Table
of Contents
-
Statement of
Purpose
-
Program Report
-
Sample Resolution
Contact
Information

Karen Dolan
Director, Cities for Progress/Cities for Peace
Fellow,
Institute for Policy Studies
1112 16th St NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20036
kdolan@igc.org
202.234.9382 x228
DC HUMAN RIGHTS
STATEMENT OF PURPOSE
What is a human rights city?
A Human Rights City is one whose
residents and local authorities, through learning about the relevance of human
rights to their daily lives, guided by a steering committee, join in ongoing
learning, discussions, systemic analysis and critical thinking at the community
level, to pursue a creative exchange of ideas and the joint planning of actions
to realize their economic, social, political, civil and cultural human rights.
Objectives
- Work together to expand the learning of human
rights at the community level, leading to sustained and social
transformation.
- Work together with local groups and individuals
to identify the specific human rights needs of the people in D.C.
- Develop priorities and take actions toward
achieving equality, peace and justice guided by the holistic human rights
framework in freedom and dignity for all.
Methods of action
Among others:
- Coalition building
- Human rights campaigns
- Public and popular education
- Testimonies to city council
- Participatory budgeting
History
On December 10,
2008, Human Rights Day, at the urging of the PDHRE, the People’s Movement for
Human Rights Learning and the American Friends Service Committee DC Peace and
Economic Justice Program, joined by the City Office of Human Rights and more
than 20 community organizations, individuals, churches and colleges, the D.C.
City Council proclaimed the District of Columbia a Human Rights City to mark
the 60th anniversary of the adoption by the United Nations of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). Washington, D.C.
has joined a successful worldwide movement that includes more than 17 cities in
6 countries.
Purpose
The purpose of the D.C. Human Rights
People’s Movement is:
(1)
To
facilitate a process for human rights learning and framing of our various
issues and struggles using the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human
Rights.
(2)
To
facilitate a bottom-up process for realizing human rights for all D.C.
residents.
The D.C. Human Rights People’s
Movement is formed by and opened to individuals, organizations, and movements
involved and interested in realizing human rights.
Value Added
- We are part of something bigger than our
individual organizations.
- Overall framing of our issues as part of the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
- Constant referral to D.C. as first Human Rights
City (accountability for our local officials)
Role of the Steering Committee
The role of the
steering committee is to facilitate the D.C. Human Rights People’s Movement
through communication, education, organization, and documentation.
DC HUMAN RIGHTS
CITY PROGRAM REPORT
A Human
Rights City is one whose residents and local authorities, through ongoing
discussions and creative exchange of ideas at the community level, come to
accept human rights as a way of life. They join in positive, proactive planning
and actions to achieve economic and social justice in the city.
In 2008 the AFSC began a major effort to make the UN Declaration of
Human Rights (UDHR) a reality in the DC area. The AFSC formed an alliance with
a United Nations non-profit, People’s Decade on Human Rights Education (PDHRE),
to educate middle school and high school students about the Universal
Declaration. After learning about the UDHR, students undertook actions to
address areas where they believed rights set out in the Declaration are not
being honored in their own community.
The D.C. Human Rights Learning Program held its first youth retreat
from March 7 through March 9, 2008 at the William Penn House. Prior to the
retreat, 89 high school students from seven public and private schools were
introduced to the concepts of human rights as contained in the UDHR. Twenty
students then attended the retreat where they learned more about the
Declaration and then created short-and long-term action plans for human rights
learning to be implemented in schools and their neighborhood. Each action was
based on a key issue identified by the youths.
After intense debate among them, D.C. youths agreed to focus on three
issues close to their lives: education, non-violence and immigration. At the
end of the retreat, the youths selected the first D.C. Youth Human Rights Council to oversee implementation of human
rights learning in their respective schools. AFSC received critical support
from the Director of the D.C. Office of Human Rights, who has since joined the
D.C. Human Rights City steering committee.
Since the
retreat, the Youth Human Rights Council has forged an alliance with the Robert F.
Kennedy Memorial
Center on Human Rights in
May 2008, conducted a need assessment survey on the needs of immigrant students
in D.C. schools from May 2008 to July 2008, and actively participated in the AFSC
Middle Atlantic Region’s Youth Gathering in July 2008. Last June the program
entered into an agreement with the District of Columbia Public Schools to
provide human rights education in the schools until 2011. The partnership will
allow the program to expand human rights education to more D.C. public schools.
The program
is serving 120 students from three public high schools: Wilson, Cardozo, and Eastern. In addition,
the program serves Friendship
Collegiate Charter
School and Sidwell Friends. Shorter presentations on human rights have
also been made to students from Friends
Community School
in College Park and Georgetown
Day School in Washington, D.C.
More than twenty local
organizations have joined with the AFSC to expand human rights learning in
their respective communities and advocate for a human rights city.
A
CEREMONIAL RESOLUTION
___________
IN THE
COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
_____________________
To recognize December 10, 2008, as “Washington,
DC Human Rights Day” in the District of Columbia.
WHEREAS, December
10, 2008, marks the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights;
WHEREAS, The United
Nations passed resolution A/RES/62/171 proclaiming the year commencing on
December 10, 2008 the international Year of Human Rights Learning;
WHEREAS, This is an opportunity to call attention to human rights
violations around the world and to continue to promote the importance of
educating our citizens about human rights;
WHEREAS, The
District of Columbia Public Schools has partnered with the American Friends
Service Committee to create courses that teach our students about human rights
issues;
WHEREAS, On this day, citizens of the nation’s capital, led by
individuals and organizations, affirm their commitment to human rights by
declaring Washington, DC, a Human Rights City;
WHEREAS,
Washington, DC being a Human Rights City makes it a model for communities
around the world to witness practical ways the human rights framework can make
every citizen a partner of sustainable change;
WHEREAS, A Human
Rights City is one whose residents and local authorities, through on-going
discussions and creative exchanges of ideas, come to understand that human
rights, when widely known as a way of life, assist in identifying the issues
and informs the actions in our DC communities, for meaningful, positive
economic and social change;
WHEREAS, Developing
Human Rights Cities is an attempt to build infrastructure for conflict
prevention, human security, sustainable development, and create a place for
active civic engagement at the local, national, and global level;
WHEREAS, Washington, DC will be
declared the first Human Rights City in the United States;
WHEREAS, As a Human
Rights City, Washington, DC will be joining other human rights cities around
the world in working to provide leadership and advocacy to secure, protect, and
promote human rights for all people;
RESOLVED, BY THE COUNCIL OF
THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, that this resolution may be cited as the “Washington, DC
Human Rights Day Recognition Resolution of 2008.”
Sec. 2. The Council of
the District of Columbia recognizes December
10, 2008 as “Washington, DC Human Rights Day.”
Sec. 3. This resolution shall take effect immediately
upon the first date of the publication in the District of Columbia Register.