A/RES/75/161 GA
Intensification of efforts to prevent and eliminate all forms of violence against women and girls : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly
75
Session
175
Yes
0
No
11
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | A/C.3/75/L.19/Rev.1 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | A/RES/75/161 |
| Category | SOCIAL CONDITIONS AND EQUITY |
| P5 Positions |
|
| UN Document | A/RES/75/161 ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — A/75/PV.46
-
Afghanistan
-
Albania
-
Andorra
-
Angola
-
Antigua and Barbuda
-
Argentina
-
Armenia
-
Australia
-
Austria
-
Azerbaijan
-
Bahrain
-
Bangladesh
-
Barbados
-
Belgium
-
Belize
-
Benin
-
Bhutan
-
Plurinational State of Bolivia
-
Bosnia and Herzegovina
-
Botswana
-
Brazil
-
Brunei Darussalam
-
Bulgaria
-
Burkina Faso
-
Cabo Verde
-
Cambodia
-
Canada
-
Chad
-
Chile
-
Colombia
-
Comoros
-
Congo
-
Costa Rica
-
Côte d'Ivoire
-
Croatia
-
Cuba
-
Cyprus
-
Czechia
-
Democratic Republic of the Congo
-
Denmark
-
Djibouti
-
Dominica
-
Dominican Republic
-
Ecuador
-
Egypt
-
El Salvador
-
Equatorial Guinea
-
Eritrea
-
Estonia
-
Eswatini
-
Ethiopia
-
Fiji
-
Finland
-
France
-
Gabon
-
Gambia
-
Georgia
-
Germany
-
Ghana
-
Greece
-
Grenada
-
Guatemala
-
Guyana
-
Haiti
-
Honduras
-
Hungary
-
Iceland
-
India
-
Indonesia
-
Islamic Republic of Iran
-
Iraq
-
Ireland
-
Israel
-
Italy
-
Jamaica
-
Japan
-
Jordan
-
Kazakhstan
-
Kenya
-
Kiribati
-
Kuwait
-
Kyrgyzstan
-
Lao People's Democratic Republic
-
Latvia
-
Lebanon
-
Lesotho
-
Liberia
-
Liechtenstein
-
Lithuania
-
Luxembourg
-
Madagascar
-
Malawi
-
Malaysia
-
Maldives
-
Mali
-
Malta
-
Marshall Islands
-
Mauritania
-
Mauritius
-
Mexico
-
Micronesia (Federated States of)
-
Monaco
-
Mongolia
-
Montenegro
-
Morocco
-
Mozambique
-
Namibia
-
Nauru
-
Nepal
-
Netherlands
-
New Zealand
-
Niger
-
Nigeria
-
North Macedonia
-
Norway
-
Oman
-
Pakistan
-
Palau
-
Panama
-
Papua New Guinea
-
Paraguay
-
Peru
-
Philippines
-
Poland
-
Portugal
-
Qatar
-
Republic of Korea
-
Moldova
-
Romania
-
Rwanda
-
Saint Kitts and Nevis
-
Saint Lucia
-
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
-
Samoa
-
San Marino
-
Sao Tome and Principe
-
Saudi Arabia
-
Senegal
-
Serbia
-
Seychelles
-
Sierra Leone
-
Singapore
-
Slovakia
-
Slovenia
-
South Africa
-
South Sudan
-
Spain
-
Sri Lanka
-
Suriname
-
Sweden
-
Switzerland
-
Syrian Arab Republic
-
Tajikistan
-
Thailand
-
Timor-Leste
-
Togo
-
Trinidad and Tobago
-
Tunisia
-
Türkiye
-
Turkmenistan
-
Tuvalu
-
Uganda
-
Ukraine
-
United Arab Emirates
-
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
-
United Republic of Tanzania
-
United States of America
-
Uruguay
-
Uzbekistan
-
Vanuatu
-
Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela
-
Viet Nam
-
Yemen
-
Zambia
-
Zimbabwe
Full text of resolution
United Nations
A/RES/75/161
General Assembly
Distr.: General
23 December 2020
20-17298 (E) 301220
*2017298*
Seventy-fifth session
Agenda item 28
Advancement of women
Resolution adopted by the General Assembly
on 16 December 2020
[on the report of the Third Committee (A/75/471, para. 80)]
75/161. Intensification of efforts to prevent and eliminate all forms of
violence against women and girls
The General Assembly,
Recalling its resolutions 61/143 of 19 December 2006, 62/133 of 18 December
2007, 63/155 of 18 December 2008, 64/137 of 18 December 2009, 65/187 of
21 December 2010, 67/144 of 20 December 2012 and all its previous resolutions on the
elimination of violence against women, as well as its resolutions 69/147 of
18 December 2014, 71/170 of 19 December 2016 and 73/148 of 17 December 2018 on
the intensification of efforts to eliminate all forms of violence against women and girls,
Reaffirming the Universal Declaration of Human Rights1 and the Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action,2
Reaffirming also the obligation of all States to promote and protect all human
rights and fundamental freedoms, and reaffirming further that discrimination on the
