Human Rights for All Post-2015
Human rights have surged to the forefront of the debate about what
will succeed the Millennium Development Goals in 2015. As human
rights and social justice organizations worldwide, we feel compelled
to lay out some of the baseline implications of embedding human
rights into the core of the sustainable development agenda this time
around.
At its essence, a post-2015 framework anchored in human rights
moves from a model of charity to one of justice, based on the inherent
dignity of people as human rights-holders, domestic governments as
primary duty-bearers, and all development actors sharing common
but differentiated responsibilities. Accordingly, the post-2015
framework should be designed as a tool to empower and enable
people—individually and collectively—to monitor and hold their
governments, other governments, businesses, international
institutions and other development actors to account for their conduct
as it affects people’s lives within and beyond borders. A sustainable
development framework founded in human rights can serve as an
instrument for people and countries to help unseat the
structural obstacles to sustainable, inclusive and just
development, prevent conflict and stimulate implementation and
enforcement of all human rights—civil, political, economic, social
and cultural rights, the right to development, and to a healthy
environment.
The post-2015 framework must then at the very least respect and
reflect pre-existing human rights legal norms, standards and
political commitments to which governments have already
voluntarily agreed. International human rights, environmental and
humanitarian law, the Millennium Declaration, as well as related
international consensus documents agreed in Rio, Vienna, Cairo,
Beijing, Monterrey and Copenhagen and their follow-up agreements
must form its non-negotiable normative base.
If it is going to incentivize progress while also preventing backsliding
and violations, human rights principles and standards must go
beyond the rhetorical, and have real operational significance this time
around. Among other things, anchoring the post-2015 agenda in
human rights for current and future generations implies that the
framework:
1. Upholds all human rights for all. The framework should
stimulate improved human rights process and outcomes for all
people, especially the most vulnerable, in all countries global
North and global South. Along with economic, social,
2/7
cultural and environmental rights, any successor framework must include commitments
to protect freedom of association, expression, assembly and political participation if
it is to ensure an enabling environment for an empowered civil society, and protect
human rights defenders, including women human rights defenders, as central agents
translating international political commitments into lived realities.
2. Stimulates transparency and genuine participation in decision-making at all levels,
throughout all policies including budget, financial, and tax policies. Access to information
and meaningful and effective participation are not only fundamental human rights, but will
also be critical to developing, implementing, and monitoring an effective and responsive
post-2015 framework.
3. Integrates meaningful institutions and systems to ensure human rights
accountability of all development actors. Lofty aspirations for a post-2015 agenda will
surely fail if proper citizen-led systems of monitoring and human rights accountability
are not built into the very DNA of the framework, with clear and time-bound commitments of
all relevant actors. While states must remain the primary duty-holder in development, all
development actors, including third-party states, the private sector and international
financial institutions should be made responsive and accountable for achieving and not
undermining global goals. Integrating substantive human rights criteria into assessments of
progress towards development goals and commitments means monitoring both the
policy and budgetary efforts of governments alongside development outcomes. Any
post-2015 monitoring mechanism should complement and reinforce the Universal Periodic
Review process for all states. A framework for ensuring accountability would benefit from
constructive interaction with the existing human rights protection regime, as well as
other relevant accountability mechanisms. In this context, we call for an accountability
framework with binding commitments, supported by effective monitoring and enforcement
mechanisms, to be agreed at the global level. This framework should reaffirm the spirit of
the 1986 Declaration on the Right to Development and it should be based on three
fundamental principles: mutual accountability (donors and partners are equally
accountable for development progress); democratic ownership of partner countries
(alignment of donor countries to policy objectives set by developing countries, through
inclusive and democratic processes); and inclusive partnerships (participation of different
varieties of development stakeholders, State and non-State actors).
4. Is backed by national mechanisms of accountability, such as judiciaries, parliaments,
national human rights institutions, reinforced by regional and international human rights
mechanisms such as the treaty bodies and the Universal Periodic Review mechanism, so
as to ensure the implementation of the post-2015 commitments. The post-2015
development agenda is well-placed to encourage governments to improve access to
justice for people living currently in poverty by monitoring measures to eradicate
existing barriers.
