Human rights affect every aspect of our lives. Indeed,
violations of human rights lie at the root of almost every
problem in the world today: violence, poverty, globalisation,
the environment, economic inequality, and lawlessness. Not to
mention the wars and conflicts that are destroying parts of
the globe.
Although human rights, in their original conception, were
broadly confined to the civil and political spheres, it is now
acknowledged that they must embrace social, cultural, and
economic issues as well. Today, people even speak of a third
generation of rights that takes into account collective rights
and issues concerning future generations of mankind. All of
this has significant implications for the work we do as
educators: it means that education dealing with such issues as
globalisation, the environment, peace and intercultural
relations, among others, are all forms of human rights
education. They deal with human rights issues and they attempt
to build a culture that respects them.
In this manual we try to address the full spectrum of issues
connected with human rights. We shall look, in this chapter,
at the way in which many, if not most, of these issues are
relevant to other fields of education - such as development
education, peace education, environmental education, education
for citizenship, and so on. Anyone who is engaged in one or
other of these forms of education should find questions of
relevance within these pages.
Almost any question concerning violations of rights may be
termed a human rights issue. The international community now
recognises three different "generations" of rights, which
cover different dimensions of human activity:
These include the civil and political rights - such as the
right to freedom of expression, freedom of association, the
right to life, to a fair trial, to participation in the
political life of society, and so on. These issues (though not
only these issues) are traditionally addressed in the formal
education sector through citizenship education, civic
education, political education /education for democracy or
law-related education.
Second generation rights (Equality rights)
These include the social, economic and cultural rights - such
as the right to an adequate standard of living, to work, to
join a trade union, to health and to education. Within the
formal education
sector, at least, these areas are often neglected. Economics
education, for example, rarely deals with such issues -
although arguably it should do. The issues are sometimes
addressed by the "hidden curriculum" - that is, by many of the
less formal activities carried out by schools or youth groups,
or the work done in tutor groups or personal, social and
health education. There is, however, increasing recognition
that second generation rights are just as relevant to
citizenship as the traditionally accepted first generation
rights - and rightly so.
Third generation rights (Solidarity rights)
These rights are also known as "emerging" rights, because they
are still in the process of being acknowledged and recognised.
They refer to the collective rights of society or peoples -
such as the right to sustainable development, to peace, or to
a healthy environment. There are increasing educational areas
that look specifically at these rights - for example,
environmental education, peace education and development
education.
(More information about the different generations of rights
can be found in Chapter 4)
Have
any of the issues that you have explored with your group been
human rights issues?
Issues covered in the manual
This manual has been structured around 16 human rights-related
issues, each of which can be seen to be directly relevant to
one or more of the different generations of rights.
-
General human rights
-
Children
-
Citizenship
-
Democracy
-
Discrimination and Xenophobia
-
Education
-
Environment
-
Gender equality
|
-
Globalisation
-
Health
-
Human security
-
Media
-
Peace and Violence
-
Poverty
-
Social rights
-
Sport
|
None of these themes is any more important than the others.
Indeed, these themes are in fact interrelated to such an
extent that addressing any one of them provides a common link
with any other. This is a direct consequence of the fact that
human rights are indivisible, interdependent andinterrelated:
they cannot be treated in isolation, because all are connected
one with another, in various different and intimate ways.
The diagram on the following page provides one illustration of
this interdependence. There are others that we could have
shown: the circle round the outside could have been reordered
almost randomly and connections still be identified. The
issues in the outer circle blend into one another, just as the
educational spheres in the central circle merge together. Even
the distinctions between first, second and third generation
rights is not clear-cut. Education, for example, is
traditionally classed as a second generation right, but
education is just as necessary for effective political
participation (a first generation right) as it is for
sustainable development (a third generation right).
Accordingly, the following analyses should be seen as just one
description among many, but they help to illustrate the ways
in which the various themes are relevant to many of the
current educational fields, and how these educational fields
overlap with one another.

