Subject: Law
Year: 2025
Type: Conference or Workshop Item
Type: PeerReviewed
Title: Constitutional safeguards and EU aspirations: addressing gender-based violence in North Macedonia
Author: Maksimova, Elena
Abstract: As North Macedonia moves forward on its path toward European Union accession, the imperative to harmonize its constitutional and legal framework with EU fundamental rights and values has gained renewed importance. Among the most pressing human rights challenges facing the country is gender-based violence (GBV), which continues to disproportionately affect women and girls, despite ongoing legislative reforms and international commitments. This presentation examines the constitutional aspects of GBV in North Macedonia, evaluating the effectiveness of the country’s supreme legal framework in addressing the issue and its alignment with the broader normative framework of the European Union. The Constitution of the Republic of North Macedonia incorporates the principles of equality, human dignity, and the right to life and security. However, in practice, the protection afforded to victims of GBV remains inconsistent and often inadequate. High levels of underreporting, lack of specialized support services, insufficient training among law enforcement and judiciary actors, and cultural stigmas all contribute to a persistent gap between constitutional guarantees and the lived reality of women facing violence. This presentation analyses the interplay between constitutional provisions and the State’s obligations under international and regional human rights instruments, with particular emphasis on the Istanbul Convention, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights and the EU Gender Equality Strategy 2020–2025. The focus is placed on whether constitutional norms are sufficiently actionable to ensure prevention, protection, and prosecution in cases of GBV, and how EU integration serves as a framework for reform. Further attention is given to the institutional and legal reforms undertaken by North Macedonia in recent years, including amendments to legislation and their constitutional implications. The presentation argues that addressing gender-based violence through a constitutional lens is not only a legal necessity for harmonization with EU standards but also a vital step toward building a more just, equal, and democratic society. In conclusion, the paper underscores the need for a more proactive constitutional commitment to combating GBV – one that goes beyond symbolic guarantees to ensure real, enforceable rights for women. As North Macedonia aspires to join the European Union, the constitutional entrenchment of gender equality and the protection of women from violence must be seen not merely as accession criteria, but as a foundational expression of European values and democratic resilience.
Publisher: Goce Delcev University
Relation: https://eprints.ugd.edu.mk/36497/
Identifier: oai:eprints.ugd.edu.mk:36497
Identifier: https://eprints.ugd.edu.mk/36497/2/book-quo-vadis-eu-security%20%282%29.pdfIdentifier: Maksimova, Elena (2025) Constitutional safeguards and EU aspirations: addressing gender-based violence in North Macedonia. In: QUO vadis EU security? A constitutional perspective on migration, transnational crime, fundamental rights and values, Sept 2025, Stip.