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CEDAW


Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women
CEDAW Resources Websites on CEDAW:

Members, Urge Your Senators to Ratify CEDAW Today!

Contact your Senator (whether for, against, or uncommitted) and encourage him/her to support the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination (CEDAW).

Contact your Senator if he/she is a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee (SFRC). Encourage them to urge the SFRC's leadership, Joseph Biden (D-DE) to move CEDAW out of the SFRC to the floor for a vote this Congress.

For more information and suggestions to ensure the ratification of CEDAW,
click here or visit www.womenstreaty.org.


Senate Moves on Treaty for the Rights of Women

At a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing on Thursday, June 13, the Committee considered, for the first time since 1994, U. S. ratification of the Treaty for the Rights of Women, or CEDAW (Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women).

The treaty, aimed at providing a universal standard for the rights of women, promotes the fair treatment of women in education, employment, health care, marriage, politics, law, and other areas. Adopted by the

U. N. General Assembly in 1979, CEDAW was signed by President Jimmy Carter in 1980. Although CEDAW has been ratified by 169 countries to date, the United States has yet to act on it.

Advocates are urging the United States, as a leader in promoting international human rights, to ratify CEDAW as a demonstration to the international community its commitment to protecting human rights and advancing the international rule of law.

Senator Joseph Biden (D-DE), Chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, is pushing for Senate ratification this year. "It is long past time we join the rest of the world" in support of the treaty, he said at the Committee hearing, passing the gavel to Sen. Barbara Boxer to chair the hearing in recognition of her longtime support of the treaty in the Senate.

"We are standing with non-ratifying countries like Syria, Iran, and Somalia," Boxer stated. "In my opinion, this is a disgrace."

A representative panel of House members, including Carolyn Maloney (D-NY), Juanita Millender-McDonald (D-CA), Constance Morella (R-MD), and Lynn Woolsey (D-CA), joined Boxer in urging U. S. ratification of CEDAW.

Other witnesses who testified in support of the Treaty included Harold Koh, Professor at Yale University and former Assistant Secretary of State for Human Rights, Juliette McLennan, former U. S. Representative to the UN Commission on the Status of Women, and Jane E. Smith, chief executive officer of Business and Professional Women/USA.

The State Department recommended ratification of the treaty last February, stating that it is "generally desirable" and "should be approved."

The American Bar Association (ABA) officially has supported U. S. ratification of CEDAW since 1984, when the House of Delegates adopted its ratification policy, and reaffirmed its position in 1996, following the 1995 Beijing World Conference on Women. Father Robert F. Drinan testified on behalf of the ABA at the last Senate hearing. This year, the ABA provided a written statement of support at the hearing, and extended comments will be submitted for the record.

Members can help encourage a timely vote out of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and urge Senate approval of ratification this year by to contacting Senators directly, especially those on the Foreign Relations Committee, to express their support for ratification. An automated system for sending e-mail messages to Senators and Administration officials is available at www.womenstreaty.org.

The Section’s Women’s Rights Committee is planning a CEDAW "rally for ratification" during the 2002 ABA Annual Meeting in Washington, D. C., in August. For more information on how to become involved in the Section’s work on CEDAW ratification, please contact the Section office (tel.: 202/662-1030) or visit the Section website (www.abanet.org/irr).