Huvudbild för Mänskliga Rättighetsdagarna i Uppsala
Profilbild för Rural and Indigenous Women rights – improved by peace agreement?

Rural and Indigenous Women rights – improved by peace agreement? Har passerat

Tisdag 20 april 2021 14:00 - 15:00 3

Utställare: Fonden för mänskliga rättigheter

Moderator: Josefina Skerk
Paneldeltagare: Leilani Farha, Rocio Caballero Culma, Rocio Campos, Rosa María Mateus

There are several causes behind the internal displacement in Colombia, the most important being the concentration of land and the struggle for control of productive lands. Nearly eight million people have been forced to abandon their territories as a result of the serious human rights violations to which they have been exposed. It is estimated that out of the affected population, 50% are women and 18% belong to ethnic minorities. The situation of displacement and the few possibilities of returning to their lands increase the vulnerability of those affected.

The right to territory constitutes the basis for access to food, housing and development for indigenous and rural communities. The peace agreement signed by the Colombian government and the FARC in 2016 was described as a great success for the participation of women in peace processes, but the implementation of the agreements with a gender perspective and the ethnic chapter of the peace agreement is a great challenge for the Colombian state and society. In other peace processes around the world, women and indigenous communities have often been overlooked as beneficiaries of land reforms and as owners of agricultural land. This has had far-reaching negative consequences for the socio-economic status and independence of women and indigenous peoples. Colombia has the opportunity to do things differently.

How interpret the interrelation of the right to housing and the right to territory? How is the right to housing and agricultural land guaranteed in Colombia within the framework of the implementation of the peace accords? What is the balance after four years of implementation of the agreements? What does the future hold for rural women and the indigenous peoples of Colombia? These are some of the topics that will be addressed during the event. Chat here with the panelist inmediately after the live transmission: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86555217488?pwd=VlJ0R3dtQkZlOHd2bFc2enE2S0J3dz09 Password: 428349 

Arrangör(er)

MR-Fonden, Act Svenska Kyrkan, Diakonia och Colombiagruppen

Form

Seminarium

Prioriterade målgrupper (max 3)

Studenter vid högskola/universitet
Civilsamhälle
Tjänstepersoner vid statliga myndigheter/departement
Förtroendevalda
Intresserad allmänhet

Språk

Engelska

Tolkningsalternativ

Skrivtolkas / Har undertext

Digitalt format

Förinspelat program

Föreläsare

Josefina Skerk Moderator

Former Vice President of the Sami Parliament in Sweden and Managing Director at Sijti Jarnge, The Sami Culture and Development Center.

Profilbild för Leilani Farha

Leilani Farha Paneldeltagare

Leilani Farga
Canadian lawyer who is the Global Director of THE SHIFT, a housing initiative. Between June 2014 and April 2020, she was the United Nations special rapporteur on adequate housing. In her tenure as Special Rapporteur, she has focused on economic inequality and an absence of effective political representation for the poor as causes of homelessness or inadequate accommodation.

Rocio Caballero Culma Paneldeltagare

Indigenous Pijao, this lawyer and human rights defender is a member of the Community of Lawyers “AKUBADAURA”, which supports the demands and defence of the indigenous´ territories in the departments of Chocó and Guaviare. She furthermore encourages and promotes the implementation of the peace agreements ethnic’s charter.

Rocio Campos Paneldeltagare

Social leader. Member of the victims’ organisation Móvice. Representative of victims of crimes committed by the state in Magdalena Medio

Rosa María Mateus Paneldeltagare

Member of The Lawyers Collectiv “José Alvear Restrepo” CAJAR, which territory defence area promotes environmental justice and legally represents vulnerable populations, such as indigenous, afro, and peasant communities in fifteen departments in Colombia. CAJAR follows the implementation of the peace agreement.