Citizenship Education
Citizenship education encourages the development of young
people as active and responsible citizens. In 1997, The
Council of Europe established the Education for Democratic
Citizenship project (EDC), and the June 2000 report for this
project emphasises the importance of social justice and
equality of rights for citizenship. T.H.Marshall, in his book
Citizenship and Social Class (Cambridge University Press,
1950), suggests that citizenship can only be effective when it
ensures access to three main types of rights. In this way, he
identifies three components of citizenship:
-
the civil
component, which includes the rights addressing
individual freedom;
-
the political
component -
e.g. the right to participate in the exercise of political
power and to vote and participate in parliamentary
institutions;
-
The social
component of
citizenship, which relates to the right to the prevailing
standard of living and equal access to education, health
care, housing and a minimum level of income.
Personal and Social Education
Many countries have some form of education that considers the
role of the individual in society and helps to prepare young
people for some of the personal challenges that they will
meet. This may overlap with citizenship issues but may also
include aspects of the individual's life related to leisure -
including sport, clubs and associations, music, art, or other
forms of culture. Such education may also be concerned with
personal relationships. Human rights enter into these
questions in two central ways: firstly, because personal
development and personal relations possess moral and social
aspects that need to be guided by human rights values;
secondly, because the right to take part in cultural life is
recognised in the UDHR as well as in other international
treaties. Even if the young people with whom you work are able
to claim this right, there are young people around the globe
who are not.
Values Education / Moral Education
Values education is also a common part of the school
curriculum in different countries, but it often gives rise to
two fundamental concerns in people's minds: which values such
education should aim to teach, and how we can be sure that
these values are not merely relevant to our own particular
culture? These are common problems faced by many who engage in
this area of education, and human rights provide a convenient
means of addressing it. Human rights are not only based on
values that are common to every major religion and culture,
but they are also admitted to be universal by almost every
country in the world. No-one can be criticised for teaching
human rights values!
Global Education
Globalisation is an issue at the front of many young people's
minds, and we have included it as one of the separate themes
within this manual. The general heading of global education
normally covers work that looks at different forms of
existence and patterns of behaviour around the globe. Such
education is important because it looks at the individual's
place not just in his or her own community or society, but in
the world as a whole. It can be used to raise a number of
questions connected with human rights and can help to open
people's eyes to violations of rights being committed in
different reaches of the globe. Global education enables young
people to assess the impact of their own actions and to
consider their individual responsibilities.
The Institute of Global Education, a non-profit United Nations
Non-Governmental Organisation, was founded in 1984 as The
World Peace University. The Institute declares its goal as "to
help co-create a world where peace and food sufficiency are a
way of life, where environmental responsibility exists, where
social justice prevails and where an individual achieves the
highest degree of self-realisation within a community of
co-operation."
Intercultural Education
There is a natural connection between global education and
intercultural education, which looks at the way we interact
with other cultures, societies and social groupings. All
societies today are characterised by increasing levels of
multiculturalism and cultural diversity and this makes
acknowledgement of, and respect for, the rights of minorities
increasingly important. We are being forced to reassess old
conceptions of national societies as culturally homogeneous
entities: the dual processes of European integration, together
with increased economic and social interdependence between
different world regions have made such notions outdated. Even
in those parts of the globe which are not experiencing
patterns of immigration, existing conflicts can more often
than not be traced back to a lack of understanding between
different peoples or ways of life to be found in one common
society. The conflicts in Northern Ireland, in the former
Yugoslavia and in parts of the Caucasus are sad illustrations
of the problems that can arise from an inability to respect
and live with other cultures.
Intercultural education is also an effective way of addressing
the modern phenomena of racism and racial discrimination and
intolerance.
The Directorate of Youth and Sport, especially through the
European Youth Centres and Foundation, has devoted much effort
to the field of intercultural education. The 'All Different
All Equal' campaign against racism, xenophobia, anti-Semitism
and intolerance was set up to address the growth of racist
hostility and intolerance towards minority groups. The
Campaign itself sought to "bring people together and give
extra momentum to the struggle against all forms of
intolerance."
The education pack, 'All Different All Equal', was produced in
order to help youth workers and educators to contribute to the
campaign. It identified two major directions for intercultural
education:
-
helping young people to gain the capacity to recognise
inequality, injustice, racism, stereotypes and prejudices,
and
-
giving them the knowledge and the abilities which will help
them to challenge and to try to change these whenever they
have to face them in society.
