IntLawGrrls |
Posted: 07 Dec 2010 03:00 AM PST ![]() The November 17 letter to U.S. Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) by the former Justice, who served from 1981 to 2006, deserves quotation at length. Here goes: In my view, this is an important treaty, and it is appropriate that it be considered by the Senate. CEDAW currently has 186 countries which have ratified, including our closest allies. The United States is the only country to have signed, but not ratified, the Convention. Our non-ratification leaves us in the company of the few remaining non-party countries, including Iran and the Sudan. This is not the company we normally keep, and this fact should inform the Senate's consideration of CEDAW.Next Senate steps regarding efforts toward U.S. ratification of the almost 31-year-old treaty (prior IntLawGrrls posts) are uncertain: a post-hearing Google search points to the same pro and con camps as always. |
Posted: 07 Dec 2010 01:04 AM PST ![]() ... 1970 (40 years ago today), at Canada's House of Commons in Ottawa, the nearly 500-page Report of the Royal Commission on the Status of Women in Canada was presented. The 167 recommendations in the report (left) -- on, for example, maternity leave, contraception, family law, child care, and pensions -- "were based on fundamental principles which assumed that equality of opportunity for Canadian men and women was possible, desirable and ethically necessary." (photo credit) Many, but not all, of the recommendations eventually would be implemented. (Prior December 7 posts are here, here, and here.) |
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