scholarly journals Human rights and education for Gambian young women during COVID-19: Recommendations for social policy and practice

2020 ◽  
Vol 63 (6) ◽  
pp. 825-829
Author(s):  
Wisuwat Wannamakok ◽  
Oumie Sissokho ◽  
Trevor G Gates

COVID-19 is not only a global health disaster but a full-fledged social, economic, and political crisis that could disrupt the gains made in women’s education and empowerment. In The Gambia, issues of unequal access to educational resources determined by gender, geographical location, and social class; a disproportionate burden of household chores imposed on women and girls; and economic pressures have the potential to expose girls to more violence, exclusion, and abuse. In this article, we use a human rights framework, as conceptualized by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) and the International Federation of Social Workers (IFSW), and discuss increases in educational inequality that young women in a poor, conservative, and patriarchal society will face during the COVID-19 pandemic. We propose solutions to mitigate these issues through social protection policies and practices that can ensure the right to education for the most vulnerable and marginalized.

Author(s):  
Iryna Surovtseva

The article is devoted to the partnership of social workers and ombudsmen as an influential tool for the citizens' rights protection. The common aspects of professional activity of social workers and ombudsmen in the citizens' rights protection of Ukraine and European countries are analyzed. Analyzed the annual reports of the National Ombudsman, clarified the dynamics of the receipt of citizens' reports about violations of their rights. There is a growing number of human rights violations in the field of social protection. The ombudsman has the right to make recommendations to the central executive bodies, which are ripe after the monitoring visits. Through the activities of social workers and the ombudsman, the state assumes the main functions of ensuring human rights in the social sphere. Foreign experience on the significant role of «natural allies» (social workers and ombudsmen) in drafting a formal protocol of strategic and tactical cooperation to optimize the residents' interests based on a friendly advisory approach have been highlighted. Most often, social workers and ombudsmen are forced to act as intermediaries between people and the state or other bodies to uphold justice and provide protection in cases where measures taken by the state in the interests of society as a whole threaten the rights and freedoms of individuals or groups. There is a need to intensify cooperation between the ombudsman's offices, social protection departments and social service providers (for example, through the joint Commissions on the quality of social services establishment, joint investigations into unsatisfactory social or medical care complaints). It seems relevant to expand the positions of specialized ombudsmen (for social protection (security), military ombudsman) as independent officials in communities (municipalities) for Ukraine.


2019 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 30-38
Author(s):  
Nurkhayati Nurkhayati

Abstract. Employment development as integral part of national development based on Pancasila and the 1945 Constitution, is held in order development human completely and development the entire Indonesian community for improve dignity, respect and self-esteem of workers and manifest the society whose prosperous, fair, affluent physically and spiritually. Given the importance of the role of laborers in development, especially in the production process, it is naturally that protection, maintenance and development for the welfare of laborers, especially women laborers, should be carried out. Because the laborer position is very weak in compare with the bussinesmen. The position of weak laborer requires the bussiness men to give away social protection guarantee to their laborers. Social guarantee is the right of entire citizen including permanent foreigners. Violations of the implementation of social guarantee means violations of human rights (HAM). This is in line with the mandate of the 1945 Constitution that has been amended namely article 28 letters d (1 and 2),  letter h (3), and article 34 (2); state that the country protects every citizens and entitled on protection from all kinds of danger, intimidation and equal treatment in carrying out their life. In fact, not all companies giving socal guarantee for their laborers, especially women laborers. In which many women laborers are still catagorized as single even though they are the backbone of the family,—because of having unemployed husband or as single parent. Thus, real action in form of advocacy is needed to change the company’s policies. Advocacy is a powerful way to bring positive changes and empower people in their lives.Abstrak. Pembangunan ketenagakerjaan sebagai bagian integral dari pembangunan nasional berdasarkan Pancasila dan Undang-undang dasar 1945, dilaksanakan dalam rangka pembangunan manusia seutuhnya dan pembangunan masyarakat Indonesia seluruhnya untuk meningkatkan harkat, martabat dan harga diri tenaga kerja serta mewujudkan masyarakat sejahtera, adil, makmur dan materiil maupun spriritual. Mengingat pentingnya peranan buruh dalam pembangunan khususnya dalam proses produksi, sudah sewajarnya dilakukan perlindungan, pemeliharaan dan pengembangan terhadap kesejahteraan buruh khususnya buruh perempuan, karena posisi buruh yang sangat lemah jika dibandingkan dengan posisi pengusaha. Posisi buruh yang lemah mengharuskan pengusaha untuk memberikan perlindungan jaminan sosial terhadap para pekerjanya. Jaminan sosial merupakan hak setiap warga negara bahkan termasuk warga negara asing yang menetap. Pelanggaran terhadap pelaksanaan jaminan sosial berarti pelanggaran terhadap hak asasi manusia (HAM). Hal ini sejalan dengan amanat UUD 45 yang telah diamandemen yaitu pasal 28 huruf d (1 dan 2) dan huruf h (3) juga pasal 34 (2); pasal-pasal tersebut menjelaskan bahwa negara melindungi setiap warganya dan berhak atas perlindungan dari segala macam bahaya, intimidasi dan perlakukan yang sama dalam menjalankan hidupnya. Dalam pelaksanaan dilapangan, tidak semua perusahaan melaksanakan jaminan sosial bagi para buruhnya, terutama buruh perempuan. Dimana banyak buruh perempuan yang masih dikategorikan lajang padahal mereka adalah tulang punggung keluarga, baik karena suami yang tidak bekerja maupun sebagai single parent. Sehingga dibutuhkan tindakan nyata dalam bentuk advokasi untuk merubah kebijakan perusahaan tersebut. Advokasi adalah cara ampuh untuk membawa perubahan positif dan memberdayakan orang dalam kehidupan mereka. 