5. Ensures that the private sector, at the very least, does no harm. The post-2015
framework must reflect current international consensus that governments have a duty to
protect human rights through the proper oversight and regulation of private actors,
especially of business and private financial actors, to guarantee in practice that they
respect human rights and the environment, including in their cross-border activities.
At the very least, no governments should allow their territory to be used for illegal or
criminal activities elsewhere, such as tax evasion, depositing assets obtained through
3/7
corruption, environmental crimes or involvement in human rights violations, no matter the
perpetrator.
6. Eliminates all forms of discrimination and diminishes inequalities, including
socioeconomic inequalities. Human rights can only be realised within socio-economic
and environmental boundaries if we also reduce inequalities of wealth, power and
resources. Governments have a particular obligation under human rights law to protect the
rights of the most marginalized and excluded, and to take additional measures to ensure
that they enjoy their rights on an equal basis with others. Protecting decent work, and
diminishing unfair wage disparities is also fundamental to reducing socio-economic
inequality, as is reforming tax and fiscal policy and promoting human rights
alternatives to austerity nationally and globally to unleash the resources necessary to
finance human rights fulfillment. The timely collection and disaggregation of data on the
basis of various grounds of compound discrimination is essential to identify, make visible
and respond to inequalities and violations of human rights and to increase accountability. At
a national level, data should be collected and disaggregated based on country-relevant
factors as defined by rights-holders.
7. Specifically and comprehensively supports women's rights. Addressing genderbased
violence, guaranteeing sexual and reproductive rights, ensuring women’s rights
to and control over land, property and productive resources and their economic
independence, recognizing the care economy and ensuring women’s rights to social
protection and the equal distribution of paid and unpaid work, and their rights to
participation in decision-making are critical, not only to realize women's human rights
and achieve gender equality, but for enabling women’s full and active participation in
economic, political and social life.
8. Enables the currently disadvantaged and commonly discriminated against and
excluded groups to be effective agents of their own development by drawing on the
provisions of human rights standards aimed at eliminating discrimination on grounds such
as race, disability, migrant or indigenous status, age, sexual orientation, gender identity,
etc.
9. Upholds the legal obligation to fulfill the minimum essential levels of economic,
social, and cultural rights, without retrogression. This would imply a focus on
universal or “zero” targets, such as the provision of comprehensive social protection
floors, universal health coverage, minimum food security guarantees, and other floors
below which no one anywhere will be allowed to fall.
10. Tackles structural drivers of inequality, poverty and ecological devastation at the
global level. A genuine and balanced global partnership then would enable people and
institutions to monitor the common but differentiated responsibilities of all actors to
eliminate rather than perpetuate these global obstacles. To be good-faith partners then,
governments, business and international institutions must assess the human rights
impact beyond their borders of their policies and agreements in areas such as
corporate accountability, environment, trade, investment, aid, tax, migration,
intellectual property, debt, weapons trade and military cooperation, monetary
policies and financial regulation. Existing human rights norms can provide a common set
of standards and useful yardstick to assess policy coherence for sustainable development.
At a time of great uncertainty, multiple crises and increasing insecurity and conflict, let us not found
the 21st century sustainable development framework on 'bracketed rights’ and broken promises,
but instead on a bold reaffirmation of human rights for all.