basis of sex is contrary to the Charter of the United Nations, the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights, the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 3 the
International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, 4 the Convention on
the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women 5 and the Convention
on the Rights of the Child and the Optional Protocols thereto, 6
__________________
1 Resolution 217 A (III).
2 A/CONF.157/24 (Part I), chap. III.
3 See resolution 2200 A (XXI), annex.
4 Ibid.
5 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 1249, No. 20378.
6 Ibid., vols. 1577, 2171 and 2173, No. 27531; and resolution 66/138, annex.
A/RES/75/161
Intensification of efforts to prevent and eliminate
all forms of violence against women and girls
20-17298
2/10
Reaffirming further the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against
Women,7 the Beijing Declaration8 and Platform for Action,9 the Programme of Action
of the International Conference on Population and Development 10 and the outcomes
of their review conferences, and the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of
Indigenous Peoples,11
Welcoming the commitment to achieve gender equality and the empowerment
of all women and girls contained in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development 12
and in the agreed conclusions adopted by the Commission on the Status of Women at
its sixtieth session13 and previous sessions, recognizing that women play a vital role
as agents of development, and acknowledging that realizing gender equality and the
empowerment of all women and girls is crucial to making progress across all
Sustainable Development Goals and targets,
Recalling that 2020 marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Fourth World
Conference on Women and the adoption of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for
Action, which have contributed greatly to the progress made towards achieving
gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls, and in this regard taking
note with appreciation of the political declaration adopted by the Commission on the
Status of Women at its sixty-fourth session, on the occasion of the anniversary,14
Recalling also that 2020 marks the twentieth anniversary of the adoption of
Security Council resolution 1325 (2000) of 31 October 2000 and the establishment of
the women and peace and security agenda,
Recalling further all previous agreed conclusions adopted by the Commission
on the Status of Women, including at its fifty-seventh session, on 15 March 2013, on
the elimination and prevention of all forms of violence against women and girls, 15
Recalling the commitment to eliminate all forms of violence against all women
and girls in the public and private spheres, including trafficking and sexual and other
types of exploitation, contained in Sustainable Development Goal 5, in particular
targets 5.2 and 5.3, and the commitment to promote peaceful and inclusive societies
for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build effective,
accountable and inclusive institutions at all levels, contained in Sustainable
Development Goal 16, and taking into account the commitment to leave no one behind,
Deeply concerned about violence against women and girls in all its different forms
and manifestations worldwide, which is underrecognized and underreported, particularly
at the community level, and its pervasiveness, which reflects discriminatory norms that
reinforce stereotypes and gender inequality and the corresponding impunity and lack of
accountability, reiterating the need to intensify efforts to prevent and eliminate all forms
of violence against women and girls in the public and private spheres in all regions of
the world, and re-emphasizing that violence against women and girls violates, and
impairs their full enjoyment of, all human rights,
__________________
7 Resolution 48/104.
8 Report of the Fourth World Conference on Women, Beijing, 4–15 September 1995 (United
Nations publication, Sales No. E.96.IV.13), chap. I, resolution 1, annex I.
