57 Amendments of Diana IOVANOVICI ŞOŞOACĂ
Amendment 11 #
2024/2109(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Recital A
Recital A
A. whereas Horizon Europe (HEU) is the EU’s largest centrally managed funding programme and the largest publicly funded research and development (R&D) programme in the world, which can enable Europe to occupy a leading place in this field on the international scene;
Amendment 32 #
2024/2109(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 2
Paragraph 2
2. Regrets that there have been negative experiences with the implementation of HEU because the shift from H2020 to HEU has mostly been experienced as an increase in complexity and bureaucracy, a bureaucracy which continues to be the main cause of the low uptake of research funding, especially in the countries in the east of Europe; underlines that the success rates in some parts of the programme are still so low as to discourage potentially excellent applications; considers that the high cost of strategic planning (due to increased complexity, time and resources invested, as well as slowed-down implementation of the framework programme (FP)) is not compensated by any substantial benefits, while European researchers are leaving Europe for countries which allocate suitable funding for research;
Amendment 40 #
2024/2109(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 3
Paragraph 3
3. Highlights the importance of an agile FP, with that agility being real time and based on concrete guidelines and priorities; notes that the Heitor report outlines the importance of responding to the fast-changing field of science and innovation and recommends more self- governance in the FP through the establishment of councils as well as less prescriptive calls; recalls that the Draghi report notes that the current governance of the FP is slow and bureaucratic, that its organisation should be redesigned to be more outcome-based and evaluated by top experts and that the future FP should be governed by people with a proven track record at the frontier of research or innovation;
Amendment 94 #
2024/2109(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 7
Paragraph 7
7. Considers that the Commission has not succeeded in creating agile but strong management of HEU, and has not allowed for sufficient agility to keep pace with the rapid technological developments taking place in all fields, which has led to complex implementation;
Amendment 154 #
2024/2109(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 10
Paragraph 10
10. Recalls that the Commission communication entitled ‘EU Missions two years on: assessment of progress and way forward’ did not positively evaluate missions, not justifying their activity, and concluded that missions had failed on core objectives such as crowding in external funding, notably through public-private partnerships that would allow for swift implementation of solutions from researchers, and especially young researchers;
Amendment 187 #
2024/2109(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 13 a (new)
Paragraph 13 a (new)
13a. Considers it necessary to include as a key priority in the framework programme the identification of solutions for the earliest possible return of researchers to their country of origin and to Europe, respectively, so as to enable Europe to develop and swiftly implement new solutions to reduce dependency on products from non-EU countries;
Amendment 237 #
2024/2109(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 15 – point a – point i
Paragraph 15 – point a – point i
i. be oriented towards facilitating the best science and innovation, in order to keep pace with continuous and rapid progress in various fields;
Amendment 251 #
2024/2109(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 15 – point a – point iii
Paragraph 15 – point a – point iii
(iii.) contribute to EU priorities, but on the terms of science and innovation rather than on the terms of policymakers, with a focus on the return of researchers to their countries of origin in Europe, so as to prevent Europe from back-slippage vis-à-vis other non-EU countries;
Amendment 267 #
2024/2109(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 15 – point b
Paragraph 15 – point b
(b) setting up the four councils proposed by the Heitor expert group, composed of eminent experts from the field, to decide on the strategic direction of the different parts of FP10, and in particular a European technology and industrial competitiveness council and a European societal challenges council, and allocating these a limited time span in which to draw up viable and genuine proposals;
Amendment 276 #
2024/2109(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 15 – point c
Paragraph 15 – point c
(c) including positions for programme managers and external experts with a proven track record in the relevant field, who are appointed as special advisers to the Commissioner responsible for research and innovation to ensure their seniority in the Commission, and who must come from all the EU countries, and not just the established EU Member States, to manage portfolios of projects across the whole programme and to set out swiftly and efficiently challenges based on strategic intelligence with a view to fostering global leadership for Europe in specific areas of their field;
Amendment 285 #
