Human Rights-Based Approach to Programming - UNFPA - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Human Rights-Based Approach to Programming - UNFPA -

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Title: Health and human rights: Bridging theory and practice Abstract #144579 Author: Jessie Evans Last modified by: Luz Angela Melo Created Date – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Human Rights-Based Approach to Programming - UNFPA -


1
Human Rights-Based Approach to Programming-
UNFPA -
  • SESSION 8
  • Advocating for a HRBA Challenges and
    Opportunities for UNFPA

2
Session Overview
  • UNFPAs advocacy role
  • Advocacy strategies
  • Obstacles and challenges
  • Strategies for challenging contexts
  • Importance of cultural sensitivity
  • Conclusion

3
UN Country Team Role
  • information, education
  • participation
  • organization
  • monitoring
  • access to remedies
  • (administrative, judicial)
  • laws
  • policies
  • services
  • data, monitoring
  • remedies

fulfil duties
CSO
Capacity development
claim rights
duty-bearers
rights-holders
Information, participation, organization,
monitoring
advocacy
technical assistance
laws and policies
service delivery
UN-CT support
Source Action 2 CLP
4
UNFPAs Advocacy Role
  • What are the different ways in which UNFPA
    engages in advocacy?
  • with governments, other duty-bearers?
  • with individuals, civil society, other
    rights-holders?
  • within the UNCT?
  • at the international level?
  • others?

5
Strategies (1)
  • Know where the government stands on various
    issues
  • Know how advocacy and programme implementation
    might be most effectively carried out
  • For example
  • legislative reform may be required and
    legislative capacities may need to be
    strengthened
  • policy reforms may be needed to combat
    discrimination and ensure consistency between
    macroeconomic and social policies and more
    equitable public policies

6
Strategies (2)
  • In order to devise and deliver effective
    advocacy, engage in environmental scanning
  • Allows understanding of factors that create or
    constrain an enabling environment
  • Analysis should consider overall legal, political
    and economic environment, and be sensitive to the
    critical role of local culture
  • Remember An enabling environment entails
    building a human rights culture

7
Obstacles and Challenges (1)
  • Challenging contexts include places where there
    is
  • Lack of political will to deal with issues seen
    as especially sensitive or controversial
  • Overt resistance to the concepts and methods of
    human rights (including for ostensible cultural,
    religious or other reasons)
  • Open political resistance to human rights

8
Obstacles and Challenges (2)
  • Challenging contexts include places where there
    is
  • Lack of political commitment and/or weak capacity
    to develop and implement a HRBA
  • Resistance to acknowledging certain populations,
    and therefore resistance to ensuring the human
    rights of those populations
  • Cultural or religiously sanctioned subordination
    of women, and where negative attitudes towards
    women and stereotypes are deeply entrenched

9
Obstacles and Challenges (3)
  • Challenging contexts include places where there
    is
  • Government that operates in a highly centralized
    manner, with limited public accountability
  • Violent conflict, widespread poverty or extremely
    weak capacity, where basic survival or
    institution building is seen as a priority
  • Generally weak governance or other significant
    structural and political barriers

10
Strategies for Advocating in Challenging Contexts
  • Work with culture
  • Emphasize that a HRBA is synonymous with national
    ownership
  • Show that human rights are not a foreign concept
  • Demonstrate that you know the value of a HRBA
  • Emphasize capacity development
  • Do the best you can in each specific situation
  • Be patient, and work progressively towards change

11
Advancing ICPD Agenda and a HRBA Without Saying
Human Rights (1)
  • Talk about the benefits of a HRBA, e.g.
  • national ownership
  • sustainable programmes
  • capacity development
  • engenders the trust of the citizenry
  • improves long-term development outcomes
  • uncovers root causes of development challenges
  • use data to show disparities
  • the focus on process
  • 3AQs

12
Advancing ICPD Agenda and a HRBA Without Saying
Human Rights(2)
  • Refer to nationally entrenched rights in
    constitutions and domestic legal standards
  • Reassure governments that you can help them meet
    their international commitments
  • Share UNFPAs own efforts to ensure
    accountability, participation, etc.
  • Change terminology
  • reproductive health or healthy families may
    be less controversial than family planning or
    reproductive rights
  • Build development around the strengths and
    interests of the people involved

13
Importance of Cultural Sensitivity
  • Cultural or religious traditions and practices
    can be in opposition to UNFPAs efforts
  • Working to change behaviours and attitudes is
    extremely time-consuming with limited immediate
    obvious impact
  • Incremental changes are possible and may be more
    enduring in the long run. This is the reason why
    UNFPA promotes a culturally sensitive HRBA
  • Essential to design and implement programmes that
    work from within a culture

14
Conclusion
  • Integrating human rights into development
    assistance is not simply a technical matter
    resolved by adequate training or better tools and
    procedures
  • In addition to knowledge of what a HRBA means in
    practice, it requires negotiation with
    governments, consensus-building, and adapting to
    potentially difficult and unfriendly contexts
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