9 Ibid., annex II.
10 Report of the International Conference on Population and Development, Cairo, 5–13 September
1994 (United Nations publication, Sales No. E.95.XIII.18), chap. I, resolution 1, annex.
11 Resolution 61/295, annex.
12 Resolution 70/1.
13 Official Records of the Economic and Social Council, 2016, Supplement No. 7 (E/2016/27), chap. I,
sect. A.
14 Ibid., 2020, Supplement No. 7 (E/2020/27), chap. I, sect. A.
15 Ibid., 2013, Supplement No. 7 (E/2013/27), chap. I, sect. A.
Intensification of efforts to prevent and eliminate
all forms of violence against women and girls
A/RES/75/161
3/10
20-17298
Recognizing that women’s poverty and lack of empowerment, as well as their
marginalization resulting from their exclusion from social and economic policies and
from the benefits of education and sustainable development, can place them at
increased risk of violence, and that violence against women and girls impedes the
social and economic and therefore the sustainable development of communities and
States, as well as the achievement of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
and other internationally agreed development goals,
Recognizing also that violence against women and girls, including sexual
harassment, is rooted in historical and structural inequality in power relations between
men and women, seriously violates and impairs or nullifies the enjoyment of all
human rights and fundamental freedoms by women and girls and constitutes a major
impediment to their full, equal and effective participation in society, as well as
economic and political life,
Recognizing further the special needs of women and girls living in areas affected
by complex humanitarian emergencies and in areas affected by terrorism, and that
global health threats, climate change, more frequent and intense natural disasters,
conflicts, violent extremism as and when conducive to terrorism, and related
humanitarian crises and the forced displacement of people threaten to reverse much
of the development progress made in recent decades and have particular negative
impacts on women and girls that need to be comprehensively assessed and addressed,
Recognizing that the growing impact of violence against women and girls,
including sexual harassment, in digital contexts, especially on social media, its
impunity and the lack of preventive measures and remedies underline the need for
action by Member States, in partnership with relevant stakeholders, and that such
violence may include stalking, death threats and threats of sexual and gender-based
violence, as well as related trends against women and girls in digital contexts, such
as trolling, cyberbullying and other forms of cyberharassment, including unwanted
verbal or non-verbal conduct of a sexual nature, with a view to discrediting women
and girls and/or inciting other violations and abuses against them,
Alarmed by the fact that violence against women and girls, including gender-
related killings of women and girls, also known as femicide in certain regions of the
world, which constitutes an extreme form of violence against women and girls, is
among the least punished crimes, and recognizing the key role of the criminal justice
system in preventing and responding to violence against women and girls, including
in ending impunity for such crimes,
Gravely concerned that domestic violence, including intimate partner violence,
remains the most prevalent and least visible form of violence against women of all
social strata across the world, and emphasizing that such violence is a violation, abuse
or impairment of the enjoyment of their human rights and fundamental freedoms and,
as such, is unacceptable,
Stressing the need to fully engage men and boys as strategic partners and allies
in achieving gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls and in
preventing and eliminating all forms of sexual and gender-based violence, including
domestic violence and sexual harassment,
Recognizing the critical contribution of family members in combating violence
against women and girls, including domestic violence, and that in preventing such
violence the family can play an important role,
Deeply concerned by the increased violence against women and girls around the
world, including domestic violence, as well as harmful practices, such as female
genital mutilation and child early and forced marriage, including in conflict-affected
A/RES/75/161
Intensification of efforts to prevent and eliminate
all forms of violence against women and girls
20-17298
4/10
areas, particularly in the context of confinement measures and school closures
adopted in response to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic,
Taking note of the response plans, policies and initiatives implemented by
Governments and civil society in response to the COVID-19 pandemic to prevent
violence against women and girls, including sexual and gender-based violence, and
facilitate reporting thereon, and to ensure that all women and girls can lead lives free
from violence, coercion, stigma and discrimination, including through the use of digital
technologies, media, helplines or the mobilization of grocery stores, pharmacies, hotels
and other service providers to help victims to find safe spaces and seek support,
Underscoring that, often, a lack of information and awareness, fear of reprisals,
persisting impunity, all forms of discrimination, including structural discrimination,
insufficient recourse for victims of violence against women and girls, gender
