Applying a Rights-based Approach: An Inspirational Guide for Civil Society
Author: Jakob Kirkemann Boesen and Tomas Martin
Date: 2007
Size:
47 pages
(225 kB)
Access full text: available online
With its focus on law and the root causes of poverty, the rights-based approach (RBA) releases a new transformative potential for development. This guide provides practical methods for the integration of the RBA into programmes implemented by smaller civil society organisations (CSOs) in poor countries. While it is not a panacea, the RBA has the potential to bring people whose rights are denied by poverty to the centre of development analyses and implementation.
The RBA stresses the accountability of duty-bearers, (including parliaments, ministries, local authorities, judges, police and teachers) and focuses on power balances through the inclusion of inalienable rights. It also offers legitimacy through an internationally-recognised development framework and assists states in fulfilling international obligations. It builds accountable relations between state structures, social groups and the individual, and has the potential to achieve positive changes in people's lives by focusing on injustice, inequality, discrimination, exploitation and denial.
The RBA enriches and enhances development initiatives by bringing a lot of existing elements of development such as gender, participation, and empowerment into a coherent framework. It also adds a number of missing elements to current activities such as a focus on law, policy and accountability, on vulnerability and on the role of the state.
RBA programming focuses on four areas: (1) the most vulnerable groups; (2) the root causes of poverty; (3) the relationship between rights-holders and duty-bearers; and (4) empowerment. Programming includes:
The RBA is not without challenges: it can be cumbersome and requires long-term planning and capacity-building. It is a tool, not a panacea. However, the RBA is gaining ground in development thinking, because it facilitates new alliances, supports a framework that reaches the web of power relations across all spheres of society, and allows smaller CSOs to adapt RBA thinking to their own environment, needs and capacities. Important principles of the approach include the following.
Access full text: available online
Source:
Boesen, J. K. and Martin, T., 2007, 'Applying a Rights-based Approach: An Inspirational Guide for Civil Society', Danish Institute for Human Rights, Copenhagen
Organisation: The Danish Institute for Human Rights, http://www.humanrights.dk/