Human Rights-Based Approaches to Programming

Poverty

Freedom from poverty is not explicitly recognised as a human right in any international human rights treaty. However, the right to an adequate standard of living (which includes  housing and food), to health, education and freedom from discrimination, housing, food, health and education, are core principles of the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) and the Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural rights. By taking these human rights principles as a framework for action, rights-based approaches tackle the underlying determinants of poverty.


According to UNICEF most of the people living in poverty are children and that child poverty is growing. Poverty affects most aspects of children’s lives and can be prevented with adequate investment by governments, civil society and families on children's rights.


A rights-based approach to poverty looks at the issue as more than the absence of money and possessions. Child poverty is a consequence of the denial of rights such as the right to play, non discrimination, participation, health and health services and education. Any action to end child poverty should go hand in hand with an action to realise children's rights.


Traditional measures to fight poverty focus on the economic status of households, neglecting inequalities within households. Furthermore, children's views are rarely taken into account when government and other institutions develop economic policies. This is a reflection of indirect discrimination against children and the assumption that adults know what is best for children. The impact of this lack of consideration for children is discriminatory in that a disproportionate number of children are affected by poverty compared to the rest of the population. 

Rights-based approaches focus on how individuals experience poverty, detecting inequalities by disaggregating data by sex, age, ethnicity, geographic region and economic status. This enables agencies to focus on the needs of vulnerable population groups to equal participation, empowerment and visibility participation in local decision-making bodies that distribute resources.

Rights-based approaches face a significant challenge in coping with shifts in poverty levels caused by seasonal changes, vulnerability to natural disasters, environmental degradation and conflict. Changes can be tackled by collaborating with key actors, including communities, private companies and governments, to establish mechanisms that monitor crises and provide a framework for accountability.


 


Example: A rights-based approach to poverty: mobilising children for participation in Ghana


Programmes to control trachoma (an infection of the eye transmitted by flies) often include hygiene programmes in schools. When discussing such a programme with students in northern Ghana, a number of issues emerged: the borehole was far from the school grounds; the female students had to carry water to the school every morning and the girls carried water not only to the classrooms but also to the teachers’ houses. These were issues of gender equality, of child exploitation, and of village politics that were felt strongly by the students. All of these issues were potentially more important to the children than the incidence of trachoma.


In order to generate lasting results, any solution would need to take these concerns and violations into account. It shows the importance of including children as partners in setting the agenda.


 