stereotypes and negative social norms, including when leading to shame or stigma, as
well as negative economic consequences, such as loss of livelihood or reduced
income, prevent many women and girls, as applicable, from reporting or acting as
witnesses and from seeking redress and justice for these crimes,
Acknowledging the importance of combating trafficking in persons in order to
prevent and eliminate all forms of violence against women and girls, and in this regard
stressing the importance of the full and effective implementation of the Protocol to
Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children,
supplementing the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime, 16
as well as of the United Nations Global Plan of Action to Combat Trafficking in Persons, 17
Emphasizing that the lack or inadequacy of documentation, research and data
on violence against women and girls, including disaggregated data, and on its
prevalence, patterns and drivers, as well as on effective approaches to prevent and
respond to it impedes efforts to design and implement measures, including, where
appropriate, policies and legislation, to prevent and eliminate all forms of violence
against women and girls,
Stressing that States have the obligation, at all levels, to promote, protect and
respect all human rights and fundamental freedoms for all, including women and girls,
and must exercise due diligence to prevent, investigate, prosecute and hold to account
the perpetrators of all forms of violence against women and girls, eliminate impunity
and provide for effective access to appropriate remedies for victims and survivors,
and should ensure the protection of women and girls, including adequate enforcement
of civil remedies, orders of protection and criminal sanctions, and the provision of
shelters, psychosocial services, counselling, health-care and other types of support
services, in order to avoid revictimization, to promote an empowering environment,
and that to do so contributes to the enjoyment of human rights and fundamental
freedoms by women and girls subjected to violence,
Encouraging the removal of all barriers to women’s access to justice and
ensuring that they all have access to information about their rights as well as effective
legal assistance so that they can make informed decisions regarding, inter alia, legal
proceedings and issues relating to family law, and also ensuring that they have access
to just and effective remedies for the harm that they have suffered, including formal
and appropriate informal justice mechanisms, as provided for by national legislation
and, where necessary, the adoption of national legislation,
Gravely concerned that impunity for violations and abuses against women
human rights defenders persists owing to factors such as a lack of reporting,
documentation, investigation and access to justice, social barriers and constraints with
__________________
16 United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 2237, No. 39574.
17 Resolution 64/293.
Intensification of efforts to prevent and eliminate
all forms of violence against women and girls
A/RES/75/161
5/10
20-17298
regard to addressing sexual and gender-based violence and the stigmatization that
may result from such violations and abuses,
Recognizing the need to promote the full, equal and meaningful participation of
women and women’s organizations, including victims and survivors of violence, in
the development, implementation and evaluation of gender-responsive policies,
regulations and legislation designed to prevent and eliminate all forms of violence
against women and girls,
Deeply concerned that the disproportionate impact of the COVID-19 pandemic
on the social and economic situation of women and girls and their access to education
and essential health services, the increased demand for paid and unpaid care work and
the reported surge of sexual and gender-based violence, including domestic violence
and violence in digital contexts, during confinement, are deepening already existing
inequalities and risk reversing the progress in achieving gender equality and the
empowerment of women and girls made in recent decades,
1.
Strongly condemns all forms of violence against all women and girls,
recognizing that they are an impediment to the achievement of gender equality and the
empowerment of all women and girls and to the full realization of their human rights;
2.
Stresses that “violence against women” means any act of gender-based
violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual, psychological or
economic harm or suffering to women and girls, including threats of such acts, coercion
or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private life,
including online, and notes the economic and social harm caused by such violence;
3.
Urges States to strongly condemn all forms of violence against all women
and girls, and reaffirms that they should not invoke any custom, tradition or religious
consideration to avoid their obligations with respect to its elimination and should
pursue, by all appropriate means and without delay, a policy of eliminating all forms
of violence against women, as set out in the Declaration on the Elimination of
Violence against Women;
4.
Calls upon States to address discrimination based on multiple and
intersecting factors, which places women and girls at greater risk of exploitation,
violence and abuse, and to take appropriate action to empower and protect them as
well as achieve their full enjoyment of human rights without discrimination;
5.
