

INSTITUTING A NATIONAL ACTION PLAN ON WOMEN, PEACE, AND SECURITY
The White House
Office of the
Press Secretary
For Immediate
Release
December 19,
2011
By the
authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the
United States of America, it is hereby ordered as follows:
Section
1.
Policy. (a) The
United States recognizes that promoting women's participation in conflict
prevention, management, and resolution, as well as in post conflict relief and
recovery, advances peace, national security, economic and social development,
and international cooperation.
(b) The
United States recognizes the responsibility of all nations to protect their
populations from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing, and crimes against
humanity, including when implemented by means of sexual violence. The
United States further recognizes that sexual violence, when used or commissioned
as a tactic of war or as a part of a widespread or systematic attack against
civilians, can exacerbate and prolong armed conflict and impede the restoration
of peace and security.
(c) It
shall be the policy and practice of the executive branch of the United States to
have a National Action Plan on Women, Peace, and Security (National Action
Plan).
Sec.
2.
National Action Plan.
A National Action Plan shall be created pursuant to the process outlined in
Presidential Policy Directive 1 and shall identify and develop activities and
initiatives in the following areas:
(a)
National integration and institutionalization.
Through interagency coordination, policy development, enhanced professional
training and education, and evaluation, the United States Government will
institutionalize a gender responsive approach to its diplomatic, development,
and defense-related work in conflict-affected environments.
(b)
Participation in peace processes and
decisionmaking. The United States
Government will improve the prospects for inclusive, just, and sustainable peace
by promoting and strengthening women's rights and effective leadership and
substantive participation in peace processes, conflict prevention, peacebuilding,
transitional processes, and decisionmaking institutions in conflict-affected
environments.
(c)
Protection from violence.
The United States Government will strengthen its efforts to prevent
and protect women and children from harm, exploitation,
discrimination, and abuse, including sexual and gender-based violence and
trafficking in persons, and to hold perpetrators accountable in
conflict-affected environments.
(d)
Conflict prevention.
The United States Government will promote women's roles in conflict prevention,
improve conflict early warning and response systems through the integration of
gender perspectives, and invest in women and girls' health, education, and
economic opportunity to create conditions for stable societies and lasting
peace.
(e)
Access to relief and recovery.
The United States Government will respond to the distinct needs of women and
children in conflict affected disasters and crises, including by providing safe,
equitable access to humanitarian assistance.
Sec.
3.
Responsibility of Executive Departments and Agencies.
(a) Executive departments and agencies (agencies) shall maintain a current
awareness of U.S. policy with regard to Women, Peace, and Security, as set out
in the National Action Plan, as it is relevant to their functions, and shall
perform such functions so as to respect and implement that policy fully, while
retaining their established institutional roles in the implementation,
interpretation, and enforcement of Federal law.
(b)
The Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, and the Administrator of the
United States Agency for International Development shall each:
(i)
designate one or more officers, as appropriate, as responsible for coordinating
and implementing the National Action Plan;
(ii) within 150
days of the date of the release of the National Action Plan, develop and submit
to the Assistant to the President and National Security Advisor an agency
specific implementation plan that will identify the actions each agency plans to
take to implement the National Action Plan; and
(iii) execute their
agency specific implementation plans, and monitor and report to the Assistant to
the President and National Security Advisor on such execution.
Sec.
4.
Interagency Process.
The Assistant to the President and National Security Advisor shall, consistent
with Presidential Policy Directive 1 or any successor documents, establish an
interagency process for coordinating the implementation of this order, which
shall, inter alia:
(a)
coordinate implementation of the National Action Plan and agency specific
implementation plans as specified in section 3(b) of this order;
(b)
establish a mechanism for agencies to report progress in implementing the
National Action Plan and agency specific implementation plans, as appropriate
and as specified in section 3(b), and in meeting the objectives of this order,
which the Assistant to the President and National Security Advisor shall draw
upon to provide an annual report to the President;
(c)
coordinate a comprehensive periodic review of, and update to, the National
Action Plan. The review of, and update to, the National Action Plan will
be informed by consultation with relevant civil society organizations. The
first review will take place in 2015; and
(d)
consider and implement other revisions to the National Action Plan, as
necessary.
Sec.
5.
General Provisions.
(a) Nothing in this order shall be construed to impair or otherwise
affect:
(i) authority
granted by law to an agency, or the head thereof; or
(ii) functions of the
Director of the Office of Management and Budget relating to budgetary,
administrative, or legislative proposals.
(b)
This order shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and subject to
the availability of appropriations.
(c)
Independent agencies are strongly encouraged to comply with this order.
(d)
This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit,
substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against
the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers,
employees, or agents, or any other person.
BARACK OBAMA
THE
WHITE HOUSE,
December 19, 2011