4/7
This joint statement is supported by the following organizations:
1. Action
Canada
for
Population
and
Development
(ACPD),
Canada
2. Active
Remedy
LTD,
UK
3. ADD
International,
United
Kingdom
4. ADRA
Germany,
Germany
5. Adventist
Development
and
Relief
Agency,
International
6. Global
Afluentes
SC,
México
7. African
Foundation
for
Environment
and
Development
(AFED),
Nigeria
8. African
Indigenous
Women's
Organization,
Eastern
and
Southern
Africa
9. African
Women's
Development
and
Communication
Network
(FEMNET),
Kenya
10. Age
International,
United
Kingdom
11. Centro
de
Estudios
para
la
Promoción
y
Defensa
de
los
Derechos
Fundamentales
y
Generacionales
(AGORA),
Peru
12. Agricultural
Missions,
USA
13. Alianza
Democratica
de
Organizaciones
Civiles
ADOC,
México
14. Alliance
contre
la
Pauvreté
au
Mali,
Mali
15. Alliance
Sud,
Switzerland
16. Amnesty
International,
International
17. Antalya
Kadin
Danisma
Merkezi
ve
Dayanisma
Dernegi,
Turkey
18. Anti
Corruption
Coalition
Uganda
(ACCU),
Uganda
19. Arab
NGO
Network
for
Development
(ANND),
International
20. ARCA,
Costa
Rica
21. Article
19
(Global
Campaign
for
Free
Expression),
UK/International
22. ASCA,
España
23. Asia
Pacific
Alliance
for
Sexual
and
Reprodustive
Health
and
Rights
(APA),
Thailand
24. Asociación
Nacional
de
Organizaciones
de
la
Sociedad
Civil
(SINERGIA),
Venezuela
25. Asosacion
Gestion
Salud
Poblacion
(AGSP),
Peru
26. Associação
Brasileira
de
Direitos
e
Bens
Comuns
(Abong),
Brazil
27. Association
Camerounaise
pour
la
prise
en
charge
des
Personnes
Agées
(ACAMAGE),
Cameroon
28. Association
Démocratique
des
Femmes
du
Maroc,
Morocco
29. Association
for
emancipation,
solidarity
and
equality
of
women
in
Macedonia
(ESE),
Macedonia
30. Association
for
Women’s
Rights
in
Development
(AWID),
International
31. Association
pour
le
développement
et
de
la
promotion
des
droits
humains,
Mauritanie
32. ASTRA
Network,
International
33. Atasehir
Kent
Konseyi,
Turkey
34. ATD
Fourth
World,
International
35. Australian
Centre
for
International
and
Tropical
Health,
the
University
of
Queensland,
Australia
36. Avocats
Sans
Frontières
(ASF),
Belgium
37. AWAZ
Foundation
Pakistan:
Centre
for
Development
Services
(AWAZCDS-‐Pakistan),
Pakistan
38. Ayvalık
Bağımsız
kadın
İnisiyatifi,
Türkiye
39. Balance
Promoción
para
el
Desarrollo
y
Juventud,
México
40. BOHP,
Turkey
41. Cameroon
Youths
and
Students
Forum
for
Peace
(CAMYOSFOP),
Cameroon
42. Canadian
Council
for
International
Co-‐operation
(CCIC),
Canada
43. Católicas
por
el
derecho
a
decidir,
México
44. Centro
de
Justicia
Internacional
(CDJI),
México
45. Center
for
Economic
and
Social
Rights
(CESR),
International
46. Center
for
International
Environmental
Law
(CIEL),
USA
47. Center
for
International
Human
Rights
(CIHR),
USA
48. Center
for
Reproductive
Rights
(CRR),
International
49. Center
for
Women
Policy
Studies,
USA
50. Center
for
Women’s
Global
Leadership
at
Rutgers
University
(CWGL),
USA
51. Center
for
Youth
Development
&
Sustainable
Democracy
(CEYDESUD),
Liberia
52. Center
of
Concern,
USA
53. Centre
For
21st
Century
Issues
(C21st),
Nigeria
54. Centre
for
Research
and
Advocacy,
Manipur
(CRAM),
India
55. Centre
tricontinental
–
CETRI,
Belgium
56. Centro
de
Documentacion
en
Derechos
Humanos
"Segundo
Montes
Mozo
S.
J."