Also calls upon States to ensure that all human rights are respected, protected
and fulfilled while combating the pandemic and that their responses to the COVID-19
pandemic are in full compliance with their human rights obligations and commitments;
6.
Urges States to take effective action to eliminate all forms of violence
against women and girls and to address structural and underlying causes and risk
factors, including by:
(a)
Designing and implementing appropriate domestic policies that are aimed
at transforming discriminatory social attitudes and social and cultural patterns of
conduct that condone violence against women and girls with a view to preventing and
eliminating, in all public and private spheres, discrimination, gender stereotypes,
negative social norms, attitudes and behaviours, and unequal power relations by
which women and girls are regarded as subordinate to men and boys and that underlie
and perpetuate male domination;
(b)
Designing or strengthening and implementing measures that remove
remaining barriers to access to justice and enable all women and girls to have equal
access to justice systems, adapted and appropriate to their needs and access to
effective, timely, appropriate and victim-centred remedies;
A/RES/75/161
Intensification of efforts to prevent and eliminate
all forms of violence against women and girls
20-17298
6/10
(c)
Ensuring that services and programmes designed to protect women and girls
from violence are accessible to women and girls with disabilities, in particular those
living in institutionalized settings, who are the most vulnerable to violence, including by
ensuring that facilities are accessible and mainstreaming disability in materials and
training courses addressed to professionals working on violence against women;
(d)
Designing and implementing legislation and policies to prevent and
respond to gender-related killing of women and girls, including femicide, and to end
impunity for such cases;
(e)
Preventing, combating and eliminating trafficking in women and girls by
criminalizing all forms of trafficking in persons, as well as by raising public
awareness of the issue of trafficking in persons, particularly women and girls,
including the factors that make women and girls vulnerable to trafficking, and
eliminating the demand that fosters all forms of exploitation and forced labour, and
encouraging, where appropriate, the media to play a role with a view to eliminating
the exploitation of women and children;
(f)
Taking measures to empower women by, inter alia, strengthening their
economic autonomy and ensuring their full and equal participation in society and in
decision-making processes by adopting and implementing social and economic
policies that guarantee women full and equal access to quality education and training
and affordable and adequate public and social services, as well as full and equal access
to financial resources and decent work, and full and equal rights to own and have
access to and control over land and other property, and guaranteeing women’s and
girls’ inheritance rights, and taking further appropriate measures to address the
increasing rate of homelessness of and inadequate housing for women in order to
reduce their vulnerability to violence;
(g)
Implementing, in partnership with all relevant stakeholders, effective
violence prevention and response activities in schools and communities, educating
children from a young age regarding the importance of treating all people with dignity
and respect, and designing educational programmes and teaching materials that
support gender equality, respectful relationships and non-violent behaviour;
(h)
Engaging men and boys in challenging gender stereotypes and negative
social norms, attitudes and behaviours that underlie and perpetuate such violence and
in developing and implementing measures that reinforce non-violent actions, attitudes
and values, and encouraging men and boys, as agents and beneficiaries of change in
the achievement of gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls, to
take an active part and become their strategic partners and allies in efforts to prevent
and eliminate all forms of violence and discrimination against women and girls;
(i)
Developing policies and programmes with the support, where appropriate,
of international organizations, civil society and non-governmental organizations,
giving priority to formal, informal and non-formal education programmes, including
scientifically accurate and age-appropriate comprehensive education that is relevant
to cultural contexts, that provides adolescent girls and boys and young women and
men in and out of school, consistent with their evolving capacities, and with
appropriate direction and guidance from parents and legal guardians, with the best
interests of the child as their basic concern, information on sexual and reproductive
health and HIV prevention, gender equality and women’s empowerment, human
rights, physical, psychological and pubertal development and power in relationships
between women and men, to enable them to build self-esteem and foster informed
decision-making, communication and risk-reduction skills and to develop respectful
relationships, in full partnership with young persons, parents, legal guardians,
caregivers, educators and health-care providers, in order to, inter alia, enable them to
protect themselves from HIV infection and other risks;
Intensification of efforts to prevent and eliminate
all forms of violence against women and girls
