Rights-based Development: Linking Rights and Participation - Challenges in Thinking and Action
Author: V Miller et al
Date: 2005
Size:
10 pages
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The growing interest in pursuing rights-based approaches to development raises questions about how these two broad traditions – human rights and development – can best work together in practice. This article from a joint 7-country action research initiative carried out by the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) and Just Associates, outlines the challenges and opportunities of this emerging trend.
Rights-based development aims to combine the community-level, participatory focus of development organisations, with the legal and institutional expertise of human rights organisations. There is much potential for increasing the impact of both human rights and development programmes by integrating these very different approaches. However, greater clarity on the objectives, strategies and limitations of rights-based approaches to development is needed. Some outstanding issues are outlined below:
Strategies and approaches that seek to build consensus and legitimacy about newly emerging rights and forms of participation are needed. Practitioners that understand the principle issues of rights-based approaches still struggle to operationalise and integrate rights and participation on a practical level.
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Source:
Miller, V., VeneKlasen, L., and Clark., C., 2005, 'Rights-based Development: Linking Rights and Participation - Challenges in Thinking and Action', IDS Bulletin, vol. 36, no. 1, pp. 31-40
Author:
Lisa VeneKlasen
, lvk@justassociates.org