(CSMM),
Ecuador
57. Centro
de
Estudios
Sociales
y
Culturales
Antonio
de
Montesinos
AC
(CAM),
Mexico
58. Centro
de
Información
y
Desarrollo
de
la
Mujer
–
CIDEM,
Bolivia
59. Centro
de
Investigación
para
la
Acción
Femenina
(CIPAF),
Dominican
Republic
60. Centro
de
Investigación
y
Educación
Sexual
(CIES-‐ ÑEPYRU),
Paraguay
61. Centro
Juana
Azurduy,
Bolivia
62. Challenging
Heights
(CH),
Ghana
63. CHOICE
for
Youth
and
Sexuality,
The
Netherlands
64. Christian
Aid,
UK
65. Church
of
Sweden,
Sweden
66. CIVICUS:
World
Alliance
for
Citizen
Participation,
International
67. Civil
Society
MDG
Campaign/GCAP
Zambia
(CSMDGC/GCAP
Zambia),
Zambia
68. Climate
Change
&
Development
NGO
Alliance,
International
69. Closet
de
Sor
Juana,
Mexico
70. Colectivo
Feminista
Panteras
Rosas,
Nicaragua
71. Collective
For
Research
and
Training
on
Development-‐ Action
(CRTD-‐A),
Lebanon
72. Colour
of
Poverty
-‐
Colour
of
Change,
Canada
73. Comision
Ecumenica
de
Derechos
Humanos
(CEDHU),
Ecuador
74. Commonwealth
Medical
Trust
(Commat),
UK
75. Community
And
Family
Aid
Foundation,
Ghana
76. CONCORD,
Sweden
77. Confederación
Colombiana
de
ONG,
Colombia
78. CONGCOOP,
Guatemala
79. Constitution
Research
Fund
NGO,
Azerbaijan
80. COUP
DE
POUCE
ONGD
(COUPDEPOUCE/ONGD),
Democratic
Republic
of
Congo
81. Colectivo
Regional
De
Adolescentes
Y
Jóvenes
Por
La
Prevención
Del
Embarazo
En
Adolescentes
(CRAJPEA),
Peru
82. Centre
for
Research,
Communication
and
Gender
in
Early
Childhood
Education
(CRECHE),
Kenya
83. CYINDEP,
Cyprus
84. Defensores
PROCDN,
Puerto
Rico
85. Desarrollo,
Educación
y
Cultura
Autogestionarios
Equipo
Pueblo
(DECA
Equipo
Pueblo),
Mexico
86. Development
Alternatives
with
Women
for
a
New
Era
(DAWN),
International
87. Dharti
Development
Foundation
Sindh,
Pakistan
88. DIGNITY
-‐
Danish
Institute
Against
Torture,
Denmark
89. Deutsche
Stiftung
Weltbevölkerung
(DSW),
Germany
90. Ecological
Society
of
the
Philippines,
Philippines
5/7
91. Egyptian
Center
for
Economic
and
Social
Rights
(ECESR),
Egypt
92. Egyptian
Initiative
for
Personal
Rights
(EIPR),
Egypt
93. ELDER
KDM,
Turkey
94. End
Water
Poverty
(EWP),
UK
95. ENDA
Tiers
Monde,
Sénégal
96. EOTO
World,
USA
97. Equality
Monitoring
Women's
Group
(ESITIZ),
Turkey
98. Equidad
de
Género,
Ciudadanía,
Trabajo
y
Familia
(Equidad),
Mexico
99. Equilibres
&
Populations
(EquiPop),
France
100. Espacio
de
Coordinación
de
Organizaciones
Civiles
sobre
Derechos
Económicos,
Sociales
y
Culturales
(Espacio
DESC),
Mexico
101. European
Network
of
Migrant
Women
(ENoMW),
Belgium
102. European
NGOs
for
Sexual
and
Reproductive
Health
and
Rights,
Population
and
Development
(EuroNGOs),
International
103. European
Womens
Lobby
Coordination
for
Turkey
(EWL
Turkey),
Turkey
104. Ev
Eksenli
Calisan
Kadinlar
Calisma
Grubu,
Turkey
105. Fair
Trade
Advocacy
Office
(FTAO),
Belgium
106. Fairtrade
Sweden,
Sweden
107. FANCA,
Costa
Rica
108. Federacion
de
Estudiantes
de
la
Universidad
de
Costa
Rica,
Costa
Rica
109. Federation
for
Women
and
Family
Planning,
Poland
110. Feminist
Atolye
(FEMA),
Cyprus
111. FemLINKPACIFIC,
Fiji
112. FIAN
International,