A/RES/75/161
7/10
20-17298
(j)
Accelerating efforts to develop, review and strengthen inclusive and
gender-responsive policies, including by allocating adequate resources, to address the
structural and underlying causes of domestic violence against women and girls, to
overcome gender stereotypes and negative social norms, to encourage the media to
examine the impact of gender-role stereotypes, including those perpetuated by
commercial advertisements, that foster gender-based violence, sexual exploitation
and inequalities, to promote zero tolerance for such violence and to remove the stigma
of being a victim and survivor of violence, thus creating an enabling and accessible
environment where women and girls can easily report incidents of violence and make
use of the services available, including protection and assistance programmes;
(k)
Taking and implementing further measures to ensure that all officials,
including those in leadership positions, responsible for implementing policies and
programmes aimed at preventing violence against women and girls, protecting and
assisting victims and investigating and punishing acts of violence receive training on
gender equality and women’s and girls’ empowerment to raise their awareness of
gender-specific needs, as well as of the underlying causes and the short- and long-
term impact of violence against women and girls, and training on gender-responsive
investigation of crimes of violence against women and girls;
(l)
Removing barriers, including political, legal, cultural, social, economic,
institutional and religious ones, preventing women’s full, equal and effective
participation in leadership and political and other decision-making positions, taking
into account that promoting women to leadership positions may significantly reduce
the risk of violence against them;
(m) Taking effective, evidence-based measures to address institutional and
structural barriers, and negative gender stereotyping, as well as multiple and
intersecting forms of discrimination and violence against women and girls, in addition
to conducting awareness-raising and capacity-building, in collaboration with civil
society and women’s organizations and relevant United Nations entities;
(n)
Taking measures to improve the safety of girls at and on the way to and from
school, including by creating a safe and violence-free environment by improving
infrastructure, such as transportation, providing hygienic, separate and adequate sanitation
facilities, improved lighting, playgrounds and safe environments and adopting policies to
prevent, address and prohibit all forms of violence against women and girls, including
gender-based violence and sexual harassment, through all appropriate measures;
7.
Also urges States to take effective action to protect victims and survivors
of all forms of violence, including by:
(a)
Providing relevant, comprehensive and victim-centred legal protection to
support and assist victims of violence, including sexual harassment, in a gender-
sensitive manner, including victim and witness protection from reprisals for bringing
complaints or giving evidence, within the framework of their national legal systems,
including, as appropriate, legislative or other measures throughout the criminal and
civil justice system, as appropriate, paying particular attention to women and girls
facing multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination;
(b)
Establishing comprehensive, coordinated, interdisciplinary, accessible and
sustained multisectoral services, programmes and responses for all victims and
survivors of all forms of violence, including sexual harassment, that are adequately
resourced, that are, when possible, in a language that they understand and in which they
can communicate and that include effective and coordinated action by, as appropriate,
relevant stakeholders, such as the police and the justice sector, as well as providers of
legal aid services, health services, shelters, medical and psychological assistance,
A/RES/75/161
Intensification of efforts to prevent and eliminate
all forms of violence against women and girls
20-17298
8/10
counselling services and protection, and, in cases of girl victims, ensuring that such
services, programmes and responses take into account the best interests of the child;
(c)
Establishing and/or strengthening law enforcement, health and social
workers’ and counsellors’ response protocols and procedures to ensure that all
appropriate actions are coordinated and taken to protect and respond to the needs of
victims of violence, to identify acts of violence and to prevent their recurrence or
further acts of violence and physical and psychological harm, ensuring that services
are responsive to survivors’ needs, including by providing access to female health-
care providers, police officers and counsellors if requested, and ensuring and
maintaining the privacy of victims and the confidentiality of their reporting;
8.
Stresses the importance of ensuring that, in armed conflict and post-
conflict situations and in natural disaster situations, the prevention of and response to
all forms of violence against women and girls, including sexual and gender-based
violence, are prioritized and effectively addressed, including, as appropriate, through
the investigation, prosecution and punishment of perpetrators to end impunity, the
removal of barriers to women’s access to justice, the establishment of complaint and
reporting mechanisms and the provision of support to victims and survivors;
9.
