|

|
UNITED
NATIONS POPULATION FUND: NEW REPORT SHOWS CULTURAL SENSITIVITY CRITICAL TO
SUCCESSFUL DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES, WOMEN'S EQUALITY:
12/11/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
|
UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 12
November 2008 -- Development
strategies that are sensitive to cultural values can reduce harmful practices
against women and promote human rights, including gender equality and women’s
empowerment, affirms The State of World Population 2008 report
from UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund.
Reaching
Common Ground: Culture, Gender and Human Rights, launched 12 November
2008, reports that culture is a central component of successful development of
poor countries, and must be integrated into development policy and
programming.
The
report, which coincides with this year’s
60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, is
based on the concept that the international human rights framework has
universal validity. Human rights express values common to all cultures and
protect groups as well as individuals. The report endorses culturally
sensitive approaches to development and to the promotion of human rights, in
general, and women’s
rights, in particular.
“Human
rights are everybody’s work, and being culturally sensitive and
understanding the context is everybody’s business,” said Thoraya Ahmed
Obaid, Executive Director of UNFPA.
Culturally
sensitive approaches call for cultural fluency—familiarity
with how cultures work, and how to work with them. The report suggests that
partnerships—between UNFPA
and community-based institutions and leaders, for example—can
create effective strategies to promote human rights and end their abuses, such
as female genital mutilation or cutting.
Culturally
sensitive approaches seek out creative solutions produced within cultures, and
work with them. “Communities have to look at their cultural values and
practices and determine whether they impede or promote the realization of
human rights. Then, they can build on the positive and change the negative,”
said Ms. Obaid.
The
State of World Population cautions that cultural sensitivity and
engagement do not mean acceptance of harmful traditional practices, or a free
pass for human rights abuses –
far from it. Values and practices that infringe human rights can be found in
all cultures. Understanding cultural realities can reveal the most effective
ways to challenge these harmful cultural practices and strengthen beneficial
ones.
Despite
many declarations and affirmations in support of women’s
rights, the report argues, gender inequality is widespread and deep-rooted in
many cultures. Coercive power relations underlie practices such as child
marriage—a leading cause of
obstetric fistula and maternal death—and
female genital mutilation or cutting. These and other harmful practices
continue in many countries despite laws against them. Women may even support
them, believing that they protect their children and themselves.
The
UNFPA approach encourages change from within, says the report. The Fund works
with governments and a variety of local organizations and individuals through
a “culture lens”. “There
are people within every culture who oppose harmful cultural practices. Our
experience shows that we can work closely with them for cultural change to
protect human rights,” said
Ms. Obaid.
The
report emphasises the importance of a culturally sensitive approach not only
to development, but also to humanitarian response. It stresses that
humanitarian assistance in conflicts must protect whatever progress women have
made towards gender equality, including reproductive health and rights.
Describing women as victims and men as aggressors ignores cultural realities
and the variety of responsibilities that women take in wartime as heads of
household, breadwinners, caregivers and combatants.
Culturally
sensitive approaches are essential for reaching the Millennium Development
Goals, says the report, including Goal 5: to improve maternal health. “To
be healthy throughout the life cycle –
before pregnancy, during pregnancy and after pregnancy –
is a human right,” said Ms. Obaid.
The
report concludes that analysing people’s
choices in their local conditions and cultural contexts is a precondition for
better development policies.
“Cultures
change, for better or worse, in good times and bad. The report is about
promoting human rights in all circumstances,” said Ms. Obaid. “Culture
is not a wall to tear down. It is a window to see through, a door to open to
make greater progress for human rights.”
***
UNFPA,
the United Nations Population Fund, is an international development agency
that promotes the right of every woman, man and child to enjoy a life of
health and equal opportunity. UNFPA supports countries in using population
data for policies and programmes to reduce poverty and to ensure that every
pregnancy is wanted, every birth is safe, every young person is free of
HIV/AIDS, and every girl and woman is treated with dignity and respect.
Labels:
United
Nations, U.N.,
MaximsNews,
UN Population
Fund, UNFPA, Thoraya
Ahmed Obaid, Women's
Rights, Gender
Inequality, Development
Strategies, The
State of the World Population Report, Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, Human
Rights, Female
Genital Mutilation, Millennium
Development Goals, MDGs,
Cultural
Sensitivity
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 |
MaximsNews®
LLC
NEWS NETWORK FOR THE
INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY |
MaximsNews Network® LLC is a Global News Network
that is read worldwide, in 201 countries and territories. MaximsNewsNetwork is associated with MediaChannel.org and Globalvision News Network, global news and media information services with more than 350 news affiliates in 135 countries.
Established in 1999, MaximsNews now publishes in
the six UN working languages: English, French, Arabic, Chinese, Russian and
Spanish.
SEE:
About
MaximsNews
The views expressed are the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of MaximsNews®
LLC.
REACH
THE WORLD'S MOST INFLUENTIAL PEOPLE
SEE:
Advertise
with MaximsNews | MaximsNews
MEDIA PARTNERSHIPS
|
Labels: MaximsNews,
MaximsNewsNetwork,
MaximsNewsPEOPLE,
United
Nations, U.N., UN,
World Politics,
International
News, Opinion,
Diplomacy, NGO,
Think-TankNews,
People
in World News,
|
|
MaximsNews
UN
United Nations World
Politics International News
Opinion
Commentary Diplomacy
Turbo Tagger
|
MaximsNews.com
U.N. ® LLC www.MaximsNews.com
| MaximsNews@MaximsNews.com
| CONTACT
MaximsNews | Please
contact us about Republishing:
Syndication@MaximsNews.com ©Copyrights 1999 -
2008, MaximsNews® LLC. All rights
reserved.
|