7 research outputs found

    Derry/Londonderry report on upholding the right to human rights to culture in post-conflict societies

    Get PDF
    This report was based on research commissioned by the Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission in 2013. It provides an overview of critique of relevant international standards addressing cultural rights; identifies examples of good practice and areas were problems have arisen and uses the City/Londonderry City of Culture 2013 designation as a case-study of the opportunities and challenges in relation to the realisation of the right to culture in post-conflict and divided societies

    The Derry/Londonderry report on upholding the human right to culture in post-conflict societies

    Get PDF
    The Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission (the Commission) is mandated as a national human rights institution to uphold all of the human rights in the international human rights treaties. These include the right to culture. However, the Commission has found that little attention has been paid to cultural rights in human rights discourse. In particular, the promotion and protection of cultural rights in societies emerging from conflict is a neglected area. Little guidance exists for States, cultural stakeholders and such human rights actors as national human rights institutions as to how best to uphold cultural rights in such contexts. This gap is of particular concern for the promotion of cultural rights in Northern Ireland, a society that is emerging from decades of conflict. It is in order to redress this gap in literature and policy guidance that the Commission is publishing the present report. The report is set against the backdrop of the designation of Derry/Londonderry as UK City of Culture 2013. The experience of that city as City of Culture is used as a case study in relation to the realisation of cultural rights in a post-conflict society. As part of the UK City of Culture initiative, the Commission organised a conference and consultation on cultural rights in divided and post-conflict societies in association with the University of Ulster and in co-operation with the UN Special Rapporteur in the Field of Cultural Rights, Ms Farida Shaheed. This event took place in Derry/Londonderry from 1 to 3 July 2013 and the discussions that took place informed the finalisation of the current report as well as the attached recommendations

    Education, equality and human rights: Exploring the impact of devolution in the UK

    No full text
    corecore