International
113. FIDA,
International
114. FIFCJ,
Argentina
115. Finnish
NGDO
platform
to
the
EU
Kehys,
Finland
116. Forest
Peoples
Programme,
UK
117. Forum
for
Women
and
Development
(FOKUS),
Norway
118. Forum
Syd,
Sweden
119. Four
Freedoms
Forum,
USA
120. Fundacion
Arcoiris,
Mexico
121. Fundacion
Construir,
Bolivia
122. Fundación
de
Desarrollo
Integral
Causana,
Ecuador
123. Fundación
Diversencia,
Bolivia
124. Fundación
para
Estudio
e
Investigación
de
la
Mujer
– FEIM,
Argentina
125. Fundación
Reflejos
de
Venezuela
(FRV),
Venezuela
126. FUNETAP,
Colombia
127. Future
Worlds
Center,
Cyprus
128. GCAP
China,
China
129. GCAP
Pakistan,
Pakistan
130. Gender
at
Work
(G@W),
International
131. Género,
Etica
y
Salud
Sexual
AC
(GESS),
Mexico
132. Gestos-‐Hiv,
Communication
and
Gender,
Brazil
133. Global
Alliance
Against
Traffic
in
Women
(GAATW),
International
Secretariat
134. Thailand
135. Global
Call
to
Action
Against
Poverty
(GCAP)-‐Kenya,
Kenya
136. Global
Campaign
for
Education
(GCE),
International
137. Global
Fund
for
Women
(GFW),
USA
138. Global
Initiative
for
Economic,
Social
and
Cultural
Rights,
International
139. Global
Resposibility
Platform,
Austria
140. Good
Energies
Alliance
Ireland
(GEAI),
Ireland
141. Gram
Bharati
Samiti
(GBS),
India
142. Gray
Panthers,
USA
143. Green
Earth
Zambia
(GEZ),
Zambia
144. Greentreen,
Bangladesh
145. Grupo
Artemisa
Honduras,
Honduras
146. Grupo
De
Mujeres
de
San
Cristobal
Las
Casas,
AC
–
Colem,
Mexico
147. Grupo
de
Trabajo
Cambio
Climático
y
Justicia
(GTCCJ),
Bolivia
148. Grupo
Diver
Radio,
Honduras
149. Grupo
Safo,
Nicaragua
150. Habitat
International
Coalition
-‐
Housing
and
Land
Rights
Network,
Egypt
151. Hawai'i
Institute
for
Human
Rights,
Hawaii
(USA)
152. Help
and
Development
Organization
(HDO),
Pakistan
153. HelpAge
International,
UK
154. HERA
-‐
Health
Education
and
Research
Association,
Macedonia
155. Hope
for
the
Needy,
Internatiaonal
156. Human
Development
Society-‐
HDS,
Pakistan
157. IBON
International,
International
158. Instituto
de
Investigación
Cultural
para
Educación
Popular
(INDICEP),
Bolivia
159. Indigenous
Information
Network,
Kenya
160. Indigenous
Peoples'
Rights
Activists
Network
(IPRAN),
Nepal
161. Institute
of
Cultural
Affairs
(ICA)-‐Benin,
Benin
162. Instituto
Mexicano
de
Derechos
Humanos
y
Democracia
A.C.,
Mexico
163. Instituto
Qualivida,
Brasil
164. Integrated
Regional
Support
Programme
(IRSP),
Pakistan
165. Interculturalidad,
Salud
y
Derechos
AC
(INSADE),
Mexico
166. International
AIDS
Women
Caucus
(IAWC),
International
167. International
Alliance
Of
Women,
Greece
168. International
Associattion
of
Religious
Freedom
South
Asia
(IARF
SACC),
India
169. Centre
International
de
Droit
Comparé
de
l'Environnement
(CIDCE),
International
170. International
Council
on
Social
Welfare
(ICSW),
Netherlands
171. International
HIV/AIDS
Alliance,
UK
172. International
Network
for
the
Prevention
of
Elder
Abuse
(INPEA),
USA
173. International
Planned
Parenthood
Federation,
International
174. International
Planned
Parenthood,
East
&
South
East
Asia
&
Oceania
Region,
