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A Fifth UN World Conference On Women In 2015? Learn More And Share Your Opinion!

A Fifth UN World Conference on Women in 2015? Learn More and Share your Opinion!

We invite you to share your opinion in the comments box below.

FRIDAY FILE: A discussion about the implications of the proposed UN Fifth World Conference on Women in 2015 is urgently needed among feminists and women’s rights activists from all regions of the world.

There are diverse opinions about the organization, hosting and purpose of the proposed conference, which have not been broadly debated. 

By Susan Tolmay[i]

The proposed 5th World Conference on Women

On March 8 2012, International Women’s Day, the President of the United Nations General Assembly H.E. Mr. Nassir Abdulaziz Al-Nasser (Qatar) and the Secretary-General H.E. Mr. Ban Ki-moon jointly proposed convening a Fifth UN World Conference on Women (5th WCW) in 2015.  In their announcement they stated that convening such a world conference is important to look closely not only at the implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action but also at the emerging issues and the enormous changes taking place in the world which are having “both positive and other implications for women.”  Their proposal will now have to go before the 193-member states of the General Assembly (GA) for discussion during the 66thsession of the GA in September. 

The proposed 5th WCW would take place twenty years after the 1995 Fourth World Conference on Women held in Beijing - where the landmark Platform for Action (BPfA) was adopted. The 1990s was a decade marked by strong global mobilization on the part of social movements- including the feminist movement- that sought to advance women’s human rights and gender equality as well as other key agendas for social justice within the fields of population and development, the environment, and human rights. Women’s human rights advocates from all regions actively participated in the UN Conferences of the 1990’s at Rio, Vienna, Cairo, Copenhagen and Beijing. These processes and outcomes were key to securing international policy frameworks that would, if properly financed and implemented, advance women’s human rights and achieve gender equality.

So far, reactions among women’s groups, networks and campaigns to another world conference have been mixed. Before the announcement in March, there was no systematic consultation with civil society, GA member states, or UN Women, and there are widespread concerns about the necessity, effectiveness, and relevance of international conferences.

Further, 2015 is the deadline for the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and when a new development framework to succeed the MDGs will be agreed. In the Rio+20 Summit that finished last week in Brazil, member states agreed to launch a process of negotiation for a set of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by 2015.  A parallel but connected UN process called ‘The Development Agenda Beyond 2015’ has already started, and feminists and women’s groups have had limited engagement so far.

Positions expressed to date

The 5WCW’s Campaign led by Jean Shinoda Bolen (San Francisco, USA) is mobilizing support for a 5th WCW that ‘address(es) new and emerging issues affecting women and girls since the Beijing Conference in 1995, to build upon and not re-open previous UN documents’.  Their position is that a 5WCW is necessary and could act as ‘as a rallying point that would raise consciousness and network women worldwide and at a time of transition’

Soon Young-Yoon, current Chair of the NYC NGO CSW Committee, expressed her personal opinion of an alternate proposal[ii] for ‘the UN to create a new model for a global event—one that does not focus on generating a global consensus document at a conference, but on implementation of promises already made’ through a global campaign, anchored in five regional conferences, using the full power of new information technologies and social media to establish a new global media network’. The campaign she proposes has two goals:

  1. To galvanize a powerful constituency to “scale-up and speed-up” implementation of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) and the Beijing Platform for Action.
  2. To strengthen communications infrastructures and skills of stakeholders, including youth and young women leaders, national machineries and UN bodies and interregional networking, for 2015 and beyond.

Reflections from discussions at the recent AWID Forum

AWID asked the Gender Equality Architecture Reform Campaign (GEAR Campaign) to facilitate the caucus meetings held at the 2012 AWID Forum on this matter. The discussions raised the following concerns:

  • The amount of resources- time and money- that a UN world conference requires, given that UN Women is not yet adequately funded and many women’s rights organizations are in financial crises.  It might be strain on the women’s movement capacity to take this on now, when there are so many critical local and regional struggles.
  • A commemoration of Beijing+20 should emphasize progress and challenges to implementation, increased access to resources, and accountability for existing international agreements on women’s rights and gender equality.
  • Lack of participation among women’s rights organizations, and civil society at large, in this process to date. Women's rights organizations demand full participation in all aspects of the Conference preparation, design, and program if it comes to fruition, including where it is held and what the main outcomes are.
  • Any Beijing+20 events need to feed women’s voices and feminists perspectives into the larger UN-post 2015 processes, including the review of the MDGs and the proposed SDGs.
  • Any events planned for 2015 should add focus, resources and energy to women’s rights organizations, not drain or divide them.  A 5th WCW or other event that would keep women busy on the sidelines would not be helpful as women seek to influence other relevant processes of the UN’s work.
  • The possibility of backlash on previously agreed international commitments on women’s rights and gender equality if a conference is held with inter-governmental negotiation of a new platform in the current geopolitical climate where anti-women’s rights forces are currently strong.