2024/2109(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 16
Paragraph 16
16. Recommends that the objective of the part of FP10 on advancing the ERA be to build an excellent, unified ERA; underlines that this requires attracting talent, including by proposing viable solutions for the return of European researchers to Europe, integrating newcomers, providing access to leading research and technology infrastructures, supporting joint early research programmes with national funders, and developing European universities alliances into European scientific institutes, so as also to attract other researchers to Europe;
Amendment 16 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Recital A
Recital A
A. whereas the EU is foundedwitnessing a deficit and an ongoing assault on the values of respect for human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law and on respect for human rights, as set out in Article 2 TEU; whereas the EU’s action worldwide ishould be guided by the universality and indivisibility of human rights and by the fact that the effective protection and defence of human rights and democracy is at the core of the EU’s external action;
Amendment 18 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Recital C
Recital C
C. whereas democratic systems are the most suitable to guarantee that every person has the ability to enjoy their human rights; whereas rules-based multilateralism is the best organisational system to defend democracies, although it is not being properly implemented anywhere in the world at the moment;
Amendment 22 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Recital E
Recital E
E. whereas the rise in authoritarianism, illiberalism and populismdictatorship and political correctness threatens the global rules- based order, the protection and promotion of human rights in the world, as well as the values and principles on which the EU is founded – actions which are being carried out by governments and ruling parties;
Amendment 31 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Recital I
Recital I
I. whereas human rights defenders (HRDs) and civil society organisations (CSOs) are crucial partners in the EU’s efforts to safeguard and advance human rights, democracy and the rule of law, as well as to prevent conflicts globally; whereas governments around the world are increasingly censoring, silencing and harassing HRDs and CSOs in their work, as well as opposition politicians by forbidding them to run for office, and independent journalists; whereas this behaviour includes measures encompassing strategic lawsuits against public participation (SLAPPs), restrictive government policies, defamation campaigns, discrimination, intimidation and violence, including extrajudicial killings, abductions, and arbitrary arrests and detention; whereas attacks on HRDs are increasingly extending to their families and communities;
Amendment 39 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Recital J
Recital J
J. whereas environmental harm and the impacts of climate change and the use of technologies to modify climate and induce artificial weather phenomena are intensifying precariousness, marginalisation and inequality, and increasingly displacing people from their homes or trapping them in unsafe conditions, thereby heightening their vulnerability and jeopardising their human rights;
Amendment 66 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 5
Paragraph 5
5. Notes with deep concern the ongoing international crisis of accountability and the challenge to the pursuit of ending impunity for violations of core norms of international human rights and humanitarian law in modern conflicts around the world which are leading to violations of women’s and girls’ rights and the continuing existence of areas where girls/women are forced to marry without their consent, or are trafficked by human traffickers for prostitution or forced labour;
Amendment 69 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 7
Paragraph 7
7. Notes with concern the increasing economic, educational, cultural, social and technological divides worldwide; stresses the responsibility of the EU to continue defending democratic values and principles and human rights, peace and dignity around the world, which are even more important to defend in the current volatile state of global politics; calls upon the EU to keep communication channelsand negotiation channels, where necessary, open with different stakeholders and to continue to develop a comprehensive toolbox to strengthen human rights and democracy globally;
Amendment 72 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 8
Paragraph 8
8. Observes that the EU and its Member States have made substantial progress in implementing the EU action plan on human rights and democracy, although they have not reached all of its goals, in particular due to the unprecedented challenges the world has experienced since its adoption; welcomes, in this sense, the extension of the action plan until 2027, with a view to maximising the synergies and complementarity between human rights and democracy at local, national and global levels; considers that there is also a need for sanctions for failure to achieve goals and meet deadlines for their realisation, including in more economically advanced states, which must set an example in terms of good practices and respect for human rights.
