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The importance of language: Why feminists are concerned about the wording in the Asia-Pacific Beijing+20 Ministerial Declaration 

The negotiations between States at the United Nations on documents and declarations are agreed upon by consensus and it all comes down to language. An issue where language is left out can result in the loss of protection in that area. Conversely, if language on a certain issue is included, civil society has one more tool to advocate with their governments to further those areas. It also means that States will have to pledge resources and funding for them to comply with their international commitments.

The 1995 World Conference on Women in Beijing did exactly that. At Beijing governments drew on and moved beyond the language they agreed upon at earlier international conferences, including the 1985 Women’s World Conference. It also reinforced some of the language that first appeared in the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development (ICPD). Opponents to certain issues, such as family planning and abortion, did everything in their power to stop their governments from including language on that. Regardless, States reached a consensus and included these themes. They also furthered language on sexual and reproductive health and gender equality in the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action (BPfA).

The recent Beijing+20 Review shows that the struggle to transform realities through language continues. Some governments have welcomed progressive language on issues, whilst others are still hesitant to move forward on emerging concerns. In other cases some governments still want to hold on to agreements dated twenty years ago and have even attempted to step away and back out from previous consensus. This led to a washed down final Ministerial Declaration that left out important concerns for women in the Asia and Pacific region.

The approved Asian and Pacific Ministerial Declaration on Advancing Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment mentioned the need to provide further political space to young women and women with disabilities, but made no reference to the rights of women migrant workers, including migrant domestic workers—a roll back on Beijing commitments and a lack of recognition for what is one of the largest issues in the region. States also tried to selectively edit language in the Declaration to try to omit key phrases already agreed on globally related to women’s diverse experience of families and women’s roles going beyond the family sphere.

“The need to reach consensus resulted in the lowest common denominator in many cases, with the final regional Declaration sadly reflecting an erosion of proposed, progressive language and diminished commitments in a range of areas,” reads the Civil Society Steering Committee statement on the approved Declaration.

Below are some of the other issues that civil society organizations identified were left out from the agreed Declaration:

Read the Statement by the Civil Society Steering Committee on the Declaration.