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THE ORIGIN AND MEANING OF HUMAN RIGHTS UN HABITAT Nairobi, Kenya 23-25 October 201 3

THE ORIGIN AND MEANING OF HUMAN RIGHTS UN HABITAT Nairobi, Kenya 23-25 October 201 3 Urban Jonsson. OUTLINE. The moral origin of human rights The legal origin of human rights The meaning of human rights Different types of human rights duties

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THE ORIGIN AND MEANING OF HUMAN RIGHTS UN HABITAT Nairobi, Kenya 23-25 October 201 3

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  1. THE ORIGIN AND MEANING OF HUMAN RIGHTS UN HABITAT Nairobi, Kenya 23-25 October 2013 Urban Jonsson

  2. OUTLINE • The moral origin of human rights • The legal origin of human rights • The meaning of human rights • Different types of human rights duties • The difference between a Right and a Privilege

  3. What is more important: The Origin or The Meaning?

  4. The Origin of Human Rights

  5. HUMAN RIGHTS TODAY Human Rights = Morality + Legality

  6. The Moral Origin of Human Rights

  7. THE MORAL FOUNDATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS Moral codes have existed and do exist in all societies on what is right or wrong, permissible or not permissible, legitimate or not legitimate etc.

  8. “The Golden Rule” In Religions

  9. THE GOLDEN RULE - BUDDHISM “Hurt not others in ways that you yourself would find hurtful”

  10. THE GOLDEN RULE - CHRISTIANITY “Do unto others as you would have them do unto you”

  11. THE GOLDEN RULE - HINDUISM “Do naught to others, if done to thee, would cause thee pain; this is the sum of duty”

  12. THE GOLDEN RULE - ISLAM “No one of you is a believer until he desires for his brother that which he desires for himself”

  13. THE GOLDEN RULE - JUDAISM “What is hateful to you, do not to your fellow man. That is the entire law; all the rest is commentary”

  14. How is this possible?

  15. I argue that this is the result of the individual human being's ‘humanitarian instinct’

  16. Human rights reflectthe very nature of Human Beings

  17. THE INFLUENCE BY WESTERN THOUGHT It was the influence of the Western ‘Enlightenment’ with concepts of: Secularism Equality Universality that influenced the development of today’s human rights

  18. DISCUSSION

  19. HUMAN RIGHTS Human Rights = Morality + Legality

  20. The Legal Origin of Human Rights

  21. The United Nations and Human Rights

  22. THE ORIGINAL PILLARS OF THE UN SYSTEM ACCORDING TO THE UN CHARTER 1945 • PEACE • JUSTICE • FREEDOMS • HUMAN RIGHTS

  23. THE UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS (1948) • “The recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice, and peace in the world”

  24. THE TWO INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS COVENANTS • The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) • The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR)

  25. CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS Right to life Right to freedom from slavery, servitude, forced or compulsory labor Liberty and security Freedom of movement

  26. CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS 5. Equality before the law 6. Freedom of thought, conscience and religion 7. Freedom of expression and peaceful assembly 8. Right to vote and be elected

  27. ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL RIGHTS Right to work and to form trade unions Right to social security Right to food Right to health

  28. ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL RIGHTS 5. Right to education 6. Right to shelter 7. Right of children to be protected from all forms of exploitation

  29. CONTROVERSIAL ISSUE Is there any fundamental difference between CPR and ESCR?

  30. THE CORE UN HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES UNITED NATIONS CHARTER UNIVERSAL DECLARATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS • INTERNATIONAL CONVENANT ON • CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS • (ICCPR) • + 2 Optional Protocols • Individual Complaints • Death Penalty • Ratified by 149 States (9 December 2002) INTERNATIONAL CONVENANT ON ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL RIGHTS (ICESCR) Ratified by 146 States (9 December 2002 International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination - Ratified 165 States Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women + Optional Protocol - Ratified 170 States • Convention Against • Torture and other • Cruel, Inhuman or • Degrading Treatment • or Punishment • Optional Protocol • (prison inspections) • Ratified 132 States. Convention on the Rights of the Child + 2 Optional Protocols Armed conflict Sale of children, child prostitution and child pornography - Ratified 191 States Convention on the Rights of all Migrant Workers and their Families

  31. NEW CONVENTION! • The Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance (2006) • The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (2007)

  32. FROM NATURAL RIGHTS TO HUMAN RIGHTS • In ‘natural rights’duties of some people are recognized, which results in privileges or ‘rights’ of others • In International Humanitarian Law (Geneva Conventions) duties of military commanders are stipulated, which means that civilians have some kind of claims • In International Human Rights Law claims of individuals are recognised, which results in duties of others

  33. DISCUSSION

  34. The Meaning of Human Rights

  35. A SIMPLE ‘DEFINITION’ OF HUMAN RIGHTS Human rights are those things that ought to be done to everybody and those things that ought not to be done to anybody

  36. THE MEANING OF HUMAN RIGHTS (content) CORRELATIVE DUTY VALID CLAIM Claim (Right) Holder Duty Bearer (Subject) (Object) “A school-aged child has a valid claim (right) to education – others have duties (or obligations) to ensure that the right is realized.”

  37. RIGHT-HOLDERS AND CLAIM-HOLDERS • All individual human beings are RIGHT-HOLDERS of those rights codified in UN International Covenants and Conventions • If the individual lives in a country that has ratified the International Covenant or Convention with the specific right codified, the individual becomes a CLAIM-HOLDER

  38. The Pattern of Human Rights

  39. PATTERN OF HUMAN RIGHTS (1) • Children have a right to adequate food • Parents have a duty to provide food for their children (primary duty-bearers) • Parents may fail to meet their duties to provide food, because they have no land or job. They have as secondary claim-holderstheir rights to land or a job not realised

  40. PATTERN OF HUMAN RIGHTS (2) • Their rights may not be realised because the community or the state cannot meet their correlative duties (secondary duty-bearers) A pattern of claim-duty relationships in society

  41. Claim-Holders and Duty-Bearers are ROLES Claim(Right)-Holders and Duty-Bearers are roles into which individuals or groups of individuals enter depending on the context Example Tenants - Landlord

  42. Different Types of Human Rights Duties

  43. DIFFERENT TYPES OF DUTIES OR OBLIGATIONS • The Duty to Respect • The Duty to Protect • The Duty to Facilitate • The Duty to Provide

  44. DUTIES AND OBLIGATIONS The Obligation / Duty toRespectrequires the duty-bearer to refrain from interfering directly or indirectly with the enjoyment of the right Example States should refrain from carrying out forced evictions; denying security of tenure to particular groups; or denying restitution to particular groups

  45. DUTIES AND OBLIGATIONS The Obligation / Duty to Protect requires the duty-bearer to take measures that prevent third parties from interfering with the enjoyment of the right Example Ensure that private actors comply with human rights standards related to the Right to Adequate Housing, incl. regulating the housing and rent markets

  46. DUTIES AND OBLIGATIONS The Obligation / Duty to Facilitate requires the duty-bearers to adopt appropriate legislative, administrative, budgetary, judicial, promotional, and other measures towards the full realization of the right Example Adopt a national housing policy and national housing plan, with a focus on disadvantaged or marginalized groups

  47. DUTIES AND OBLIGATIONS The Obligation / Duty to Providerequires the duty-bearers to directly provide assistance or services for the realization of the right Example Prevent and address homeless-ness; provide the physical infrastructure required for housing; and provide housing subsidies: and stop all illegal forced evictions

  48. DISCUSSION

  49. The Difference between a Right and a Privilege

  50. Table Group Work What is the difference between a right and a privilege?

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