Discriminatory Laws Undermining Women’s Rights
This paper provides insight into the current situation and recent trends in the abolition or reform of discriminatory laws undermining women's rights in countries outside the European Union (EU). The paper aims to provide a nuanced understanding of processes through which legal reforms take place. Among the factors that have proven to facilitate legal reform are the ratification of international human rights treaties, feminist activism, legal and public advocacy by women’s rights and other human rights non-governmental organisations (NGOs), political dialogue, and increased women's representation in decision-making processes. Incremental steps supported by the EU towards the abolition of discriminatory laws across all legal categories, EU engagement with a broad range of stakeholders at both national and local levels, programmes supporting the gathering of gender-disaggregated data across all sectors and the publicising of data to draw attention to gender inequality in law and practice, among others, can all contribute towards successful reform of discriminatory laws. Striking the right balance between funding programmes that mainstream gender and funding dedicated to gender-targeted programmes, together with the increased use of country gender profiles, are essential in order to achieve quality legal reforms.
Λεπτομερής ανάλυση
Εξωτερικός συντάκτης
Mr. Paul DALTON, Ms. Deniz DEVRIM, Mr. Roland BLOMEYER, Ms. Senni MUT-TRACY
Πληροφορίες για το έγγραφο
Τύπος δημοσίευσης
Λέξη κλειδί
- έκθεση έρευνας
- γυναίκα
- γυναικεία συμμετοχή
- γυναικείο κίνημα
- δημογραφία και πληθυσμός
- διακρίσεις λόγω φύλου
- ΔΙΕΘΝΕΙΣ ΣΧΕΣΕΙΣ
- ΔΙΚΑΙΟ
- δικαιώματα και ελευθερίες
- δικαιώματα της γυναίκας
- δικαιώματα του ανθρώπου
- ΕΚΠΑΙΔΕΥΣΗ ΚΑΙ ΕΠΙΚΟΙΝΩΝΙΕΣ
- θέση της γυναίκας
- ισότητα έναντι του νόμου
- ισότητα των φύλων
- κοινωνική ζωή
- ΚΟΙΝΩΝΙΚΑ ΘΕΜΑΤΑ
- πολιτική ζωή και δημόσια ασφάλεια
- πολιτική συνεργασίας
- ΠΟΛΙΤΙΚΗ
- τεκμηρίωση
- τρίτες χώρες