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X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://globalforumcdwd.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Global Forum of Communities Discriminated on Work and Descent - GFoD
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DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20251030
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20260116
DTSTAMP:20260626T071010
CREATED:20251030T112249Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260625T180532Z
UID:10038-1761782400-1768521599@globalforumcdwd.org
SUMMARY:Call for Expressions of Interest: GFoD Civil Society Preparations for the 2026 Voluntary National Reviews (VNRs)
DESCRIPTION:The Global Forum of Communities Discriminated on Work and Descent (GFOD) has actively engaged in the United Nations Voluntary National Reviews (VNRs) to bring the lived experiences of marginalized populations directly to global policy discussions. Representing diverse communities across the world—including Roma\, Haratins\, Quilombola\, and caste-affected groups—GFOD’s core priority is ensuring the developmental planning of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) firmly upholds the principle of “leaving no one behind”. \nAcross the globe\, communities discriminated on work and descent (CDWD) continue to be left out of national sustainable development strategies and action plans. The attached resource documents provide a comprehensive overview of the structural barriers\, country-specific concerns\, and key advocacy entry points for the 2026 VNR cycle. \nKey Focus Areas of the 2026 Reports \nCountry-Specific Briefs: In-depth examinations of entrenched inequalities\, social stratification\, and human rights challenges across Albania\, Brazil\, Burkina Faso\, Cameroon\, Estonia\, Italy\, the Republic of Moldova\, Senegal\, and Somalia. \nSystemic Challenges: Data and perspectives detailing severe barriers to safe housing\, quality education\, decent work\, formal employment\, and adequate healthcare. \nCore Questions for Member States: A structured list of priority questions designed for governments and stakeholders to raise during the VNR process to hold countries accountable to their SDG commitments. \nActionable Recommendations: Policy-driven solutions advocating for the legal recognition of CDWD\, the collection of disaggregated data\, and the meaningful political participation of women and youth. \nExplore or download the attached PDFs below to access the full country profiles\, community-led monitoring insights\, and concrete institutional recommendations. \nREAD VNR Questions 2026 HERE \nREAD VNR Countries CDWD Questions HERE
URL:https://globalforumcdwd.org/event/call-for-expressions-of-interest-gfod-civil-society-preparations-for-the-2026-voluntary-national-reviews-vnrs/
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Moscow:20251105T114500
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Moscow:20251105T124500
DTSTAMP:20260626T071010
CREATED:20251027T175234Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251027T175234Z
UID:10026-1762343100-1762346700@globalforumcdwd.org
SUMMARY:Featured Event at the Civil Society Forum – World Summit for Social Development
DESCRIPTION:Intersectional Justice for Women and Girls: Structural Change and Leadership\n📍 Doha\, Qatar – 5 November 2025\, 11:45 AM–12:45 PM(AST / UTC+3) \nRegister here \nThe Inclusivity Project (TIP)\, in partnership with the Global Forum of Communities Discriminated on Work and Descent (GFoD)\, UN Women\, ERGO Network\, and other global partners\, invites you to a powerful session spotlighting the leadership of women from communities facing descent-based discrimination. \nThis interactive event\, part of the Civil Society Forum during the Second World Summit for Social Development\, will explore how women from Dalit\, Roma\, Haratin\, Quilombola and other communities are driving systemic change through creative storytelling\, policy advocacy\, and community-led action. \nThrough art\, dialogue\, and lived experience\, the session aims to inspire structural transformation and advance intersectional justice\, ensuring no one is left behind in the global pursuit of equality and dignity. \nFor any inquiry about the event do not hesitate to reach out to:Simona Torotcoi (GFoD) – simona@globalforumcdwd.orgKunjani Pariyar Pyasi – pkunjani123@gmail.com
URL:https://globalforumcdwd.org/event/featured-event-at-the-civil-society-forum-world-summit-for-social-development/
LOCATION:Room #14\, Exhibition Hall #7\, Doha\, Qatar
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Qatar:20251105T150000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Qatar:20251105T163000
DTSTAMP:20260626T071010
CREATED:20251005T190924Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251024T085003Z
UID:9924-1762354800-1762360200@globalforumcdwd.org
SUMMARY:Designing Inclusive Futures: People-First Solutions for Social Inclusion and Equal Opportunities for Communities Discriminated on Work and Descent
DESCRIPTION:#HEARUSNOW  \nBackground:As the WSSD-2 convenes\, this Solutions Session will spotlight community-led and multi-stakeholder initiatives addressing those most affected by social crises. Youth groups\, stakeholders\, IGOs\, and Member States will present case studies/solutions focused on the contexts of Communities Discriminated on Work and Descent (CDWD) with intersections to Indigenous Peoples\, and Migrants/Refugees under the theme of social inclusion and decent work for all. \nA regional analysis\, compiled by UNECE as an input to WSSD-2\, elaborates how poverty and exclusion disproportionately affect frontline groups. While extreme monetary poverty is rare in some regions\, multidimensional poverty rates exceed 20%\, hitting women\, children\, Roma communities\, and migrants hardest. This highlights the deep structural inequalities that must frame WSSD-2 discussions. The 2024 report on the status of Communities Discriminated on Work and Descent (CDWD) – which includes Dalits in South Asia\, Haratin and Osu in Africa\, Roma in Europe\, and Quilombolas in Latin America – shows that over 270 million people face entrenched discrimination. Despite 80 years of UN efforts\, concepts of untouchability persist\, denying these communities access to decent work\, education\, justice\, and secure livelihoods\, with discrimination ingrained in social systems. This is worsened by environmental crises and economic precarity\, hitting Indigenous peoples\, migrants\, refugees\, and other marginalized groups hardest\, especially children and young women. Yet CDWD and excluded youth are leading change and advancing justice\, and building societies rooted in dignity and equity.  \n \nAgainst this backdrop\, this session will: \n\nShowcase case studies from CDWD organisations and allied partners\, with a cross-cutting focus on youth\, Indigenous peoples\, and refugees\n\n\nHighlight key solutions – in the form of policy suggestions and concrete actions proposed by the CDWD youth groups\, UN agencies\, and other stakeholders – and the role of multi-stakeholder partnerships in delivering these \n\nThe session will culminate in a compendium of solutions/policy recommendations as a resource for Summit follow-up and implementation. \nSystemic exclusion affects many communities — including CDWD\, Indigenous peoples\, migrants\, refugees\, people with disabilities\, racial and ethnic minorities\, and those experiencing homelessness — driven by structural discrimination\, displacement\, climate crises\, and economic precarity. These impacts fall hardest on children and youth\, especially young women. For many\, migration becomes the only option amid collapsing ecosystems\, insecure land rights\, and shrinking labor markets\, yet pathways remain unsafe and exploitative. In the face of these challenges\, CDWD and other excluded youth are leading change: challenging discrimination\, demanding migration justice\, advancing climate resilience\, and shaping rights-based solutions for livelihoods\, land\, and water. Their leadership and solidarity are essential to building societies rooted in dignity\, justice\, and equity. \nObjectives:\n\nIdentify and dismantle systemic barriers faced by communities discriminated on work and descent\, Indigenous peoples\, migrants\, refugees\, and other excluded groups by surfacing community-driven and youth-led solutions that advance decent work\, social inclusion\, and human rights.\nPropose and showcase scalable community- and youth-led innovations – from local to global levels – that address discrimination\, migration justice\, gender inequality and economic exclusion\, with clear pathways for policy adoption and institutionalisation.\nGenerate actionable\, gender-responsive policy solutions rooted in grassroots experiences\, to inform WSSD2 outcomes and align with SDGs on poverty eradication\, decent work and social inclusion.\nFoster international solidarity and resource solutions that work by securing commitments to support community\, women and youth-led solutions through funding\, capacity strengthening and rights-based partnerships at all levels.\n\nFORMAT: \nOpening Remarks (5 mins)  \nSolutions Showcase – Youth and Community Leaders (20 mins) \nPolicy and Partnerships Dialogue (15 mins) \nInteractive Co-creation Segment (15 mins) \nClosing & Way Forward (5 mins) \n \n 
URL:https://globalforumcdwd.org/event/wss-cdwdyouth/
LOCATION:Online: Zoom
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20251128T140000
DTEND;TZID=Asia/Kolkata:20251128T150000
DTSTAMP:20260626T071010
CREATED:20251130T172624Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251130T172636Z
UID:10084-1764338400-1764342000@globalforumcdwd.org
SUMMARY:A Step Forward at the UN to Address Hierarchical Oppression – Strengthening International Standards to Protect Descent Communities
DESCRIPTION:Discrimination based on Work and Descent (DWD) affects over 270 million people globally\, often manifesting as social exclusion based on inherited status\, practices of untouchability\, and notions of “purity and pollution”. When groups face extreme forms of discrimination in accessing employment\, education\, healthcare\, and housing\, their capacity to contribute to national development is severely curtailed. \nWhile some States have constitutional and legal frameworks to protect minority rights\, implementation and consistent enforcement remain weak\, leading to systemic exclusion. This side event will prioritize identifying concrete measures and strategies necessary to eliminate these deep-seated discriminatory practices\, recognize the intersecting challenges faced by CDWD members and ensure the promise of the 2030 Agenda to “leave no one behind” is realized. \nThe contribution of the Communities Discriminated on Work and Descent (CDWDs) to peaceful and cohesive societies is undeniable. Rather than mere victims of systemic and intergenerational forms of discrimination\, these communities are agents of change. They are the protagonists of tolerant\, inclusive and diverse societies worldwide\, including economic development\, culture\, media\, and the performing arts. These contributions are often overlooked\, suppressed\, or even appropriated by dominant groups who may pass them off as their own. Despite their positive impact\, CDWD communities are frequently denied due recognition and are instead subjected to harmful stereotypes that portray them as backward\, unskilled\, and only suited for the most menial roles. \nThere is growing and steady recognition of CDWDs through several other UN mechanisms\, such as the UPR\, communications of special procedures and periodic reviews of treaty-bodies. This recognition\, however\, materialized in a fragmented manner\, through several standards and mechanisms\, which do not provide sufficient protection to over 260 million persons under this condition. \nObjectives \nThe side event aims to: \n\n Scrutinize existing state institutional arrangements\, such as quotas\, commissions\, or advisory bodies\, to determine why they often fail to ensure adequate and equitable representation and address the interests of smaller minority groups.\n Adopt a robust intersectional approach in all programmes and policies\, addressing the double marginalization faced by specific groups\, such as CDWD women\, girls\, youth\, and LGBTQ individuals\, who face exclusion both from the majority society and sometimes their own communities.\n Urge the UN mechanisms to adhere to key human rights standards and strengthen global standards on CDWD\, ensuring the specific form of hierarchical oppression based on work and descent is recognized and consistently reflected in national laws and practices.
URL:https://globalforumcdwd.org/event/a-step-forward-at-the-un-to-address-hierarchical-oppression-strengthening-international-standards-to-protect-descent-communities/
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