How do we monitor human rights violations worldwide?

June 1, 2021 by usidhr.org

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5 min read

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As enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948), we are all entitled to human rights which protect our freedoms and abilities to live our lives without fear of persecution or oppression. How then are these rights protected in the face of violation? What legal bodies and organizations exist in order to ensure our human rights are protected?

International Jurisdiction

Firstly, there isn’t one single international court that has been founded in order to protect human rights worldwide. Rather, the responsibility of ensuring the protection of human rights lies with the individual government or nation-state. However, due to the lack of bodies and relevant national legislation, enforcing international human rights law is not always that simple.

There are international bodies that protect certain geographical areas, such as the African Court of Human Rights, the European Court of Human Rights, and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. The African Court of Human Rights was founded in 2004 by the African Union along with the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights in order to monitor human rights violations in Africa. 31/ 54 states have ratified the protocol and the court is composed of 11 judges who are nationals of member states. The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) is located in Strasbourg, France, and interprets the European Convention of Human Rights. This convention was signed in 1950 by 47 European states and its articles include: Article 3 (Prohibition of Torture), Article 10 (Freedom of Expression) and Article 12 (Right to Marry).

The International Criminal Court (ICC) has jurisdiction over war crimes, genocides, and crimes against humanity and prosecutes individuals internationally. It is an inter-governmental organization based in the Hague, the Netherlands and when national governments are unable to prosecute criminals, the ICC fulfills the role. It consists of 123 member states, and can only investigate within these countries. 42 states have not signed the Rome Statute
(which established the ICC in 1998) and therefore the ICC cannot prosecute individuals from these nations.

Human Rights Instruments

Treaties and conventions have been adopted at regional (regional instruments) and international (international instruments) levels to ensure the protection of human rights, which are also known as Human Rights Instruments. This includes the Convention of the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, which was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1965 and protects Article 2:

This also includes the Declaration of the Rights of the Child which was adopted by the United Nations in 1959 and protects Article 25:

There are also regional conventions that apply to a specific geographical area. For example, the American Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous People
by the Organisation of American States (2016) only applies in the Americas. The Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN) Human Rights Declaration (2009) only applies in Asia.

Accountability

There are many organizations and charities which work around the world to monitor human rights violations in the world. The reports they generate go on to influence international policy and international relations between states and governments. One of these is Amnesty International, which comprises three key areas: research, advocacy, and campaigns/action. Amnesty International publishes yearly reports on every country in the world detailing human rights abuses and violations. Another similar organization is Human Rights Watch (HRW). It was founded in 1978 and comprises lawyers, experts, journalists who monitor and expose human rights violations around the world. They have individual country fact files with reports of the protection or abuses of human rights in each country.

Human Rights Protection

In order to protect our human rights, we need to monitor their statuses internationally and understand when our rights are being violated. The simplest solution is to ensure a basic level of education is available to all citizens of every nation, so everyone understands their basic human rights, from the right to liberty (Article 3) to the right of freedom of assembly (Article 20). Education will help prevent human rights violations from happening in the first place. While monitoring human rights violations is a useful instrument to ensure abuses are corrected through advocacy and policy change, prevention can lower the odds of committing such abuses. As the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights states: ‘Action to protect and promote human rights has inherent preventive power while rights-based approaches to peace and security bring this power to efforts for sustainable peace’. USIDHR is committed to ensuring every individual has a fair understanding of their basic human rights. To aid in this endeavor, the founder of USIDHR and international human rights law specialist, Ms. Isabelle Vladoiu, has created an 8-module training to certify generations of human rights consultants who can then pass on this essential knowledge into their wider communities. Despite lacking legal jurisdiction, grassroots human rights movements are essential for monitoring and preventing human rights violations worldwide.

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Ella Turney

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US Institute of Diplomacy and Human Rights (USIDHR) is a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization located in Washington, DC. Its main purpose is to advance education for all. Through its EduforEveryChild program, USIDHR helps kids at-risk of poverty go to school by supporting their education for an entire year. So far, they have helped hundreds of kids go to school by awarding them the Edu-box containing school supplies, materials and necessaries to go to school. USIDHR also provides online courses and training on human rights, human trafficking, diplomatic protocol and etiquette, and business consulting. Other programs include Let Her Lead, an initiative aimed at empowering young women through education and training, and Religious Pluralism for promoting religious freedom for all.

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