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<div>from Dr Sam Lanfranco (Prof Emeritus), York U.<br> <a href="mailto:Lanfran@Yorku.ca">Lanfran@Yorku.ca</a> <br></div>
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<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="PADDING-LEFT: 1ex; MARGIN: 0px 0px 0px 0.8ex; BORDER-LEFT: #ccc 1px solid"> As we celebrate the 30th anniversary of CEDAW, the United Nations<br>Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against<br>
Women, we may want to temper our notions around the idea that CEDAW<br>is an extraordinary revolutionary document, unique in its<br>perception of women as full human beings.<br><br>The reason for the caution here is not to devalue the achievement of<br>
CEDWA but to recognize two things. First that it is but on stepping<br>stone in a long path toward full rights for women, and a just gender<br>equality. There is much left to be done. Second, it is but one<br>stepping stone in a long path that, in Western thought at least,<br>
stretches well back into the Enlightenment.<br><br>It was almost 200 years ago, after she had taken Edmond Burke to task<br>for not opposing American slavery, that Mary Wollstonecraft wrote "A<br>Vindication of the Rights of Women: with Strictures on Political and<br>
Moral Subjects"(1792), re-published in Sylvana Tomaselli (ed) "A<br>Vindication of the Rights of Men and A Vindication of the Rights of<br>Women", Cambridge Univ. Press, 1995.<br><br>While we mark history by events, by writings, and by declarations, the<br>
history of the struggles around human rights have gone on for ever,<br>and will go on for ever. The test of our efforts will always be "are<br>we making progress" and not "are we there yet".<br><br>If the CEDWA stepping stone deserves a distinct marker it is give<br>
tribute to the fact that a global body (the UN) has endorsed the<br>notion that the rights are universal, and that the next phases in the<br>quest for more pervasive human rights now spansglobal initiatives, as<br>well as civil and local initiatives.<br>
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