Amendment 75 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 10
Paragraph 10
10. Recalls the fundamental role of the Neighbourhood, Development and International Cooperation Instrument – Global Europe, including its thematic programme on human rights and democracy, as a flagship EU instrument in promoting and protecting human rights and democracy around the world; highlights the need to engage with civil society in all the EU’s relevant external activities; reiterates the importance of streamlthinking of a human- rights based approach in the EU’s external action instruments; underlines Parliament’s role in the instrument’s programming process and calls on the Commission and the European External Action Service (EEAS) to monitor human rights promotion and protection programmes more closely and on the basis of common criteria at European and global level and share all relevant information in a timely manner in order to enable Parliament to play its role accordingly, in particular during high-level geopolitical dialogues with the Commission;
Amendment 79 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 12
Paragraph 12
12. Stresses the important role of human rights dialogues within the EU’s human rights toolbox and as a key vehicle for the implementation of the EU action plan on human rights and democracy; highlights that these dialogues should address the overall situation of human rights and democracy with the relevant countries; notes that human, and also the situation of respect for women’s rights, especially in areas which are isolated, deprived or of limited economic potential which prevents them from becoming less dependent on their partners or families; notes that human and especially children’s rights dialogues should be seen as a key element of sustained EU engagement and not as a free-standing instrument; recalls that these dialogues need to be used in conjunction and synergy with other instruments; reiterates the need to raise individual cases, in particular those highlighted by Parliament in its resolutions, and ensure adequate follow-up of them and subsequent developments in them, with sanctions being imposed in the event of failings; calls to increase the visibility of these dialogues and their outcomes, including through the publication of a joint press statement and appropriate media coverage of outcomes and good practices, as well as suitable sanctions to prevent failures to implement them;
Amendment 83 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 13
Paragraph 13
13. Welcomes the increasing use of the EU GHRSR as a key political tool in the EU’s defence of human rights and democracy across the world; notes, however, the challenges that the requirement of unanimity poses in the adoption of sanctions and reiterates its call for the introduction of qualified majority voting for decisions on the GHRSR; fully supports the possibility of imposing targeted anti-corruption sanctions within the EU framework in this regard, which has been a long-standing priority of Parliament, whether through its inclusion in the GHRSR or with a different regime; highlights the need for the complete enforcement of sanctions and follow-up of their enforcement, and calls for circumventions to be tackled and sanctioned;
Amendment 107 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 24
Paragraph 24
24. Recalls that the right and unrestricted access to food, including having physical and economic access to water and adequate food for all socio- economic categories or the means to itstheir procurement, is a human right; is extremely concerned about the challenges to the right to foodand access to food and water worldwide, especially in situations of war and conflicts, which are continuing to cause population displacement and migration; notes with concern the increasing reports of the weaponisation of food in situations of armed conflict; calls for the EU and its Member States to promote mandatory guidelines on the right and unrestricted access to food without discrimination within the UN system;
Amendment 113 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 25
Paragraph 25
25. Highlights that climate change and its impact on the environment has direct effects on the effective enjoyment of all human rights; recognises the important work of CSOs, indigenous people, land and environmental HRDs and indigenous activists for the protection of a clean, healthy and sustainable environment and for protection against mass deforestation solely for the sake of substantial gain for a small number of people to the detriment of the local population; deplores the risks that environmental HRDs and indigenous activists face and calls for their effective protection to be guaranteed; notes with deep concern the increasing threats to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment posed by the deployment of weapons of mass destruction and other forms of warfare that adversely and disproportionately affect the environment;
Amendment 115 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 26
Paragraph 26
26. Calls for a systematic and consistent approach to promoting and defending children’s rights through all of the EU’s external policies; calls for more concerted efforts to promote, defend and implement the respect, protection and fulfilment of children’s rights in crisis or emergency situations and prevent their separation from their families, especially with a view to using them for organ trafficking, sexual exploitation, illegal adoptions or forced labour; condemns the decline in respect for the rights of the child and the increasing violations and abuses of these rights, including through violence, early and forced marriage, sexual abuse including genital mutilation, trafficking, child labour, recruitment of child soldiers, lack of free access to education and healthcare, malnutrition and extreme poverty; further condemns the increase in death of children in situations of armed conflict and stresses the need for effective protection of children’s rights in active warfare; reiterates its call for a systematic and consistent approach to promoting and defending children’s rights through all EU external policies, as well as a policy on sanctions and severe punishments in the laws of each country for these serious cases;
