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This activity starts with participants personal ideas about rights as expressed in an imaginary bill of rights. They then find correspondences between their ideas and specific articles of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR).
Procedure PART A: Human Rights for a New Planet 1. Read the following scenario: A small new planet has been discovered that has everything needed to sustain human life. No one has ever lived there. There are no laws, no rules, and no history. You will all be settlers here and in preparation your group has been appointed to draw up the bill of rights for this all-new planet. You do not know what position you will have in this country. 2. Instruct participants, working in small groups, to do the following:
3. Each group presents its list to the class. As they do so, make a "master list" that includes all the rights the groups mention, combining similar rights. 4. When all the groups have reported their lists, examine the master list:
5. Discussion questions:
PART B: Linking Rights to the UDHR 1. When the master list is complete, participants return to their small group and try to match the rights listed with articles of the UDHR. Some rights may include several articles. Others may not be in the UDHR at all. Alternative: To save time, assign each group specific rights from the master list to investigate. 2. As a group finishes, ask a representative to write down the numbers of the articles they have identified next to the right on the master list. You may need to add an extra chart sheet next to the master list. 3. Review each right on the list.
4. Discuss
Going Further 1. Personal Preferences At this point, especially if a natural break occurs, ask participants to mark on the list the three rights that mean the most to them personally. The facilitator can then tally up the marks to see how many each right received. When the group continues, remind participants about the interdependency and indivisibility of rights. See Part V, Appendices. Discuss:
2. Categories of Rights Explain the distinction between civil/political rights and social/economic/cultural rights. See Part V, A Human Rights Glossary, for definitions. Ask participants to determine which rights on their list are civil and political and which are social, economic, and cultural. Did any one kind of right predominate? Why? Adaptations 1. A New School This activity can be adapted to imagine the creation of a totally new school. This version could lead into an examination of the human rights climate of the current school and the creation of a list of "school rights," which would improve the school or classroom environment. These might be written as both rights and responsibilities (e.g., "Everyone has the right to be treated with respect" and "Everyone has the responsibility to treat others with respect"). This analysis of school problems could lead directly to action projects. See Part IV, Taking Action for Human Rights. 2. What If? To emphasize the universal application of rights, the activity might be varied by assigning some groups specific roles in the society on the new planet (e.g., you are disabled, a member of an ethnic minority, a millionaire) while other groups have no roles. Did having a particular position in society influence ideas about necessary rights? These differences could also be included through discussion or having each participant draw a role, for example, "What if on the new planet you were a disabled person? Would this fact affect your ideas about necessary rights?". Sources: Adapted from First Steps, 96-98; Edward OBrien et al., Human Rights for All, (St. Paul, MN: West, 1996).
The immediate task of human rights teaching and research should be to prevent or substantially decrease human rights violations by discovering and applying inexpensive, practical, and effective methods of awakening in individuals, groups, peoples, and governments an awareness of the meaning, content, and value of human rights; how human rights are violated; how violations may be prevented or redressed; how human rights may be enhanced; and the will to respect and vindicate human rights. In short, to internalize reverence for human rights -Dr. José W. Diokno, Chairman
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