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Service Learning for Human Rights
Ideas for Taking Action
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Addressing Needs and Issues
- Assess community needs, identify group that work on those issues, and join their efforts.
- Research community issues and develop reports about them for local government, policy makers, and the press.
- Write letters to the editor on social issues, putting them in a human rights context.
- Write letters for Amnesty International and other human rights groups.
- Provide child care or eldercare for people who are looking for work, attending school. or going to medical appointments, etc.
- Register voters.
- Work to inform voters about the human rights aspects of election issues.
- Support candidates who take a stand on human rights issues.
- Work with organizations advocating for a clean and healthy environment, including community clean-ups and environmental monitoring.
- Work with organizations that advocate human rights locally and internationally.
Researching and Writing
- Study current issues and write stories to convey information to others.
- After performing service, write stories, poems, and plays based on the experience.
- Write articles for school and community publications.
- Help people with disabilities to write letters.
- Produce community newsletters.
- Interview refugees and recent immigrants or people from another culture and write about their perspectives.
- Research local issues from a human rights perspective and write up your finding, citing articles in specific human rights documents.
- Learn about the human rights history of your community. Are there people, places, and events that have a significance to human rights?
- Survey youth or other marginalized groups about their needs or opinions, help interpret these from a human rights perspective, and convey this to policy makers.
- Research literature on human rights and organize a performance or reading.
Teaching Others
- Teach others about the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC) and other human rights documents.
- Work with organizations that seek to educate about human rights such as Amnesty International, the Street Law Project, and the United Nations Association.
- Tutor recent immigrants and refugees and help them with basic tasks such as using the telephone and using public transport.
- Help others improve their literacy skills, especially through programs in public libraries.
- Prepare immigrants for citizenship examinations.
- Develop games and activities for teaching young children about their rights. Try them out in after-school program, youth groups, etc.
- Train senior citizens and other groups in computer skills.
- Teach others about the relationship between human rights and a healthy environment.
Creating, Celebrating, and Performing
- Make December 10, International Human Rights Day, important in your community.
- Create a celebration for the 50th anniversary of the UDHR.
- Collect oral histories related to human rights.
- Invite local "human rights heroes" and activists to speak.
- Establish a "human rights defenders" award for members of the community who contribute to human rights.
- Invent ways to educate the public about the UDHR through artistic expression, including music, drama, and murals.
- Research literature or music on human rights and organize a performance, reading, or concert.
Source: Adapted from "Youth Service Connections to the Curriculum," National Youth Leadership Council, 1991.
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