The Executive Director of the UN Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women), Michelle Bachelet said that the outcome document must highlight women’s roles throughout the entire text, as their participation permeates all aspects of sustainable development, including agriculture, education, environmental management and decision-making, among others. “We cannot afford to leave women marginalized,” she stated. “This is not sustainable. This social exclusion of women is not only hurting women, it is hurting all of us.”
While there is strong language about women empowerment included in Paragraph 8 of the latest draft of “The Future We Want,” the draft document fails to recognize that reproductive rights are critical to the achievement of sustainable development. It ignores young women and men’s rights to choose when and if they want to have children, to have a safe sex life, and to access reproductive health care. It is impossible to address urgent environmental concerns and strategies for sustainable development if the path to achievement does not include gender equality and women’s empowerment.
Brazilian feminists, along with several civil society organizations, mobilized quickly to respond to the conference discussions, and RH Reality Check published a blog post that highlighted the lack of commitment towards women’s and human rights.

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