Stakeholder Engagement Meeting Notes Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)

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Stakeholder Engagement Meeting Notes Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) Date & location: International convention engagement relates to: Documents referenced: Attendance: 28 February 2018 Human Rights Commission (HRC) Office, Auckland Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) CEDAW Concluding Observations from 7 th periodic review of NZ (2012) CEDAW List of issues for 8 th periodic report of NZ NZ Government 8 th periodic report (June 2016) HRC s upcoming CEDAW consultations Submission template 40 people including representatives from WEP s, Rural Women NZ, Pacific Women s Watch, NZ Prostitutes Collective, PSA, Amnesty International NZ, World Vision, Auckland University, Shine, Auckland Women s Centre and the YWCA. A. Background to meeting: 1. In July 2018, the Committee for CEDAW will review how New Zealand is doing under the Convention. 2. On 28 February 2018, the HRC held a consultation meeting with stakeholders to inform its report to the Committee. 3. Approximately 40 people attended the consultation, including representatives from a number of organisations. 4. A list of issues discussed and minutes from the meeting are provided below. B. Main issues raised: 1. The HRC identified six key issues: a. Violence and abuse b. Data collection c. Employment d. Human trafficking e. Access to healthcare f. Poverty 2. Participants suggested four additional issues: 1

C. Meeting Notes a. Immigrant women s rights b. Financial security c. Gender impact assessment d. Reproductive / labour rights 1. Violence and abuse a. Family Court system and treatment of women by Judges i. Failure to take a victim centered approach ii. Misunderstanding of circumstances of women iii. Lack of access to free legal services iv. Lack of trained specialist family court advisors on violence and abuse b. Women abuse against women is often ignored, but is occurring in NZ c. Violence against immigrant women - a group that is often unheard and victimized d. Need for Maori and Pasifika women to be heard e. Barriers for Maori in accessing courts f. Collaboration and information sharing between groups who work on violence and abuse needed currently a business model approach is taken resulting in groups competing with each other rather than sharing information g. Information on domestic violence and abuse needs to be offered to women, rather than telling them what to do h. Intersectional approach needed to recognize differences between women and issues particular to each group particularly important for Maori where the history of colonisation needs to be kept in mind when dealing with issues that affect them i. Lack of funding of good researchers and academics j. Research needed on connection between poverty and women s suicide k. Integration of disabled women, mental illness and substance abuse l. Workplace abusive relationships when couples working together m. Police insensitive when dealing with sexual assault and rape n. Enact a comprehensive national strategy required across all government agencies to address violence and abuse; and to address gender equity and resourcing (look at approach of the Victoria, Australia which used a comprehensive approach across all agencies) o. Train police, immigration, counsellors, CYFs workers on gendered approach to violence and abuse, with a particular emphasis on an intersectional point of view and consent p. Improve funding to NGOs that work on issues relating to domestic violence and abuse 2

2. Poverty q. Move focus to primary prevention involving education in schools and move away from gendered binaries in primary prevention strategies r. Provide list of NGOs providers, counsellors that work on domestic violence and abuse s. Support the International Labour Organisation Convention to stop Violence against Women and Men in the World of Work a. Importance needs to be placed on children s learning environment at home and at school and cyclical impact on poverty b. Female students living in poverty at university c. Working poor - full time workers who live in poverty (30% of those living in poverty) d. Maori and Pacifica community disproportionately affected i. Overrepresentation in prisons ii. Individualism destroying whanau and support systems e. Provide a definition of poverty to address material deprivation f. Address systemic racism that feeds into poverty g. Engage with women on areas that affect them, including people live in poverty, Rainbow and Maori groups h. Ensure inter-ministry collaboration for best long-term effective strategies 3. Data Collection a. Important because need evidence to make arguments and push for change b. Allows for gender impact analysis of legislation c. Gender impact analysis needed in terms of housing no mention of this in most recent report on housing situation d. Census i. Only records those in households so homeless not recorded ii. Issues for rural women now that census is digital lack of internet; need to ensure process so that women receive hard copy on time iii. Refugee women not represented iv. No question regarding SOGI-SIC community despite this being raised for years e. National health index numbers in place, but lack of communication between doctors, GPs, hospitals etc. f. NZ only country where people have to publish public domain name puts women at risk g. Not all women report violence and abuse to police so need to ensure data is collected from them 3