Encourages States, in efforts to prevent and eliminate violence against
women and girls, to work in partnership with the private sector and civil society,
including women’s and community-based organizations, faith-based organizations,
feminist groups, women human rights defenders, girls’ and youth-led organizations
and trade, labour and other professional unions, as well as other relevant stakeholders;
10. Looks forward to the Generation Equality Forum, to be convened by the
United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women
(UN-Women) and co-chaired by France and Mexico, in partnership with civil society;
11.
Takes note of the adoption by the International Labour Organization of the
Violence and Harassment Convention, 2019 (No. 190);
12. Notes that efforts by civil society organizations in eliminating violence
against women and girls, including by assisting victims and survivors of violence to
have access to justice, are complementary to those of Governments, and in this regard
urges States to support, where possible, non-State-led initiatives aimed at promoting
gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls;
13. Calls upon Member States to integrate prevention, mitigation and response
efforts and reinforce plans and structures to counter the increase of sexual and gender-
based violence, including domestic violence and violence in digital contexts, and
harmful practices such as child, early and forced marriage as part of their COVID-19
responses, including by maintaining and designating protection shelters, hotlines and
help desks, and health and support services, as well as legal protection and support as
essential services for all women and girls;
14. Also calls upon Member States to adopt measures to recognize, reduce and
redistribute women’s and girls’ disproportionate share of unpaid care and domestic
work and the feminization of poverty, which is exacerbated by the COVID-19
pandemic, including through poverty eradication measures, labour policies, public
services and gender-responsive social protection programmes;
15. Urges States to ensure the promotion and protection of the human rights
of all women and their sexual and reproductive health, and reproductive rights in
accordance with the Programme of Action of the International Conference on
Population and Development, the Beijing Platform for Action and the outcome
documents of their review conferences, including through the development and
enforcement of policies and legal frameworks and the strengthening of health systems
Intensification of efforts to prevent and eliminate
all forms of violence against women and girls
A/RES/75/161
9/10
20-17298
that make universally accessible and available quality, comprehensive sexual and
reproductive health-care services, commodities, information and education, including
safe and effective methods of modern contraception, emergency contraception,
prevention programmes for adolescent pregnancy, maternal health care such as skilled
birth attendance and emergency obstetric care, which will reduce obstetric fistula and
other complications of pregnancy and delivery, safe abortion where such services are
permitted by national law, and prevention and treatment of reproductive tract
infections, sexually transmitted infections, HIV and reproductive cancers,
recognizing that human rights include the right to have control over and decide freely
and responsibly on matters related to their sexuality, including sexual and
reproductive health, free from coercion, discrimination and violence;
16.
Calls upon States to prevent, address and prohibit violence, including sexual
harassment, against women and girls in public and political life, including women in
leadership positions, journalists and other media workers and human rights defenders,
including through practical steps to prevent threats, harassment and violence, and to
combat impunity by ensuring that those responsible for violations and abuses, including
sexual and gender-based violence and threats, including in digital contexts, are promptly
brought to justice and held accountable through impartial investigations;
17. Urges States to ensure the full, equal and meaningful participation of
women, taking into account their diverse situations and conditions and, as
appropriate, girls, in the development, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of
policies, programmes and other initiatives in the justice sector and aimed at
preventing and responding to violence against women and girls;
18. Encourages States to systematically collect, analyse and disseminate data
disaggregated by sex, age and other relevant parameters, including, where
appropriate, administrative data from the police, the health sector, the judiciary and
other relevant sectors, to consider developing methodologies to collect data on all
forms of violence against women and girls, including sexual harassment, in, inter alia,
digital contexts, in order to monitor all forms of such violence, such as data on the
relationship between the perpetrator and the victim and geographical location, with
the involvement of national statistical offices and, where appropriate, in partnership
with other actors, including law enforcement agencies, in order to effectively review
and implement laws, policies, strategies and preventive and protective measures,
while ensuring and maintaining the privacy and the confidentiality of the victims;
19. Urges the international community, including the United Nations system
and, as appropriate, regional and subregional organizations, to support national efforts
to promote the empowerment of women and girls and gender equality in order to
enhance international efforts to eliminate violence against women and girls, through,
inter alia, official development assistance and other appropriate assistance, such as
facilitating the sharing of guidelines, methodologies and best practices, taking into
account national priorities;
20. Stresses the need to take the measures necessary to ensure that no
individual working within the United Nations system, including its agencies, funds,
programmes and entities, should be involved in sexual harassment, too often
perpetrated against those affected by humanitarian crises, and recognizes the efforts
of the United Nations system in this regard;
21.
