Linking the Arts with Human Rights Education: Theatre for Development and Child Rights

Author(s):  
Kaya J Chwals
2016 ◽  
Vol 104 ◽  
pp. 55-61 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marissa A. Gutiérrez-Vicario

“….What makes somebody an American is not just blood or birth, but allegiance to our founding principles and the faith in the idea that anyone from anywhere can write the next great chapter of our story.”-U.S. President Barack Obama, January 2013 I am most interested in exploring the idea of the construction of global citizenship and engagement around human rights education of young immigrant youth through the arts, particularly public art in the form of muralism. I will use some of the work of Art and Resistance Through Education (ARTE), an organization that engages young people around human rights through the arts, as a case study. Some questions that may be explored include:How can educators break down unfamiliar human rights jargon and demonstrate the relevance of human rights on both a local and global level to young immigrant youth?  How can young people be galvanized into exploring the human rights of their home countries and the countries they have immigrated to, utilizing the arts?How can art be used to cultivate global understanding and human rights education among young people, most specifically through public art?In efforts for communities to construct more democratic public spaces, one often finds that these spaces manifest themselves as murals or similar forms of public art. What are more creative ways of building a more democratic form of community art? What are more creative ways for young immigrant youth to develop a sense of belonging through the arts?  Overall, this proposal seeks to explore the intersection between public art, human rights education/global competency, and immigrant youth empowerment. The proposal will discuss the involvement of immigrant youth, predominately from Latin America, in various art projects, as they explore their own sense of identity and belonging in New York City. 


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-24
Author(s):  
Yvonne Vissing

This article suggests comprehensive implementation of child and human rights education is a strategy to reduce risk and increase benefits to children, yet there are barriers to its implementation. This article explores the current condition of human rights education (HRE) and child rights education (CRE) in the United States. It compares it to CRE implementation benefits globally, particularly in Wales. Exploratory pilot studies indicate that the way rights education is structured in the US does not allow young people to benefit from its potential capacity. Students lack of rights knowledge is explored in this article. Teachers identify obstacles to rights implementation in schools. Recommendations on how to improve HRE are provided.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robyn Saaltink ◽  
Frances A. Owen ◽  
Donato Tarulli ◽  
Christine Y. Tardif-Williams

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