h. Rural impact assessment needed what is rural and who is rural? Need to stop guess work i. Conduct gender impact analysis regarding housing and rural women j. Ensure homeless and refugee women are recorded in census data k. Ensure comprehensive collection of data on violence and abuse against women 4. Employment a. Living wage needs to be extended to precarious work b. Under new employment law, 90-day trial period continues to apply to employers will with less than 20 employees, however women in this group are still vulnerable in the work place c. Need for child care to be funded d. Equal pay legislation to enable comparators across sectors e. Need to pass legislation to stop structural discrimination and to change societal thinking that men and women are different f. Traditional work done by women should be paid e.g. caring for children, elderly, house work g. Previous CEDAW recommendations still haven t been enacted i. Temporary special measures: 1. conversation needed on quotas 2. could move away from quotas by calling for proportionate representation of gender groups in organsiations (keeps away from merit arguments) 3. e.g. Sovereign Insurance staff reflect clients and staff make up 4. need for legislation on this ii. Paid parental leave 1. ability for men and women to share parental leave 2. incentives needed for men to share parental leave i.e. look at Swedish example h. Leadership committees and boards need to proportionately represent organizations i. Deconstructing gender as a means of distinguishing between access to resources j. Ensure living wage is extended to precarious work and that tradition work carried out by women e.g. caring for children, elderly, house work is paid k. Remove 90-day trial period for employers with less than 20 staff l. Ensure further funding for child care m. Ensure equal pay legislation enables comparators across sectors 4

n. Legislate to stop structural discrimination and to change societal thinking that men and women are different o. Act on previous CEDAW recommendations regarding temporary special measures and paid parental leave for men p. Ensure women are represented proportionately on leadership committees and boards 5. Health Care a. Rural women i. Access to healthcare for rural women: long waiting times; centralisation of health care leading to little or no care for rural community; elderly women and widows particularly affected, women who don t drive are unable to get to appointments ii. Those especially affected are the elderly, mentally ill and those with disabilities iii. Need attitude shift in terms of alternative medicines iv. Acknowledgment of experience of rural community and experience of how to survive living outside of cities climate and environmental issues v. A lot of emphasis being placed on mental health of rural men, but women are the ones holding community together and need to be strengthened b. Need to see health issues through a disability lens e.g. breast screening for disabled women c. Attitudes of those treating those with mental health issues important need for empathy d. Lack of disability data in relation to sexual and physical abuse, mental abuse, poverty, health care access; access to justice e. Ensure rural women have access to adequate healthcare, in particular the elderly, mentally ill and people with disabilities f. Engage with rural community on strategies for surviving outside of cities in relation to climate change and environmental issues g. Collect data on physical, mental and sexual abuse against women, poverty, access to health care and access to justice h. Ensure that health issues for women with disabilities are seen through a disability lens 6. Human trafficking and immigrant women a. Labour exploitation major issue i. International students, rainbow immigrants and refugees are all affected b. Exploitative practices vs. trafficking (global definitions differ) i. Long hours ii. Need permanent residency or citizenship to legally be a sex worker 5

iii. Definition trafficking needed c. Migrant sex workers i. Major problem around sex workers on student, work, or temporary visa because it is illegal it places these workers in a vulnerable position as they are unable to go to the police when they are forced into this work ii. Youth sex workers iii. NZPC research immigrant sex workers: no evidence of trafficking; migrants working based on choice d. Human trafficking i. Agricultural industries ii. Forced marriage, dowry abuse iii. Dowry abuse e. FGM all forms should be illegal before 18 years of age f. Lack of up to date government information i. NZ Plan of Action not updated since 2009 ii. Data needed on child trafficking as this is happening in NZ iii. MBIE resource on immigrant workers hasn t been updated since 2009 g. Global Alliance Trafficking made important recommendations in report in relation migrant sex workers in NZ, which should be considered by the government h. Domestic trafficking is an extension of gender based violence when girls or women are forced into sex work or prostitution but silenced research been done that government needs to look at i. Collate legislation, research, information, organisations on immigrant rights j. Amend section 19 of the PRA and section 157 and 159 of the Immigration Act to decriminalize migrant sex work k. Conduct robust research on the agencies and organisations working with victims of human trafficking and immigrant women l. Train immigration officials to identify situations of human trafficking and issues particular to migrant women. 6