Amendment 129 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 27
Paragraph 27
27. Stresses that women’s rights and gendersexual equality are indispensable and indivisible human rights, as well as a basis for the rule of law and inclusive resilient democracies; deplores the fact that millions of women and girls continue to experience discrimination and violence, especially in the context of conflicts, and are denied their dignity, autonomy and even life; calls for the EU, its Member States and like- minded partners to step up their efforts to ensure the full enjoyment and protection of women’s and girls’ human rights, free access to high-quality education and continued training programmes for easier access to employment and reduced dependence on partners and/or family; condemns in the strongest terms the increasing attacks on sexual and reproductive health and rights around the world, as well as gendersex-based violence; welcomes the accession of the EU to the Istanbul Convention; calls for the EU and its international partners to strengthen their efforts to ensure that women fully enjoy human rights and are treated equally to men; stresses the need to pursue efforts to fully eradicate the practice of female genital mutilation and to minimise forced marriages and trafficking for prostitution or forced labour;
Amendment 169 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 31
Paragraph 31
31. Reiterates its call for the EU and its Member States to develop new avenues and programmes to strengthen the rights of elderly people, taking into account the multiple challenges they face, such as age- based discrimination, poverty, violence and a lack of social protection, limitation of free access to healthcare and other essential services, as well as barriers to employmentespecially in rural and isolated or deprived areas, as well as barriers to employment, leading to the loss of a wealth of experience which can be of benefit to young people at the outset of their careers; underlines the work of the UN Open-ended Working Group on Ageing on a legally binding instrument to strengthen the protection of the human rights of older people and calls for the EU and its Member States to consider actively supporting that work, as well as actual implementation in both legislation and real life;
Amendment 170 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 32
Paragraph 32
32. Reiterates its condemnation of all forms of racism, intolerance, xenophobia and discrimination on the basis of race, ethnicity, nationality, social class, disability, caste, religion, belief, age, sexual orientation or gendersexual identity; condemns the growing international threat of hate speech, including online, and the manipulation by authorities of public opinion and violation of the right to freedom of expression and opinion and access to information on all platforms, respect for the principle of AUDIATUR ET ALTERA PARS; reiterates the crucial role of education, information and dialogue in promoting tolerance, understanding and diversity, respect for religious beliefs; calls for the EU and its Member States to lead the global fight against all forms of extremism, with respect for customs, traditions and religions and welcomes the adoption of an EU strategy to this end;
Amendment 182 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 35
Paragraph 35
35. Emphasises the critical significance of freedom of expression and unrestricted access to trustworthy information for sustaining democracy and a thriving and free civic space without manipulation or constraints; is seriously concerned about the increasing restrictions on freedom of expression in numerous countries worldwide, particularly for journalists, through censorship, enforced self- censorship, and the misuse of counter- terrorism or anti- corruption laws to suppress journalists and, civil society groups, opposition politicians and, in the worst cases, lawyers; raises concerns, additionally, about the physical security of opposition politicians, dissidents, lawyers, journalists and media workers and their being targeted in conflict zones;
Amendment 186 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 36
Paragraph 36
36. Calls urgently for the EU to back trustworthy media and information outlets thaton all platforms which broadcast news and information and promote the accountability of authorities and support democratic transitions; voices concern about the extensive use of SLAPPs to silence journalists, activists, opposition politicians and dissidents, trade unionists and HRDs globally; welcomes, in this context, the directive designed to shield journalists and HRDs from abusive legal actions and SLAPPs; encourages lawmakers in non-EU countries to develop legislation with the same goal, as part of broader efforts to promote and protect media freedom and pluralism; regards bans imposed on the use of social and media platforms merely because they criticise authorities as unacceptable;
Amendment 197 #
2024/2081(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 42
Paragraph 42
42. Is concerned by the threat that artificial intelligence (AI) can pose to democracy and human rights, especially if it is not duly regulated and/or is used to manipulate public opinion; welcomes the Council conclusions on Digital Diplomacy of 26 June 2023 to strengthen the EU’s role and leadership in global digital governance, in particular its position as a shaper of the global digital rulebook; welcomes, in this regard, the adoption of the EU Artificial Intelligence Act which aims to harmonise the rules on AI for protecting human rights, and the advantages that AI can bring to human wellbeing; notes with concern the adverse effects of the ‘fake content industry’ on the right to information and press freedom, including the rapid development of AI and the subsequent empowerment of the disinformation industry12; _________________ 12 Reporters Without Borders, ‘2023 World Press Freedom Index – journalism threatened by fake content industry’ https://rsf.org/en/2023-world-press- freedom-index-journalism-threatened-fake- content-industry.
