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human rights

The work on this site seeks to learn from the human rights struggles of the past. How was legal slavery abolished? How has the emancipation of women been advanced? How did apartheid come to an end? Learning about these profound human rights achievements can help us better understand how to overcome human rights violations against non-citizens. It also reports on human rights issues of today as they impact on non-citizens.

Libya’s Migrant Slaves

By
March 13, 2011
Benghazi - calling for freedom

Among the tragedies befalling the people of Libya, is the tragedy befalling its migrant workers.   On 9 March the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies reported that 30,000 migrant workers were forced back into Libya by forces loyal to Muammar Gaddafi to ‘return to work’ in Tripoli.   This forced return amounts to slavery.  It also violates international human...
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Government should take lesson from Christmas Islanders

By
December 21, 2010
Christmas Island

It appears from all reporting that what makes the tragedy that occurred on the morning of Wednesday 15 December, 2010 on the shoreline of Christmas Island all the more tragic is that human beings had to watch (and listen) helplessly whilst fellow humans died just metres away. The stories of the traumatised witnesses have painted a horrific picture of...
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Hometown Foreigners

By
November 30, 2010
Burakumin leather workers from 1873 photo by SHINICHI SUZUKI

We traditionally define a “foreigner” as someone who comes from a country other than our own. But that definition is too easy. It does not fully encompass the range of people who find themselves “foreigners” in their own hometowns (that is facing exclusion and discrimination): sometimes because of the occupation they hold. The Japanese...
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Book Review: The Strange Alchemy of Law and Life by Justice Albie Sachs

By
November 10, 2010
Book Review: The Strange Alchemy of Law and Life by Justice Albie Sachs

The victims and perpetrators of human rights abuses whisper from the pages of this short book.  They speak to us of their struggle to realize their own humanity and recognize the humanity of each other.   For a judge it is an unusual book, but then Albie Sachs is an unusual judge.  A member of the...
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A Vision of a World Made New: Eleanor Roosevelt’s Prayer

By
October 27, 2009
A Vision of a World Made New: Eleanor Roosevelt’s Prayer

Eleanor Roosevelt was the first Chair of the United Nations Human Rights Commission.  Her work, with her colleagues, led to the adoption in 1948 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.  The following, according to her son, is a prayer that she said every night: Our Father, who has set a restlessness in our...
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