Gender Equality
Breve descripción del grupo de trabajo sobre las desapariciones forzadas o involuntarias y de la declaración de 1992
El Grupo de Trabajo fue establecido por la Comisión de Derechos Humanos en su resolución 20 (XXXVI) con el mandato de examinar cuestiones relativas a las desapariciones forzadas o involuntarias de personas.
Foreword
In an era in which digital transformation is fast reshaping the global economy, having the ability to harness the potential of e-commerce and digital trade is essential for developing countries.
El comité contra la desaparición forzada y sus funciones
La supervisión de la aplicación de la Convención por los Estados partes se confía al Comité contra la Desaparición Forzada, que fue establecido en virtud del artículo 26 de la Convención y que está compuesto por 10 expertos independientes.
Introducción a la convención
La Convención es el primer instrumento de derechos humanos jurídicamente vinculante de ámbito universal relativo a la desaparición forzada.
Conclusions
Access to legal identity remains a challenge for women, girls and individuals of different SOGIESC, as evidenced by the barriers outlined in this report. Despite legislative progress promoting gender equality, gaps in enforcement, coupled with institutional inefficiencies and deeply ingrained sociocultural norms, continue to hinder women’s ability to obtain identity documents and register vital life events.
Understanding what works
More than one in five participants (23 per cent) reported being aware of a solution/s to gender inequality in the space sector that worked.
Annex I: Methodology
This Gender Alert was compiled using data and analysis gathered through the consultation cycle undertaken jointly with UNAMA and IOM – and research initiatives.
Demographic profile of detainees
As of July 2024, camp management estimated the population consisted of 41,032 individuals.
Introduction
Understanding women’s experiences and representation in the space sector is vital.
Approach and methodology
The methodology used in the study is a mixed methods approach (quantitative and qualitative).
Introduction
As of December 2024, the wars in Iraq and Syria that led to the rise of the Islamic State (ISIL/Da’esh)4 have left tens of thousands of men, women, and children indefinitely and arbitrarily detained in “camps” in northeast Syria.
Conclusions
The following section presents the findings and conclusions of the study, rooted in the evidence provided through the lived experiences, constraints, and motivations of those arbitrarily detained in Al-Hol.
Introduction
This analysis triangulates women’s testimonies and key-informant interviews with secondary literature on gender and food security in Sudan.
Foreword from the executive director
AIDS is not over.Together, we must overcome disruption and transform the AIDS response.
Towards a sustainable HIV response: reaffirming global solidarity
Shared responsibility and global solidarity have been the foundations on which the global HIV response has achieved its historic reductions in numbers of new HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths. As we transition to a new era of solidarity, shared responsibility and global solidarity will remain essential to hopes for ending AIDS. Unless the world pulls together to overcome the growing financing, human rights and programmatic challenges confronting the HIV response, we will miss the opportunity to end AIDS as a public health threat.
The HIV response is at risk
Progress in the global HIV response continued in 2024, although it was uneven and fell short of global AIDS 2025 and 2030 targets. The 1.3 million people newly acquiring HIV in 2024 was 40% lower than in 2010, and the number of AIDS-related deaths (630 000 in 2024) has continued to fall—by 54% since 2010 and by 15% since 2020.
