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2023 U. Oxford Hum. Rts. Hub J. 1 (2023)

handle is hein.journals/uoxhruj2023 and id is 1 raw text is: 










        Engendering the Right to

     Work in International Law:

  Recognising Menstruation and

      Menopause in Paid Work


      Sydney   Colussi, Elizabeth  Hill and Marian   Baird*


Abstract

It is widely accepted in international law that pregnancy and parenthood
should not prevent women  from exercising their human right to work.
Across  various international conventions, special labour rights and
protections have  been  enshrined  for pregnancy,  childbirth, and
childrearing to 'engender' the right to work and remedy workplace
inequalities that arise in relation to these reproductive issues. However,
other   reproductive  (and  post-reproductive) issues,  specifically
menstruation and menopause,  have not received adequate attention in
international law despite their direct relationship to gender inequality in
paid work.  In this article, we argue this narrow approach to the
reproductive body needs to be revisited. If the right to work is to be
properly 'engendered', then menstruation and  menopause  must  be
acknowledged   as important  processes  that, like pregnancy  and
parenthood, shape  the capability of ciswomen and  all people who
experience menstruation and menopause to realise this right. Applying
Fredman's  substantive equality framework to these specific issues, this
article develops a critical feminist reading of the right to work in two key
human  rights conventions, the International Covenant on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) and the Convention to Eliminate All
Forms  of Discrimination Against Women  (CEDAW),   to argue for an
expanded understanding of the reproductive body and its significance for
workers over the life course.

   Sydney is a PhD candidate at the University of Sydney; Elizabeth Hill is Associate
Professor of Political Economy at The University of Sydney; Marian Baird is Professor of
Gender and Employment Relations and a Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in
Australia. Thank-you to Beth Goldblatt and the anonymous reviewers for their feedback.

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