Theme 2021: Equality
This year’s Human Rights Day theme relates to 'Equality' and Article 1 of the UDHR – “All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.”
This is why UNESCO is launching today its Global Education Monitoring Report on Youth and a campaign encouraging youth to hold governments accountable for ensuring everyone’s right to education.
The principles of equality and non-discrimination are at the heart of human rights. Equality is aligned with the 2030 Agenda and with the UN approach set out in the document Shared Framework on Leaving No One Behind: Equality and Non-Discrimination at the Heart of Sustainable Development.
Equality, inclusion and non-discrimination, in other words - a human rights-based approach to development - is the best way to reduce inequalities and resume our path towards realising the 2030 Agenda.
- Rebuild better, fairer, greener
Equal opportunities for youth
Successive financial and health crises have had long-lasting and multidimensional impacts on millions of young people. Unless their rights are protected, including through decent jobs and social protection, the “COVID generation” runs the risk of falling prey to the detrimental effects of mounting inequality and poverty.
Reversing vaccine inequality and injustice
Vaccine injustice through unfair vaccine distribution and hoarding contravenes international legal and human rights norms and the spirit of global solidarity. The call for a common agenda and a new social contract between Governments and their people is the need of the hour so as to rebuild trust and to ensure a life of dignity for all.
Advancing the right to healthy environment and climate justice
Environmental degradation, including climate change, pollution and nature loss, disproportionately impacts persons, groups and peoples in vulnerable situation
- Ask yout students to read the illustration version of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Do students know what their rights are ? The Declaration is translated into at least 435 languages and dialects;
- Organize lecture series, film or steaming series, book discussions, news, workshops, debates among students, parents, on human rights;
- Take part in human campaigns of the day at school;
- Get out school with your students and help other young people and old people within your community;
- Wear a t-shirt on Human Rights Day. Make a t-shirt made just stating that is Human Rights Day (cross-curricular);
- Ask your students (Secondary education) to write out a specific article from the United Nations Declaration;
- Invite them to promote human rights on Twitter (school account)
- Nobel Peace Prize
- UNESCO
- UN
- EU
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