Participants at the AWID caucus brainstormed alternatives to a conference that would call for implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action and bring attention to advancing women’s human rights without risking negotiated text.  These options include:

  • To hold a UN-Habitat World Urban Forum Model with partnerships and engagement with local government working closely with civil society leaders and producing an outcome document as a set of recommendations from the chair;
  • To hold a celebration session on the 20th Anniversary of the Beijing PFA as a High Level Plenary Session of the United Nations General Assembly;
  • To hold a pledging Conference with commitments made to implement the Beijing Platform of Action or a Political Declaration by Member States following civil society consultations. 

All of these options are without holding negotiations that could re-open existing agreements and potentially generate a serious backlash, at a moment when women’s rights and gender equality are seriously being questioned by some UN member states. For example in the very recent Rio +20 negotiations governments challenged the recognition of the role of women in sustainable development and the final outcome document did not include reproductive rights. Feminists working to influence the negotiations had an uphill battle to ensure that governments reaffirmed Cairo and Beijing conferences’ agreements. This process that just ended is a good example of the geopolitical context that we might face in 2015.

Tell us what you think!

The announcement of the potential 5thWCW challenges all of us to share our analysis, hopes, positions and ideas. Voices that have spoken so far tell stories of concern, uncertainty and caution but also nostalgia for a ‘Beijing-like’ process, the need to re-energize our movements at the global level, and hope to advance women´s rights and feminists agendas. For some, it offers opportunities to revitalise long term struggles and add relevant issues that can respond to current crisis and challenges at regional, national and local levels. For AWID, it is critical to provide information on the proposed conference and the diverse views expressed as well as to create a space to debate the issue. 

We invite you to reflect on the road ahead as we approach the celebration of the 20th anniversary of the Beijing Conference.  Share your comments and proposals on how best to celebrate the Beijing Conference and continue to advance women’s human rights and gender equality globally.  Tell us your thoughts, reactions and positions on this debate and help us broaden the voices and perspectives that are contributing to this conversation. 

[i] The author thanks Lydia Alpizar, Charlotte Bunch, Alexandra Garita, Alejandra Scampini, Anna Turley and Zonibel Woods for their contributions to the article.

[ii] This document has been circulating via email, if you would like to see the full proposal please email stolmay@awid.org

We commit to produce a future Friday File sharing the highlights of the comments shared in the three languages that we work on: English, French and Spanish.

Share your comments below or join the discussion on Facebook.

Article License: Creative Commons - Article License Holder: AWID

Comments

The abuse against women such as the recent events in India is a crisis that needs the support from all women of the world. Please discuss a global strategy where women everywhere can benefit

That is a good a idea but the greatest challenge is lack of inclusion of the women at the grass root who are the real practitioners of the policies but are never given the opportunities to tell the real truth of what is happening on the ground.I support the SWCW but please let it not be an affair of select few otherwise it remains a mere mirage for women and development. I have seen women executives who represent these women organisations living large at the expense of the very women they are supposed to progress.If it is all inclusive it is ok because it has made good progress for women since Beijing.
Betty

That is a good a idea but the greatest challenge is lack of inclusion of the women at the grass root who are the real practitioners of the policies but are never given the opportunities to tell the real truth of what is happening on the ground.I support the SWCW but please let it not be an affair of select few otherwise it remains a mere mirage for women and development. I have seen women executives who represent these women organisations living large at the expense of the very women they are supposed to progress.If it is all inclusive it is ok because it has made good progress for women since Beijing.
Betty

A whole new generation has grown up since Beijing in 1995. We need to harness the energy of young women who are on the front lines of women's issues, and a 5th WCW is a great way to do this. I also think we need the weight of a UN sponsored event to have any kind of impact on public consciousness or systemic implementation of proposals. Regional meetings can be very useful for developing participation, agendas, and momentum, but the big event is still a powerful way to experience our own might and to try to push things forward.

