to suggest that a rights based approach to programming requires: (1) The analysis of a problem/situation from a holistic perspective of human rights, and related obligations of Governments, according to international human rights standards. In other words, identify rights that must be respected, protected, and promoted and fulfilled either by positive interventions or through non-infringement. Assessment by bi/multilaterals how their activities might impact on enjoyment of these rights. Establish how achievement of development goals is to be placed within the framework of the realization of gender equality. (2) Development of steps to be taken to ensure implementation of the identified rights at the national level, and how they can be supported and facilitated by bi/multilateral co-operation. This will require legislative and administrative measures, policy planning and implementation, law enforcement, and resource allocation for implementation of such measures. (3) Establishment of mechanisms to monitor implementation of rights. In recognition of the fact that human rights implementation is not exclusively a matter of enforcement through law and legal mechanisms, such mechanism should include national and international legal remedies and complaints procedures, the preparation of national action plans, the establishment of national human rights mechanisms such as Ombudspersons, Equality Commissions or Human Rights Advocates. (4) Participation of civil society with a view to making a difference in the decisionmaking process. This should include people's broad based awareness of international human rights standards to foster social mobilisation and involvement, respect for, and priorities of rights, and the creation of a culture of human rights. NOTES: 1 Thomas Buergenthal in: Steiner, Henry J./Alston, Philip, International Human Rights in Context, Clarendon
Press, Oxford (1996) p 143 2 E.g. Geneva Convention on Wounded and Sick, Art 3 (a)(c) (torture cruel and degrading treatment), Art 12, 16; Common Article 3, Geneva Conventions; Geneva Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War, Art 27, 38.

3 The European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (1950), and the European Social Charter (1961). 4 SAARC Convention on Trafficking and Sexual Exploitation of Women and Children, adopted at the Ministerial Meeting in Colombo, July 1998 and due to be adopted at the next SAARC Summit, 1999. 5 Constitutions of India, Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, drawing on the Constitution of Ireland have separate chapters on enforceable fundamental rights, and non-enforceable directive principles of state policy. Constitutions of Vietnam, Lao PDR, Cambodia and China. Also Constitution of South Africa, Art.27 (general), Art 28 (children). Sri Lanka Draft Constitution, Art. 22 (rights of children to basic nutrition, shelter, basic health care), Art. 24 (safe conditions of work), Art 25 (access to health care including emergency medical treatment, food and water, appropriate social assistance). Unni Krishnan v State of Andhra Pradesh, JT 1993 474. Mohini Jain v State of Karnataka, 1992, 3 SCC 666 (education); Samity and Others v State of West Bengal, 1996, AIR SC 24,26 (emergency health care). Art 27(3), 27(1); Soobramany v Minister of Health, (Kwazulu Natal) Case CC4 32/97 (1997). CESCR, art 1 (right of self determination), art 8 (trade unions); ICCPR, art 1 (right of self determination), art 21, 22, (freedom of association and right to join trade unions). General recommendation No. 19 (eleventh session, 1992) on violence against women. UN Doc.HRI/GEN/1/Rev.3, 1997. DHR, art 3, ICCPR, art 6 (right to life); UDHR, art 4; ICCPR, art 8 (slavery); UDHR, art 5; ICCPR, art 7 (torture etc); UDHR, art 9; ICCPR, art 9 (protection from arbitrary arrest). General Assembly Resolution 48/104 of 20 December 1993. Integrating the gender perspective into the work of United Nations human rights treaty bodies, UN Doc. HRI/MC/1998/6, 3 September 1998. Byrnes, Andrew: Human Rights Instruments, in: Byrnes/ Connors/ Lum Bik, Advancing the Human Rights of Women, pp 50-55, gives a brief digest of such cases. UDHR, art 29 (duties in the community); ICESCR, preamble para 5; ICCPR, preamble para 5. Steiner/ Alston, pp. 256-273, 274. Right to adequate food as a human right, UN Center for Human Rights Geneva, 1989. Eide, A.: Realization of social and economic rights and the minimum threshold approach, HRLJ Vol. 10, No. 1-2, 1989, p 35. General comment 3 (fourth session, 1990), UN Doc. HRI/GEN/1/Rev.3, 1997. Copelon, Rhonda: Intimate Terror, in: Cook, Rebecca (ed.), Human Rights of Women, p 116. Velasques Rodrigues Case (1988), Inter American Court of Human Rights; Ser.C, No 4. 9 Hum Rts., L J 212; Faiz v Attorney General, 1995, 1 Sri LR 372; Upaliratna v Tikiri Banda, 1995, Sri LR 165 Sri Lanka (illegal cover for private action); Airey v Ireland, 32 Eur.Ct. H R (Ser.A) 1979 (inaction); Vishaka v State of Rajasthan, Writ petition

(Criminal), Nos 666-70 of 1992 India (inaction); Saheli Women's Resource Centre v Commissioner of Police Delhi, AIR 1990 SC 513 (collusion of police in private violence, state responsible); Padmini v State of Tamil Nadu, 1993 Crim.L J 29641 (India); Ratnasiri v Basnayake, SC/4/94 1995; Saman v Leelanda, 1989, 1 Sri LR 1; Karunasena v Sriyantha, SC 257/93 (1994) (State liability for violence by Sri Lanka law enforcement authorities in custodial situation); c.f. Ronda Copelon: Intimate Terror, ibid. MacKinnon, Catherine, Only Words, Harvard (1993) See the Committee's statement on reservations adopted at its 19th session, UN Doc. A/53/38/Rev.1. R v Keegstra (1990), 3 SCR 697, cited. Hogg P W: Constitutional Law of Canada Carswell (1992), 818-819. Art 36 (1); S v Makwanyane and Another, 1995, 3 SA 391. Mohamed Khan v Shah Bano Begum, 1985, 2SCC 566. Sarla Mudgal and Other v Union of India, Writ Petition (Civil) No 1079 of 1989; India Today, June 5 1995 p.54; Abeysundere v Abeysundere and Attorney General, S.C. Appeal No 70/96 (1996) Sri Lanka, overruling Attorney General v Reid (1967). Ahmedabad Women's Action Group v Union of India, 1997, 3 SCC 573 (Muslim Personal law on Talak divorce and Hindu Succession and Guardianship law not unconstitutional). The Economic and Social Council [the parent body of the CESCR] may bring to the attention of other organs of the United Nations, their subsidiary organs and specialized agencies concerned with furnishing technical assistance any matters ... which may assist such bodies in deciding, each within its field of competence, on the advisability of international measures likely to contribute to the effective progressive implementation of the Covenant." General comment 2 (fourth session, 1990), UN Doc. HRI/GEN/1/Rev.3, 1997 Ranjit Jayanthi: The Protection of the Rights of Refugee Women, in: Byrnes/ Connors/ Lum Bik, p 176; The State of the World's Refugees, UNHCR United Nations High Commission for Refugees (1997) pp 48, 116, 196. Vienna Declaration, para 14, 27, 36, 37, 43; ICPD, Chapter II (Principles), Ch. VII (reproductive rights), Ch.XIV (international co-operation); World Summit For Social Development Commitments; Beijing Platform for Action, Institutional Arrangements, p. 159 (c) National Level (a). Mar Robinson (1992), Allen Lane Lecture, as quoted in: Hargenn, John, Mary Robinson: An Independent Voice, OBrien Press, Dublin 1998. Nowak, M.: The human right to development versus human-rights-based development cooperation, in: R. Tetzlaff (ed.), Human Rights and Development, Eine Welt Stiftung Entwicklung und Frieden, Bonn 1993.

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