Malaysia
175. International
Presentation
Association
of
the
Sisters
of
the
Presentation,
International
176. International
Trade
Union
Confederation
(ITUC),
International
177. International
Women's
Health
Coalition
(IWHC),
International
178. International
Women
in
Law
and
Development
in
Africa
(WiLDAF/FeDDAF-‐WASRO/BSRAO),
International
179. Ipas,
International
180. IRIS
Esitlik
Gozlem
Grubu,
Turkey
181. Isis
International,
Philippines
182. İstanbul
University,
Turkey
183. Jeunes
Volontaires
pour
l'Environment
Nepal
(JVE-‐ NEPAL),
Nepal
184. Jeunes
Volontaires
pour
l'Environnement,
Togo
185. Jeunesse
Active
de
Guinee
(JAG),
Guinea
186. Juventud
Frente
Amplio,
Costa
Rica
187. Kadin
Calismalari
Dernegi,
Turkey
188. Kadin
Partisi
Girisimi,
Turkey
189. Kadın
Adayları
Destekleme
Derneği
(KA.DER),
Turkey
190. KAMER
Vakfi,
Turkey
191. Karadeniz
İlleri
Kadın
Platformu
Trabzon
derneği
KİKAP
TRABZON,
Turkey
6/7
192. Karadeniz
Kadın
Dayanışma
Derneği
(KARKAD-‐DER),
Turkey
193. Keig
Platform
(Women's
Labor
and
Employment
in
Turkey),
Turkey
194. Kejibaus,
Nigeria
195. Kenya
Debt
Relief
Network
(KENDREN),
Kenya
196. Kepa,
Finland
197. Kikandwa
Environmental
Association
(KEA),
Uganda
198. Kikap
Trabzon,
Turkey
199. Kirmizi
Biber
Dernegi,
Turkey
200. Kolectiva
Rebeldías
Lésbicas,
Peru
201. KULU-‐Women
and
Development,
Denmark
202. Fundación
Red
Nicaraguense
de
Comercio
Comunitario
(RENICC),
Nicaragua
203. Red
Latinoamericana
de
Católicas
por
el
Derecho
a
Decidir
(CDD-‐AL),
International
204. Landesa,
USA
205. Latin-‐American
Campaign
for
the
Right
to
Education
(CLADE),
International
206. Leonard
Cheshire
Disability
(LCD),
UK
207. Liga
Brasileira
de
Lésbicas,
Brazil
208. Lithuanian
National
Non-‐Governmental
Development
Cooperation
Organisations'
Platform,
Lithuania
209. National
Council
of
Swedish
Youth
Organizations
(LSU),
Swedish
210. Manodiversa
Asociacion
Civil,
Bolivia
211. Mavigöl
Kadin
Dernegi,
Turkey
212. MCP
Bolivia
Fondo
Mundial,
Bolivia
213. Medicos
del
Mundo,
Spain
214. Mercy
Sisters,
Ireland
215. MGLT,
Peru
216. Missionary
Oblates
of
Mary
Immaculate
(OMI),
Italy
217. Model
Mission
of
Assistance
in
Africa
(MOMI
AFRICA),
Nigeria
218. Mor
Salkim
Kadin
Dayanisma
Dernegi,
Turkey
219. Mother
Child
with
AIDS
Support
Organisaton
(MOCASO),
Kenya
220. Mother
of
Hope
Cameroon-‐MOHCAM,
Cameroon
221. Mouvement
Français
pour
le
Planning
Familial
(MFPF),
France
222. Mujer
Y
Salud
–
MYSU,
Uruguay
223. MujeresMundi,
Belgium
224. Mus
kadin
Dernegi
–
MUKADDER,
Turkey
225. MyRight,
Sweden
226. Nagle
Community,
Ireland
227. National
Coalition
Against
Racial
Discrimination
(NCARD),
Nepal
228. National
Council
for
Research
on
Women,
USA
229. National
Fisheries
Solidarity
Movement,
Sri
Lanka
230. National
Indigenous
Women
Federation
(NIWF),
Nepal
231. Neighbourhood
Community
Network,
India
232. NGO
Committee
on
Ageing
,
USA
233. NGO
Federation
of
Nepal
(NFN),
Nepal
234. Niger
Delta
Women's
Movement
for
Peace
and
Development,
Nigeria
235. NOMREK
Legal
Consultants
and
Advocates,
Uganda
236. OceaniaHR,
USA
237. Ohaha
Family
Foundation
(TTOFF),