Amendment 11 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Recital A
Recital A
A. whereas equality between women and men is a fundamental principle of the EU, which must also apply at global level, and whereas the EU’s external action must be guided by this principle;
Amendment 14 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Recital B
Recital B
B. whereas women’s human rights and gendersexual equality are not only fundamental human rights, but preconditions for advancing development and reducing poverty, and a necessary foundation for a peaceful, prosperous and sustainable worldincreasing the level of education and civilisation, and a necessary foundation for a peaceful, prosperous world that we can pass on as a legacy to future generations;
Amendment 16 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Recital C
Recital C
C. whereas 189 governments across the world, including the EU and its Member States, committed to working towards gendersexual equality and empowering all women and girls at the 1995 Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing;
Amendment 17 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Recital D
Recital D
D. whereas the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action is the most comprehensive globalworld agenda for promoting gendersexual equality and is considered the international ‘Bill of Rights’ for women, defining women’s rights as human rights and articulating a vision of equal rights, freedom and opportunities for all women in the world, and was reaffirmed in 2015 with Goal 5, ‘Achieve gendersexual equality and empower all women and girls’, of the sustainable development goals (SDGs) set out in the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, by specifying targets and concrete measures across a range of issues affecting women and girls;
Amendment 32 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Recital G
Recital G
G. whereas the UN General Assembly has raised the alarm about the active resistance to advances in gendersexual equality and the growing transnational backlash against women’s rights; whereas there is a clear and urgent need to reaffirm substantive equality and the human rights of women and girls4; _________________ 4 UN General Assembly, Escalating backlash against gender equality and urgency of reaffirming substantive equality and the human rights of women and girls: Report of the Working Group on discrimination against women and girls, 15 May 2024, https://documents.un.org/doc/undoc/gen/g2 4/073/47/pdf/g2407347.pdf.
Amendment 37 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point a
Paragraph 1 – point a
(a) confirm its commitment to the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action and to the range of actions for women’s human rights and gendersexual equality outlined therein; confirm its commitment to women’s human rights, through gendersexual equality policy mainstreaming in all policy areas and cycles, to the implementation of specific and targeted actions for women’s human rights and gender equality of sexual equality policy, to avoid a deepening of these inequalities, especially in less developed countries with precarious education, and to ensuring proper gendersexual equality policy budgeting;
Amendment 46 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point b
Paragraph 1 – point b
(b) ensure that gender equality andbetween women’s rights are fully and proudlynd sexual equality policy is fully supported and implemented in all aspects of EU external action through an adequately funded, gender-inclusive and intersectional approach that is transformative, inclusive and intersectional approach terms of sexual equality policy; there is also a pressing need for this policy of equality in women’s rights to be supported by men, in all fields and at all levels;
Amendment 55 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point d
Paragraph 1 – point d
(d) take due stock of the progress, and setbacks, encountered in the implementation of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action and promote active measures to achieve the proposed goals, as well as drastic penalties for delays and/or failure to achieve goals in relation to equal rights for women and men;
Amendment 59 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point e
Paragraph 1 – point e
(e) reinvigorate the EU’s efforts to overcome remaining challenges, at European and global level, to the full implementation of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action; ensure that the EU leads by example by putting in place robust policy measures to address, combat and, anticipate genderand penalise sexual inequality in all its manifestations, and to empower women in all their diversityand men to achieve the proposed goals;
Amendment 65 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point f
Paragraph 1 – point f
(f) reiterate that the EU has an important role to play in achieving a gender-sex- equal world through supporting partner countries in addressing gendersex discrimination; ensure that the EU leads by example by urging the remaining five Member States that have still not ratified and implemented the Istanbul Convention to do so in the shortest possible timeframe, in accordance with the provisions of their constitutions and with reference to their domestic law, as well as religious principles;
Amendment 80 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point g
Paragraph 1 – point g
(g) press for equal opportunities for all in all areas of life, to allow women in all their diversity to fulfil their potential, notably in decision-making, whether political, economic, academic or cultural, this also being essential for good governance and policymaking; within this context, express opposition to semiotic violence against women in politics, which sustains and reinforces negative stereotypes about women and discourages youngboth young women and adult or elderly women from entering politics and the public sphere;
Amendment 86 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point h
Paragraph 1 – point h
(h) emphasise that weak political leadership, lack of commitment, data gaps, insufficient investment, and the rise of anti- rights movements have been identified as obstacles; thus making it necessary to promote more women in leadership, increase investment, and implement comprehensive education, learning, lifelong training, cultural and policy reforms to overcome these systemic barriers and achieve a truly equal society, processes in which the mandatory involvement of men is also necessary;