2020 ◽  
Vol 20 (3) ◽  
pp. 433-452
Author(s):  
Corina Heri

ABSTRACT In 1948, Article 17 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) pioneered a right to (individual and collective) ownership of property. Today, the right to property—specifically the social function of property, which was a mainstay of the discussions—can be linked to the idea of a human right to land, which has been particularly prevalent in the discourse concerning the creation of human rights protections specific to peasants. The peasant rights process highlights a number of normative and implementation gaps in international human rights law, including relating to land use and tenure. The present contribution will argue that the claims made in this context are neither new nor niche but relate to universal human rights entitlements and have existed at least since the drafting of the UDHR. They are not only an iteration of an age-old class struggle but are at the forefront of a contemporary critique of the existing international legal system as a whole. While existing human rights, including the right to property, can be part of a response to these critiques, however, neither peasant rights nor the activists who promote them can be expected to resolve them alone.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 45-52
Author(s):  
Makhmudjon Ziyadullaev ◽  

This article presents ofthe content of the right to social security, which is considered as one of the constitutional rights of citizens, the role of state pensions in the social protection of pensioners and the world pension systems, including distributive, mandatory and conditional pension funds.As well as the size of pensions and their components, the relevance and importance in the Republic of Uzbekistan, the ratification of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights and changes in thepension sector over the past 3-4 years, taking into account the types of pension provision, frombeginningsof independence of our country


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lukas Groß

‘Disability may increase the risk of poverty, and poverty may increase the risk of disability.’ Breaking this cycle is a major challenge for the international community, especially the countries of the Global South. As the most recent human rights treaty of the United Nations, the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities also specifies the right to social protection. This study deals with the question of to what extent a human rights-based approach characterised by need orientation and accessibility can be derived from specific state obligations. In addition, it examines the efforts to implement such an approach in Sub-Saharan Africa. In this context, the study shows that it has been possible to both develop innovative concepts that consider the realities of the lives of local people with disabilities in Uganda and Ghana and, at the same time, to ensure the implementation of international human rights law in those two countries.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 0162-0177
Author(s):  
Leonardo Mozdzenski ◽  
Albert de Albuquerque

This paper proposes to critically examine the LGBTphobic comments of social workers against the content of the video For Social Work there is no "gay cure", created by the Brazilian Federal Council of Social Work (CFESS). Thus, based on the theoretical and methodological principles of Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA), this research investigates how the construction of meanings of the arguments made in those prejudiced posts proceeds. CDA proposes to describe, interpret and disseminate how forms of power, domination and social inequality are (re)produced in discursive practices, in their socio-political and cultural contexts. More particularly, this study turns its attention to the rhetorical appeals of ethos and pathos observed in those statements that were favorable to the proposition of therapies for sexual (re)orientation ("gay cure"), thus reproducing the hate speech, stigmatization and discrimination against the human rights of the members of the gender and sexuality diverse community. The findings can be arranged into five analytical categories: the cis-hetero-compulsory rhetoric, the "freedom of thought" rhetoric, the "right to choose" rhetoric, the neoconservative rhetoric and the religious rhetoric.


2017 ◽  
pp. 49-66
Author(s):  
Jesús García Cívico

The right not to be subjected to torture or to cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, and the right of asylum have, individually considered, an extensive field of application", but it is possible to point out some traits in common. Firsty, in both rights undelie the moral spirit of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. At the same time, according to the recent reports of the main human rights organisations, both rights are in deep political crisis. Furthermore, is possible to see that sometimes they cross each other: there is a triple «zone of intersection between the right of asylum and the right not to suffer torture, inhuman or degrading treatment: one of the reasons for escaping from a country is to avoid suffering torture ("refuge after torture")  secondly, sometimes inhuman and degrading treatment occur precisely in the process of seeking asylum ("inhuman treatment in the refuge"), finally, there are countries with strong deficiencies in their immigration policies and this can produce a perverse effect: the transfer of potential asylum seekers to countries where they are at risk of torture or inhuman treatment again ("torture or inhuman and degrading treatment after asylum").


Author(s):  
Cremin Kevin

This chapter examines Article 28 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), which deals with the rights that persons with disabilities have to an adequate standard of living and to social protection. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) and the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights both recognize the right to an adequate standard of living. Similarly, Article 23 of the UDHR recognizes ‘the right to just and favourable remuneration ensuring for himself and his family an existence worthy of human dignity, and supplemented, if necessary, by other means of social protection’. Evidence indicates, however, that these rights have not been effectively implemented for persons with disabilities. Article 28 aims to combat this injustice.


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