General Assembly resolution
48/104 of 20 December 1993
The General Assembly,
Recognizing the urgent need
for the universal application to women of
the rights and principles with regard to
equality, security, liberty, integrity and
dignity of all human beings,
Noting that those rights and
principles are enshrined in international
instruments, including the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights, 1/ the
International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, 2/ the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights, 2/ the Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
3/ and the Convention against Torture and
Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment
or Punishment, 4/
Recognizing that effective
implementation of the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women would contribute to the
elimination of violence against women and
that the Declaration on the Elimination of
Violence against Women, set forth in the
present resolution, will strengthen and
complement that process,
___________
1/
Resolution 217 A (III).
2/ See resolution 2200 A
(XXI), annex.
3/ Resolution 34/180, annex.
4/ Resolution 39/46, annex.
Concerned that violence
against women is an obstacle to the
achievement of equality, development and
peace, as recognized in the Nairobi
Forward-looking Strategies for the
Advancement of Women, 5/ in which a set of
measures to combat violence against women
was recommended, and to the full
implementation of the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women,
Affirming that violence
against women constitutes a violation of the
rights and fundamental freedoms of women and
impairs or nullifies their enjoyment of
those rights and freedoms, and concerned
about the long-standing failure to protect
and promote those rights and freedoms in the
case of violence against women,
Recognizing that violence
against women is a manifestation of
historically unequal power relations between
men and women, which have led to domination
over and discrimination against women by men
and to the prevention of the full
advancement of women, and that violence
against women is one of the crucial social
mechanisms by which women are forced into a
subordinate position compared with men,
Concerned that some groups of
women, such as women belonging to minority
groups, indigenous women, refugee women,
migrant women, women living in rural or
remote communities, destitute women, women
in institutions or in detention, female
children, women with disabilities, elderly
women and women in situations of armed
conflict, are especially vulnerable to
violence,
Recalling the conclusion in
paragraph 23 of the annex to Economic and
Social Council resolution 1990/15 of 24 May
1990 that the recognition that violence
against women in the family and society was
pervasive and cut across lines of income,
class and culture had to be matched by
urgent and effective steps to eliminate its
incidence,
Recalling also Economic and
Social Council resolution 1991/18 of 30 May
1991, in which the Council recommended the
development of a framework for an
international instrument that would address
explicitly the issue of violence against
women,
Welcoming the role that
women's movements are playing in drawing
increasing attention to the nature, severity
and magnitude of the problem of violence
against women,
Alarmed
that opportunities for women to
achieve legal, social, political and
economic equality in society are limited,
inter alia, by
continuing and
endemic violence,
__________
5/ Report of the World
Conference to Review and Appraise the
Achievements of the United Nations Decade
for Women: Equality, Development and Peace,
Nairobi, 15-26 July 1985 (United Nations
publication, Sales No.
E.85.IV.10), chap.
I, sect. A.
Convinced that in the light
of the above there is a need for a clear and
comprehensive definition of violence against
women, a clear statement of the rights to be
applied to ensure the elimination of
violence against women in all its forms, a
commitment by States in respect of their
responsibilities, and a commitment by the
international community at large to the
elimination of violence against women,
Solemnly proclaims the
following Declaration on the Elimination of
Violence against Women and urges that every
effort be made so that it becomes generally
known and respected:
Article 1
For the purposes of this
Declaration, the term "violence against
women" means any act of gender-based
violence that results in, or is likely to
result in, physical, sexual or psychological
harm or suffering to women, including
threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary
deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in
public or in private life.
Article 2
Violence against women shall
be understood to encompass, but not be
limited to, the following:
(a) Physical, sexual and
psychological violence occurring in the
family, including battering, sexual abuse of
female children in the household,
dowry-related violence, marital rape, female
genital mutilation and other traditional
practices harmful to women, non-spousal
violence and violence related to
exploitation;
(b) Physical, sexual and
psychological violence occurring within the
general community, including rape, sexual
abuse, sexual harassment and intimidation at
work, in educational institutions and
elsewhere, trafficking in women and forced
prostitution;
(c) Physical, sexual and
psychological violence perpetrated or
condoned by the State, wherever it occurs.
Article 3
Women are entitled to the
equal enjoyment and protection of all human
rights and fundamental freedoms in the
political, economic, social, cultural,
civil or any
other field. These rights include, inter
alia:
(a) The right to life; 6/
(b) The right to equality; 7/
_____________
6/ Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, article 3; and International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
article 6.
7/ International Covenant on
Civil and Political Rights, article 26.
(c) The right to liberty and
security of person; 8/
(d) The right to equal
protection under the law; 7/
(e) The right to be free from
all forms of discrimination; 7/
(f) The right to the highest
standard attainable of physical and mental
health; 9/
(g) The right to just and
favourable
conditions of work; 10/
(h) The right not to be
subjected to torture, or other cruel,
inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment. 11/
Article 4
States should condemn
violence against women and should not invoke
any custom, tradition or religious
consideration to avoid their obligations
with respect to its elimination. States
should pursue by all appropriate means and
without delay a policy of eliminating
violence against women and, to this end,
should:
(a)
Consider, where they have not yet done so,
ratifying or acceding to the Convention on
the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women or withdrawing
reservations to that Convention;
(b) Refrain from engaging in
violence against women;
(c)
Exercise due diligence to prevent,
investigate and, in accordance with national
legislation, punish acts of violence against
women, whether those acts are perpetrated by
the State or by private persons;
_____________
8/ Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, article 3; and International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
article 9.