The objectives and principles of intercultural education have
also been pursued in a variety of ways through intercultural
learning - a term that is more commonly used in non-formal
education, particularly in European youth work.
Anti-racist education
Anti-racist education takes as its starting point the
assertion that we live in a multi-cultural and democratic
society, in which all citizens have a right to equity and
justice. Nevertheless, it recognises the very real existence
of racism and racist attitudes in every modern society, and
the impact that this can have for young people, especially
those associated with certain minorities, both in terms of
giving them a negative experience of the education process and
in terms of diminishing their chances in later life.
Anti-racist education attempts to address racist behaviour,
language and practices, both individual and institutional, and
to increase general awareness of the harmful effects of racism
in modern society. It aims to help in the creation of a
multi-racial and interdependent society in which all citizens'
rights are respected and protected.
Another complementary approach can be found in "Section 3" of
DOmino where the authors propose the integration of peer group
education in the fight against racism.
Development Education
Development education has strong links with global education,
but gives particular emphasis to third generation rights -
such as sustainable development, the right to a healthy
environment, and peace. It also gives high priority to issues
concerning the interaction of different societies and methods
of development, which is why we have created a link in the
diagram with intercultural education. Development education is
thus holistic, in the sense that it is based upon a view of
the world as one interconnected whole, and it is oriented
towards the future.
The Development Education Association is a British
organisation that has been working for almost 10 years in this
field. They define development education as lifelong learning
that:
-
explores the links between people living in the "developed"
countries of the North with those of the "developing" South,
enabling people to understand the links between their own
lives and those of people throughout the world
-
increases understanding of the economic, social, political
and environmental forces which shape our lives
-
develops the skills, attitudes and values which enable
people to work together to take action to bring about change
and take control of their own lives.
Environmental Education
The search for methods of sustainable development forms one of
the key aims of development education, and leads naturally to
concerns about the future state of the environment. From this
perspective, questions concerning further economic development
- particularly of
developing countries - need to be balanced against their cost
to mankind and the natural world as a whole. Environmental
education aims to bring these questions to public attention,
and to encourage greater care and respect for the natural
resources of the world.
That also links in with human rights concerns. Since the life
of mankind is dependent on a healthy and sustainable
environment, consideration for the human rights of people
throughout the globe, and of future generations, brings
environmental issues to the forefront. Today, some people even
speak of the need for official recognition of a separate
environmental human right.
Peace Education
The natural resources of this world have not been equally
distributed. They have been, and no doubt will continue to be,
one source of violent conflict between different individuals
and societies. There are, unfortunately, many others. Peace
educators may be interested in more equitable or more sensible
ways of sharing the earth's resources as a means of resolving
some of the conflicts in the world, but their focus is likely
to be primarily on the conflicts themselves and more
particularly on their structural causes. Peace education is
based on a concept of peace that goes beyond the mere absence
of war: peace can only be addressed by means of a search for
justice and by understanding structural forms of exploitation
and injustice.
Few people will need to be convinced of the need for peace
education - for a better understanding of conflict, for
respect among peoples that makes violent conflict less likely,
and for the skills to transform potentially dangerous
situations into peaceful ones. The world needs that: a genuine
right to life for everyone, and a genuine respect for everyone
- including, even, those among us who have made mistakes.
Education for tolerance, for intercultural understanding, and
fundamentally, education in the inherent and universal nature
of basic human rights must be an important route towards that
aim.
The period 2001-2010 has been declared the International
Decade for a Culture of Peace and Non-Violence for the
Children of the World (UN Doc A/RES/53/25). The International
Peace Research Association, which was set up with support from
UNESCO, has a Peace Education Commission that brings together
educators working to promote a culture of peace.
Law-related Education
This is perhaps the most "formal" of the different education
fields we have discussed so far, but law-related education is
not just learning about the laws that exist, it is also about
developing respect for the rule of law and for the fundamental
principles of justice that are laid out in the international
human rights treaties.
The connection between law-related education and human rights
can be made at two separate levels: firstly, in the specific
'legal' rights that protect the individual against unfair
trials, but secondly at the level of international law. The UN
institutions, the European Court of Human Rights and other
regional structures are legal institutions that exist to
protect our human rights, but we need to know about them and
we need to use them, if they are to be effective in this aim.
They will not hunt us out.