Amendment 96 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point i
Paragraph 1 – point i
(i) apply gender mainstreaming and gendersexual equality policy mainstreaming and sexual equality policy budgeting in all EU policy areas, including external action, and lead by example in this regard, including by adopting penalties in accordance with the domestic and constitutional laws of the Member States;
Amendment 100 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point j
Paragraph 1 – point j
(j) commit to constant appraisal and pro-active corrective action in the EU’s internal and external policies in regard to gendersexual equality, sexual equality, policy mainstreaming and budgetingsexual equality policy budgeting in order to achieve the proposed goals, and penalties for delays and/or failure to achieve goals;
Amendment 103 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point k
Paragraph 1 – point k
(k) call on the Commission to further develop and roll out concrete and well- financed plans and actions to address the UN SDGs, specifically those related to gendersexual equality policy;
Amendment 114 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point l
Paragraph 1 – point l
(l) take the lead and promote measures at European and global level in the global fight against the backlash against gendersexual equality and women’s rights;
Amendment 118 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point m
Paragraph 1 – point m
(m) urge the Commission to further develop and improve the collection of gender-sex- desegregated data and to ensure that this data contributes to better policymaking; as well as to reinforce the European Institute for Gender Equality both in terms of funding and capacity, in order to achieve the proposed goals at European and global level; all policies on equality between women and men must have regard to and comply with both the domestic law of the Member States and their constitutions, and, in particular, the religious norms of the Member States;
Amendment 125 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point n
Paragraph 1 – point n
(n) implement without delay and to the fullest extent the EU Sexual Equality Action Plan (GAP) III and ensure that 85 % of all new actions throughout external relations by 2025 contribute to gender equalitysexual equality and women’s empowerment; all policies on equality between women and women’s empowerment must have regard to and comply with both the domestic law of the Member States and their constitutions, and, in particular, the religious norms of the Member States;
Amendment 131 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point o
Paragraph 1 – point o
(o) take note of and implement the recommendations of Parliament’s resolution of 10 March 2022 on the EU GAP III, and thus prioritise GAP III in every aspect of EU external action through a gendersex-transformative and intersectional approach, both in terms of GAP III’s geographical coverage and areas of action, as well as genderwomen’s and men’s equality policy mainstreaming in all areas of external action, whether trade, development policy, humanitarian aid, security or sectors such as energy and agriculture; all policies on equality between women and men must have regard to and comply with both the domestic law of the Member States and their constitutions, and, in particular, the religious norms of the Member States;
Amendment 139 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point p
Paragraph 1 – point p
(p) devise, fund and implement policies that reduce the role of gendera person’s sex as a factor in poverty both within and, through external action, outside of the EU, taking due note of intersectional factors, including age, social class, level of schooling and education, care responsibilities, disability, race and sexuality;
Amendment 147 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point q
Paragraph 1 – point q
(q) address the systemic and root causes of women’s poverty, focusing on those women living in rural areas or remote and deprived areas, and empower women and girls in all their diversity through education, training, lifelong- learning, entrepreneurship for financial independence, non-discriminatory labour opportunities, equal pay with men for equal work, access to social services, balancing unpaid care and social responsibilities through legislative initiatives, combating gender stereotyping and promoting women as role models;
Amendment 158 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point r
Paragraph 1 – point r
(r) call for further efforts, legislation and enforcement of existing measures to ensure the rights of women domestic workers so that they are not constantly dependent on their partners and so that their household work is recognised as equivalent to employed and remunerated work in work sectors;
Amendment 170 #
2024/2057(INI)
Motion for a resolution
Paragraph 1 – point s
Paragraph 1 – point s
(s) enhance the EU’s response, resources and toolkit, both internally and externally, regarding gendersex-based violence, including domestic, sexual, physical, psychological and economic violence, including in war zones, taking account of migration, drug trafficking, prostitution and sexual exploitation, and also reducing forced marriages, where necessary, by implementing legislative penalty provisions;
Amendment 9 #
2024/2019(DEC)
Draft opinion
Recital B
Recital B
B. whereas the Union has room for improvement in, and must improve, its approach to promoting equality through its policies, legislation and funding mechanisms, in close cooperation with the Member States, in order to meet its proposed objectives;
Amendment 25 #
2024/2019(DEC)
Draft opinion
Paragraph 2
Paragraph 2
2. Acknowledges the Union’s commitment to gender mainstreaming and the need to further focus on combating violence against women and girls in policymaking, with a focus on educational programmes in that sense in all the Member States, along with information campaigns; stresses the need to urgently establish a common approach to rape at a European level with common minimum sanctions in national laws, which should be adopted as a matter of urgency;
Amendment 35 #
2024/2019(DEC)
Draft opinion
Paragraph 3
Paragraph 3
3. Is concerned about the growing financial risks due to Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine and its impact on gender equality policies; highlights the need to prioritise policies that protect children, women and families, especially to prevent their trafficking and exploitation for illegal work and sexual activities;