9/ International Covenant on
Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
article 12.
10/ Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, article 23; and International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights, articles 6 and 7.
11/ Universal Declaration of
Human Rights, article 5; International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
article 7; and Convention against Torture
and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading
Treatment or Punishment.
(d) Develop penal, civil,
labour and
administrative sanctions in domestic
legislation to punish and redress the wrongs
caused to women who are subjected to
violence; women who are subjected to
violence should be provided with access to
the mechanisms of justice and, as provided
for by national legislation, to just and
effective remedies for the harm that they
have suffered; States should also inform
women of their rights in seeking redress
through such mechanisms;
(e) Consider the possibility
of developing national plans of action to
promote the protection of women against any
form of violence, or to include provisions
for that purpose in plans already existing,
taking into account, as appropriate, such
cooperation as can be provided by
non-governmental organizations, particularly
those concerned with the issue of violence
against women;
(f) Develop, in a
comprehensive way, preventive approaches and
all those measures of a legal, political,
administrative and cultural nature that
promote the protection of women against any
form of violence, and ensure that the
re-victimization of women does not occur
because of laws insensitive to gender
considerations, enforcement practices or
other interventions;
(g) Work to ensure, to the
maximum extent feasible in the light of
their available resources and, where needed,
within the framework of international
cooperation, that women subjected to
violence and, where appropriate, their
children have specialized assistance, such
as rehabilitation, assistance in child care
and maintenance, treatment,
counselling, and
health and social services, facilities and
programmes, as
well as support structures, and should take
all other appropriate measures to promote
their safety and physical and psychological
rehabilitation;
(h) Include in government
budgets adequate resources for their
activities related to the elimination of
violence against women;
(i)
Take measures to ensure that law enforcement
officers and public officials responsible
for implementing policies to prevent,
investigate and punish violence against
women receive training to sensitize them to
the needs of women;
(j) Adopt all appropriate
measures, especially in the field of
education, to modify the social and cultural
patterns of conduct of men and women and to
eliminate prejudices, customary practices
and all other practices based on the idea of
the inferiority or superiority of either of
the sexes and on stereotyped roles for men
and women;
(k) Promote research, collect
data and compile statistics, especially
concerning domestic violence, relating to
the prevalence of different forms of
violence against women and encourage
research on the causes, nature, seriousness
and consequences of violence against women
and on the effectiveness of measures
implemented to prevent and redress violence
against women; those statistics and findings
of the research will be made public;
(l) Adopt measures directed
towards the elimination of violence against
women who are especially vulnerable to
violence;
(m) Include, in submitting
reports as required under relevant human
rights instruments of the United Nations,
information pertaining to violence against
women and measures taken to implement the
present Declaration;
(n) Encourage the development
of appropriate guidelines to assist in the
implementation of the principles set forth
in the present Declaration;
(o) Recognize the important
role of the women's movement and
non-governmental organizations world wide in
raising awareness and alleviating the
problem of violence against women;
(p) Facilitate and enhance
the work of the women's movement and
non-governmental organizations and cooperate
with them at local, national and regional
levels;
(q) Encourage
intergovernmental regional organizations of
which they are members to include the
elimination of violence against women in
their programmes,
as appropriate.
Article 5
The organs and specialized
agencies of the United Nations system
should, within their respective fields of
competence, contribute to the recognition
and realization of the rights and the
principles set forth in the present
Declaration and, to this end, should, inter
alia:
(a) Foster international and
regional cooperation with a view to defining
regional strategies for combating violence,
exchanging experiences and financing
programmes
relating to the elimination of violence
against women;
(b) Promote meetings and
seminars with the aim of creating and
raising awareness among all persons of the
issue of the elimination of violence against
women;
(c) Foster coordination and
exchange within the United Nations system
between human rights treaty bodies to
address the issue of violence against women
effectively;
(d) Include in analyses
prepared by organizations and bodies of the
United Nations system of social trends and
problems, such as the periodic reports on
the world social situation, examination of
trends in violence against women;
(e) Encourage coordination
between organizations and bodies of the
United Nations system to incorporate the
issue of violence against women into ongoing
programmes,
especially with reference to groups of women
particularly vulnerable to violence;
(f) Promote the formulation
of guidelines or manuals relating to
violence against women, taking into account
the measures referred to in the present
Declaration;
(g) Consider the issue of the
elimination of violence against women, as
appropriate, in fulfilling their mandates
with respect to the implementation of human
rights instruments;
(h) Cooperate with
non-governmental organizations in addressing
the issue of violence against women.
Article 6
Nothing in the present
Declaration shall affect any provision that
is more conducive to the elimination of
violence against women that may be contained
in the legislation of a State or in any
international convention, treaty or other
instrument in force in a State.