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News: UN Food Agency Adopts Guidelines to Slash World Hunger in half by 2015
24.11.2004
FAO has adopted a set of voluntary guidelines deemed vital to achieving the Millennium Development Goal (MDG) of slashing the number of the world’s hungry in half by 2015.
Rights and Risk: Challenging Biotechnology Policy in Zimbabwe
20.1.2005
A Human Rights Approach to Poverty Reduction Strategies
12.3.2005
This document is a set of guidelines in the proces, content, monitoring and accountabililty of poverty reduction strategies in the human rights approach.
ODI Briefing Paper: The Work of Amartya Sen
12.3.2005
This Briefing Paper reviews the ways in which Nobel Prize winning economist Professor Amartya Sen has focused international attention on the significance of fundamental human freedoms and human rights for development theory and practice.
Integrating Human Rights with Sustainable Human Development
12.3.2005
Drawing on the relationship between human rights and sustainable human development, the document outlines three areas for UNDP action.
Promoting Rights-Based Approaches: Experiences and Ideas from Asia and the Pacific
12.3.2005
Save the Children has promoted rights-based approaches through training workshops, programme reviews, discussions, documents and practical programme experimentation. All of this work is based on a firm commitment to human rights and the fundamental principles of universality, indivisibility, accountability and participation.
To Claim our Rights: Livelihood Security, Human Rights and Sustainable Development
21.6.2005
This paper explores the potential contribution of a human rights perspective to the development of policies and programmes that strengthen the sustainability of poor people’s assets and livelihood security.
Questions and Answers
18.10.2005
World Vision Zambia joins children's campaign against HIV/AIDS (11 November 2005)
28.11.2005
World Vision Zambia National Director Martin Silutongwe expressed the urgent need for efforts to improve the standard of children’s lives in Zambia during the launch of the 2005 Global Movement for Children (GMC) ‘Lesson for Life’ in Lusaka recently.
Save The Children calls on the international community to support Angola's forgotten poor (11 November 2005)
28.11.2005
As Angola prepares to commemorate the 30th anniversary of its independence from Portugal on November 11, Save the Children is calling on the international community to do more to address the extreme poverty in the country, where 45 per cent of children suffer from chronic malnutrition and one in four die before their fifth birthday.
Britain’s Poorest Children Revisited
5.12.2005
The Government has celebrated its achievements in delivering a general decline in poverty. This decline is welcome, however, current policies appear to have made little impact on children most in need.
What Young People Are Saying no. 19: Excluded and Invisible Children
20.12.2005
Millions of children today are at risk because of discrimination, poverty and inequality, conflict and poor governance, and HIV/AIDS. Many children still lack access to basic services such as clean water, health care, schools and hospitals. Others are denied their right to a formal identity, face early marriage, or are forced into armed combat or dangerous work. In honour of the 2006 State of the World’s Children report on excluded and invisible children, Voices of Youth held discussions on how young people think these children can be reached.
The Sixth WTO Ministerial Conference
21.12.2005
ministerial conferences are the WTO’s highest decision-making body, meeting at least once every two years and providing political direction for the organization. This sixth conference will be vital for enabling the four-year-old Doha Development Agenda negotiations forward sufficiently to conclude the round in 2006.
Agricultural Rehabilitation: Mapping the Linkages between Humanitarian Relief, Social Protection and Development
11.5.2006
Evaluation/ Learning Process of the UK Inter-Agency Group on Rights Based Approaches
15.5.2006
Growing scepticism on trade deal
12.6.2006
As the world trade talks resume on 13 December, many UK development campaigners say that they would prefer no deal to a bad deal for poor countries.
Q&A: World Trade Talks
12.6.2006
Ministers from around the world are attempting to reahc a deal on international trade rules. The World Trade Organisation's Ministerial Conference is seen as a key stage in shaping the future of international commerce. But what are the negotiations all about?
ISRAEL: Equality Index 2007 (Arabic)
17.7.2008
Reader on Children and Rights Based Programming No. 5
5.6.2009
The reader contains selected resources about children and rights-based approaches to programming. This includes basic texts, legal instruments, best practice documents, policy and advocacy documents, monitoring and reporting tools, training material and websites. Further resources are available on the rights-based programming website www.therightsapproach.org.
TRANSPARENCY: Publishing What We Learned
21.4.2010
This report discusses the origins and evolution of PWYP from 2002 to 2007. It also assesses the effectiveness of PWYP’s advocacy and policy initiatives and examines how the Coalition has operated internationally. In this sense, the report is not only a narrative of PWYP’s history and accomplishments, but a practical tool to shine a light on the strengths and challenges which face a global civil society coalition.
EDUCATION: Reference Guide on External Education Financing
21.1.2011
The INEE Reference Guide on External Education Financing provides an overview of the different types of mechanisms for financing education in order to help governments, policy makers and civil society better understand the ways in which donors provide education assistance, how various funding mechanisms work and why donors choose one funding mechanism over another.
CRIN Submission on UN Draft Guiding Principles for Business & Human Rights
10.2.2011
On January 31, 2011, CRIN submitted comments to the UN Special Representative of the Secretary General on Transnational Corporations and other Business Enterprises, Professor John Ruggie, as part of the consultation on the draft Guiding Principles for the Implementation of the United Nations 'Protect, Respect and Remedy' Framework.

 

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