Cambodia is facing many crises that violate their rights as human beings. Having their land taken by corrupt politicians, or having their freedom to express their thoughts censored to being forced to partake in a demeaning industry where they are forced to due hard labor with little to no pay. Land grabbing leaves families in a state of loss and anger. Freedom of speech and expression takes away the right the citizens had when the United States brought democracy to the country, leaving their…
Nation Human Rights Commission (UNHRC) is an intergovernmental organization within the structure of the United Nations. It comprises of 47 Council positions intended to ensure a fair geographical representation. 13 members are drawn from Asia, 13 members from Africa, 8 from Caribbean and Latin American, 5 from Eastern Europe and 7 from Western Europe and other states. The Council was established in 2006 by the United Nations General Assembly to succeed the United Nations Commission on Human…
escape because they had been chained to their beds. These people had been chained to their beds because they were not "trusted" to be alone (Satish Shri, Raste.) Large populations of Americans, the mentally disabled, face many accounts of Human Rights violations, yet these people have done nothing to have this brought upon them. A mental disability can be defined as but not limited to a derangement or abnormality of function; a mental state (Schlein, Lisa.) Examples that will be referred to in…
American organization that is religiously devoted to end women’s rights violations on an international scale. And, their main project is to share how China uses barbaric techniques to enforce the one-child policy. This includes forced abortions and infanticide.…
freedom has been decreasing, U.S human rights activists remain hopeful that the Obama administration’s efforts will continue to and prioritize its human rights foreign policy agenda (Jost, 2009). With official tactics being quiet diplomacy, skeptics have doubts over the effectiveness of U.S human rights policies, yet with the implementation of the freedom of expression resolution, there is no doubt the U.S is taking the right steps in curbing human rights violations worldwide (Jost, 2009). In…
Ruggie’s Principles The United Nations Human Rights Council in 2005 appointed Harvard Professor John Ruggie to study business and human rights and end the debate on the human rights responsibilities of companies. Ruggie’s six-year study builds on his “Protect, Respect and Remedy” Framework, published in 2008, that outlined a state’s duty to protect human rights, and the corporation’s responsibility to respect human rights. This study leads to unanimous endorsement by the United Nations.…
The topic concerning global human rights has served as a spark, initiating many instances of heated debate and provoking great controversy. While many episodes of insufficient progress are often portrayed in the media and other informational platforms; there are actually a great deal more successes eluding the majority of the world’s population in regards to securing human rights. Specifically, the international community is, in fact, making substantial leaps in the right direction toward the…
The Truth Behind the Mask: Human Right Abuses in Transnational China Whenever I visited Beijing, China, I could see buildings of many large corporations such as McDonalds and Walmart. However, the Southern parts of China have a completely different appearance. When I was a child, I used to visit Guangzhou every year and could see many factories and thousands of workers who came from other parts of China. Nowadays, poor workers still migrate to Southern cities to work for the transnational…
The Rwandan Genocide is a depiction of a time when the global community turned its back on human rights violation. The leadership of the UN and the “functioning of the Secretariat” along with its key member states all contributed to the UNSC failure to deal effectively with the Rwandan genocide. The states of the international community were ignorant…
“exotic” and “oppressive” cultures, “but all human relations and institutions or structures in which gender stereotypes and fixed parental gender role are used in a way that is detrimental t let full realisation of women’s human rights.” Article 5 lays the foundation for an approach to go beyond the distinction between formal and substantive equality and concentrate on transformative equality (Hunter, 2008). This is a big progress in directing human rights actors and practitioners not just…