On June 21st, forty women came together in The Hague, The Netherlands. Some represented women's organizations or NGOs, others came as individuals, collectively representing a broad spectrum. We discussed the opportunities and risks of a 5th World Conference on Women and alternatives for Beijing + 20. We also discussed recommendations to the Dutch government, which will adopt a position at the General Assembly. Based on these discussions the recommendations have been agreed upon and formulated by a broad-based writing group.

To summarize: the position of the Dutch civil society representatives is: yes, agree to a 5th World Conference on Women or another Beijing+20 process, ONLY under very strict conditions, as listed in the recommendations.
You can find the English version here: http://www.wo-men.nl/what-do-dutch-ngos-think-about-a-5th-world-conference-on-women-in-2015

Whether there will be a 5WCW or not, there is a need for a new élan for women’s rights.
We are interested in creative, mobilizing, energizing alternatives to celebrate the Beijing+20 momentum.

Joni van de Sand
WO=MEN Dutch Gender Platform
www.wo-men.nl
http://www.wo-men.nl/5wcw-beijing-20 (mainly in Dutch)

Utilize the 5th UN-WCW platform to honour men (males) across board who have left indelible marks in various spheres of socio-economic and political life while championing and advancing The Agenda. Also give more focus on the role of religion in The Agenda

1 Commemorative conferences as well as the MDGs have tended to go back on previous commitments, in particular regarding women's empowerment and gender equality, women's sexual and reproductive rights, and so on. The known risks outweigh the potential benefits.

2 There is an over-representation of Northern NGOs at global development events: how to ensure that feminisms and not 'gender and development' and 'aid' shape the agenda?

3 This proposal hasn't come from women's movements, or even from UN Women. So why lock ourselves into a colossally expensive and perhaps outdated model for global debate when there are other options we could pursue?

4 The AWID caucus options are focused, affordable and achievable and would give a clear feminist agenda around which women's rights organisations (and NGOs that share their goals) can mobilise in accordance with their own priorities and resources.

I buy the idea of having 5WCWC's, however as it has been expressed, women rights organizations and feminists should take a leadership role. We need to focus/reflect on what has been our successes and challenges as women movement globally since Beijing 1995 without forgetting/including the voices of grassroots women, youth in particular. Financing for women rights movement and real holding our Governments accountable need to be at the center of our discussion. Looking forward to be there and participate actively.

It is nice to have 5WCW. I never attended. There should be opportunity to rural women organisation who are working directly with grassroots women..there should be a clear strategy for action on decisions taken in the conference.

I guess that there is a Planning Committee for 5CWC and I wish that they take into consideration the maximum participation of women/ girls of all walks of life- in particular the women/girls living in poverty- in the preparation for the forthcoming Conference. This could be done by facilitating a process for discussion at neighbourhood level; then there will be universal participation in preparation for the conference; today with the social media a lot can be achieved with greater outreach. Success stories like Kudumbashree http://www.kudumbashree.org/ programme in Kerala, India and the Neighbourhood Parliaments in India where many thousands of women/ girls and boys come together at neighbourhood level to have a say in decision making that affect their lives and meaningfully participate in the implementaiton of those decisions. Such movements provide insights as one of the ways of getting women /girls to participate and communicate their voices at various levels. I suggest that the process begins now so that there is universal participation of women and girls before conference begins in 2015. Otherwise only the so called the 'big' and those who have 'big voices' play a role in such conferences and the so called 'small' are not heard.

It is good that AWID has created opportunity to discuss these issues. The proposed 5th WCW in 2015 when member states would have completed negotiations for a set of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) would not be strategic in my opinion.
Ideally the conference on women needed to happen prior to any thought process on Development Agenda Beyond 2015 with a view of evaluating the commitments of the 4th WCW. This would in turn mean that the outcome of the 5th WCW would have a chance to inform development agenda beyond 2015 or SDGs for that matter.

I think that commemoration of Beijing+20 is a good opportunity to take stock what we gained and what we are yet to gain in terms of action or in action of members state on the commitments made during the 4th WCW. It would be a good opportunity to re-strategize on those areas where member states have not taken actions yet.

In the event that the 5th WCW should take place, we truly must ensure that the stakeholders involved recognise the need to consult with us women as a constituency. We need to agree first! Or at least some common grounds.