Underscores the critical importance of protecting all persons affected by
humanitarian crises, in particular women and children, from any form of sexual
exploitation and abuse, including those perpetrated by humanitarian personnel,
welcomes the determination of the Secretary-General to fully implement the United
Nations policy of zero tolerance for sexual exploitation and abuse, stresses that victims
and survivors should be at the core of such efforts, notes the six core principles relating
A/RES/75/161
Intensification of efforts to prevent and eliminate
all forms of violence against women and girls
20-17298
10/10
to sexual exploitation and abuse adopted by the Inter-Agency Standing Committee, and
encourages Member States to make greater efforts to prevent and respond to sexual
exploitation and abuse and to ensure that perpetrators are held accountable;
22. Stresses that, within the United Nations system, adequate resources should
be assigned to UN-Women and other bodies, specialized agencies, funds and
programmes responsible for the promotion of gender equality, the empowerment of
women and the human rights of women and girls and to efforts throughout the United
Nations system to prevent and eliminate violence against women and girls, including
sexual harassment, calls upon the United Nations system to make the necessary
support and resources available, and takes note with appreciation in this regard of the
contribution of the Spotlight initiative;
23. Also stresses the importance of the Secretary-General’s Global Database
on Violence against Women, expresses its appreciation to all those States that have
provided the Database with information regarding, inter alia, their national policies
and legal frameworks aimed at eliminating violence against women and girls and
supporting victims of such violence, strongly encourages all States to regularly
provide updated information for the Database, and calls upon all relevant entities of
the United Nations system to continue to support States, at their request, in the
compilation and regular updating of pertinent information and to raise awareness of
the Database among all relevant stakeholders, including civil society;
24. Calls upon all United Nations bodies, entities, funds and programmes and
the specialized agencies and invites the Bretton Woods institutions to intensify their
efforts at all levels to eliminate all forms of violence against women and girls and to
better coordinate their work, with a view to increasing effective support for national
efforts to prevent and eliminate sexual harassment;
25. Requests the Special Rapporteur of the Human Rights Council on violence
against women, its causes and consequences to submit an annual report to the General
Assembly at its seventy-sixth and seventy-seventh sessions;
26. Requests the Secretary-General to submit to the General Assembly at its
seventy-seventh session a report containing:
(a)
Information provided by the United Nations bodies, funds and
programmes and the specialized agencies on their follow-up activities to implement
resolution 73/148 and the present resolution, including on their assistance to States in
their efforts to eliminate all forms of violence against women and girls, including in
the context of the COVID-19 pandemic;
(b)
Information provided by States on their follow-up activities to implement
the present resolution;
27.
Also requests the Secretary-General to present an oral report to the
Commission on the Status of Women at its sixty-fifth and sixty-sixth sessions, including
information provided by the United Nations bodies, funds and programmes and the
specialized agencies on recent follow-up activities to implement resolutions 71/170 and
73/148 and the present resolution, and urges United Nations bodies, entities, funds and
programmes and the specialized agencies to contribute promptly to that report;
28. Decides to continue its consideration of the elimination of all forms of
violence against women and girls at its seventy-seventh session under the item
entitled “Advancement of women”.
46th plenary meeting
16 December 2020
▶ Cite this page
UN Project. “A/RES/75/161.” UN Project, https://un-project.org/votes/resolution/A-RES-75-161/. Accessed .