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Event

Defending Women Cultural Rights Defenders - Event Postponed

March 12, 2020

UPDATE: Due to the COVID-19 outbreak, the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women has been reduced to a one-day session and the side-events have been postponed to a later date. 

A side event during United Nations Commission on the Status of Women

Thursday, March 12, 2020
10:30 am – 12:30 pm

Bahá’i International Community’s United Nations Office
866 United Nations Plaza #120, New York, NY 10017

Women human rights defenders play critical roles in the defense of cultural rights, including the right to take part in cultural life without discrimination. They promote feminist approaches to cultures, and the transformative and empowering nature of equality in cultural rights that can also lead to the realization of other human rights. The UN Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights, Karima Bennoune, just published a report on cultural rights defenders—human rights defenders who defend cultural rights—to help increase the attention and assistance they receive.

Please join Karima Bennoune, Director of the Artists at Risk Connection (ARC) at PEN America Julie Trébault, Cynthia Rothschild, and Bani Dugal for a discussion about the report and strategies for implementing its recommendations so as to increase international support for women cultural rights defenders.

The event is organized in partnership with the UN Special Rapporteur in the field of cultural rights, the Women Human Rights Defenders International Coalition and the Baha'i International Community

This event is free and open to the public. Please RSVP to arc@pen.org with your name and number of guests.

Speakers

Karima Bennoune was appointed UN special rapporteur in the field of cultural rights in October 2015. Bennoune is a professor of international law at the University of California–Davis School of Law. She grew up in Algeria and the United States. Bennoune has worked in the field of human rights for more than 20 years, including with governments and non-governmental organizations, and has carried out field missions, trial observation, election observation, and research in many regions of the world. She has also served as a consultant for UNESCO.    

Bani Dugal is the principal representative of the Bahá’i International Community to the United Nations. She is currently the vice-chair of the steering committee of the NGO working group on the Security Council, co-chair of the Multi-Faith Advisory Council to the UN Inter-Agency Task Force for Religion and Development, and co-president and member of the World Council of Religions for Peace. Dugal previously served as president of the NGO Committee on Freedom of Religion or Belief, chair of the NGO Committee on the Status of Women, co-facilitator of the UN Gender Equality Architecture Reform Campaign (GEAR), co-facilitator of the Faith and Feminism Working Group, and chair of the Global Forum of the NGO Committee on UNICEF, among many other positions she has held at the UN in New York.  

Cynthia Rothschild is an independent activist and consultant with a focus on United Nations advocacy and policy, sexual rights, LGBT issues, HIV & AIDS, and women human rights defenders. A human rights, sexual rights, and feminist activist for over 20 years, she has worked with global networks and NGOs within and outside the U.S., including the Center for Women’s Global Leadership (where she was the senior policy advisor from 2005–2009), and a number of women’s and reproductive rights groups and AIDS service organizations. Cynthia is a trainer and facilitator, and has also supported NGOs in organizational development projects, including in work related to UN advocacy at the Human Rights Council and the Commission on the Status of Women. In 2011 and in 2015, Cynthia consulted with the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), where she made significant contributions to the UN’s two groundbreaking reports on discrimination and violence based on sexual orientation and gender identity. She was a member of the board of directors of the Astraea Lesbian Foundation for Justice from 2010–2015 and of Amnesty International USA in the early 2000s.  

Julie Trébault is the director of PEN America’s Artists at Risk Connection project. A highly-respected leader in the art world, she brings skills, experience, and a network to launch a new support system for artists at risk worldwide. Prior to joining PEN America, she served as the director of public programs at the Museum of the City of New York, where she built a robust roster of panel discussions, performances, screenings, and symposia spanning New York City’s arts, culture, and history. She previously was the director of public programs at the Center for Architecture.  

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