I am a Gender Specialist & active citizen. I have never participated in any UN WCW but I would like to appreciate that women's struggle for equality has picked up although there is yet a lot to be done. Organizing world women's conference is important for women to celebrate what has been achieved as well as look at the challenges to women's advancement nationally, regionally and globally that could be addressed at the conference. Women should be consulted when such conferences are organized with women's full participation and consultation. Rural women's voices should also be heard from all regions of the world.

I have never participated in any UN WCW but I would like to appreciate that women's struggle for equality has picked up although there is yet a lot to be done. organizing world women's conference is important for women to celebrate what has been achieved as well as look at the challenges to women's advancement nationally,regionally and globally that could be addressed at the conference. women should be consulted when such conferences are organized with women's full participation and consultation.
rural women's voices should also be heard.

I honestly believe giving social and economic support to the international community of women's rights workers is of utmost importance! It is essential that the women and men working towards a gender equal world know each other's faces and stories, on a personal level. I suggest the conference incorporate levels of involvement: 1) Create forums for each nation/region that will participate in the conference, 2) Eventually ask those participating in forum discussions to nominate a representative for their nation/region, 3) Fund the travel of these nominees (UN Funding!) to participate in the 5th World Conference on Women, 4) Air the conference on line (video and audio). As for the topics of the conference- I'd be very interested in learning more about Soon Young-Yoon's 2-step proposition! Thoughts?

I think the main problem to attend any relevant UN event is funds.Women find it difficult to get money to reach the conference and women's organizations have found it difficult to survive to do rights work due to limited money especially governments that are controlled by men when it comes to disbursement who are anti women having any rights! This is so in patriarchal societies-India though many changes remains still entrenched in this morass.I can only speak for myself-I have worked on women and child rights for the last decade or so in a small state of India Goa-it has a high growth index compared to many other states and boasts of high health and education indices-but the plight of women is dismal though govt.figures point otherwise since they compare it to other states of the country which is pathetic. Women empowerment and gender equality remains a pipedream unless women can take part in decision making and that starts with allowing participation. Therefore I focused on child participation and that is encouraging- to bring about change to lead to rwlisation of women's rights and the MDG goals. I would like to present my experience at a UN forum but have no funds as have quit working with NGO's since could not watch funds squandered and used to line personal pockets with no results or being coopted by governments to toe their inefficient lines..hence though I have lots to share is it possible I could be given any cover for travel and stay to attend a women's conference? I am a catalyst as have brought changes in my family for gender equality and for me the personal is political and by my example have motivated many women from diverse backgrounds to take up for their own rights but will be counted as a woman who has put her head on the block to further human rights in her own way? I am now a member of the 2015 Foresight Exercise for Women being conducted by the Desteree Institute France and UNESCO and sent in articles-I hope to participate in the formulation of the Action Plan scheduled to happen in Paris in Dec 2012 but will be able to as funds remain in limbo? so whats to be done for me to come for this conference as I have so much to contribute from India as am sure many of sisters in my position would want to but too many protocols and forms to fill so do we stand a chance???

I think it will draw some attention to the issues of gender and women in particular as currently the green economy document has not covered all women issues. In addition, it was never made clearly any commitment but the language was a diplomatic language with no clear action plan or implementation strategy. And as the women is a cross cutting matter to every goal whether its the MDGs or the new set of SDGs, women issues has to be at the centre, articulated and enforced for implementation. Women issues is like energy, represent the core area for development. Without women there is no development as well as without energy there is no development.. So it might be necessary to bring it up in focused conference separately, although it might be costly, need time and efforts and of course it has to be effective.

Wonderful that AWID has started this discussion. Please note that I have expressed my personal views on the issue. These do not reflect the International Alliance or the NGO CSW NY consensus. One suggestion- events at the UN in New York could move very fast. It is important to engage with your governments if you have strong views on this issue.

I would like to see "commemoration Beijing +20" as a reflection on what we have done as a movement to bring the voices and issues of lesbian women to the forefront of this very interconnected struggle.

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Resources

5th WCW Caucuses at AWID Forum 2012

Three caucuses were organised by GEAR at AWID's request where participants discussed the proposal for a 5th World Conference on Women to be held in 2015. 

Progress report submitted by the NGO/CSW/NY Enquiry Panel on the 5th World Conference on Women

The following is a progress report by the NGO/CSW/NY  Enquiry Panel established by the NGO/CSW/NY in April 2012.

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