Nigeria
238. One
Million
Voices
for
Nicaragua-‐
ANSC,
Nicaragua
239. One
Small
Voice,
USA
240. Ordu
Kadini
Guclendirme
Dernegi,
Turkey
241. Organisation
pour
la
Promotion
du
Tourisme
de
l'Education
et
de
l'Environnement
(OPTEE/ONG),
Madagascar
242. Oxfam
Interantional,
International
243. Parahita
Foundation,
Indonesia
244. Participatory
Research
Action
Network
(PRAN),
Bangladesh
245. Peace
Movement
Aotearoa
(PMA),
New
Zealand
246. People's
Health
Movement,
International
247. Personas,
Sexualidades
y
Generos
(PSG),
Costa
Rica
248. Peruvian
American
Medical
Society
(PAMS),
USA-‐Peru
249. Plan
International
International/UK
250. Planned
Parenthood
Association
of
Thailand
(PPAT),
Thailand
251. Plataforma
Interamericana
de
Derechos
Humanos,
Democracia
y
Desarrollo
(PIDHDD),
International
252. Population
Matters,
UK
253. Portuguese
NGDO
Platform,
Portugal
254. Presentation
Ireland,
Ireland
255. Presentation
Justice
Network
Ireland
(PJNI),
Ireland
256. Presentation
Sisters
South
East,
Ireland
257. Presentation
Sisters
Western
Australia,
Australia
258. Presentation
Sisters,
Northern
Province
PBVM,
Ireland
259. Presentation
Sisters,
Wagga
Wagga
PBVM,
Australia
260. Profamilia,
Puerto
Rico
261. Realizing
Sexual
and
Reproductive
Justice
(RESURJ),
International
262. Red
Departamental
de
Mujeres
Chocoanas
RDMUCHO,
Colombia
263. Red
Multicultural
de
Mujeres
Trans
de
Guatemala
(REDMMUTRANS),
Guatemala
264. Red
Nicaraguense
de
Comercio
Comunitario
(RENICC),
Nicaragua
265. Research
Institute
Without
Walls
(RIWW),
USA
266. Réseau
des
Organisations
de
Développement
et
Associations
de
Défense
des
Droits
de
l'Homme
et
de
la
Démocratie
(RODADDHD),
Niger
267. Ruah
Community
Services,
Australia
268. Rwanda
Union
Of
The
Youth
And
Children
With
Disabilities,
Rwanda
269. Sampark
Trust,
India
270. Sedane
Labour
Resource
Center
(Lips),
Indonesia
271. Seeds
India,
India
272. Service
de
Renforcement
et
d'Appuis
Aux
Communautés
de
Base
et
aux
organisations
de
la
Société
Civile
en
Afrique
Centrale
(SERACOB),
Democratic
Republic
of
Congo
273. République
Démocratique
du
Congo
(RDC)
274. Servicios
Ecumenicos
Para
Reconciliacion
Y
Reconstruccuion
(SERR),
USA
275. Shelter
and
Settlements
Alternatives:Uganda
Human
Settlements
Network
(SSA:UHSNET),
Uganda
276. Sisters
of
Mercy,
Ireland
277. Slow
Food
Tanganyika,
Democratic
Republic
of
Congo
278. Social
Watch,
International
279. Menschen
fuer
Solidaritaet,
Oekologie
und
Lebensstil
(SOL),
Austria
280. Soroptimist
International,
International
281. Southern
Africa
Human
Rights
NGO
Network
(SAHRINGON),
Tanzania
282. Southern
African
Faith
Communities'
Environment
Institute
(SAFCEI),
South
Africa
283. Spanish
Federation
for
Family
Planning,
Spain
284. Sri
Lanka
United
Nations
Friendship
Organisation
(SUNFO),
Sri
Lanka
285. Stand
Up
For
Your
Rights,
The
Netherlands
286. Stop
AIDS
Alliance,
Belgium
287. Study
Center
for
Gobernability
and
Democracy
(CEGODEM),
Nicaragua
288. Support
for
Women
in
Agriculture
and
Environment
(SWAGEN),
Uganda
289. Sustainable
Environment
Development
Watch
(SusWatch-‐Kenya),
Kenya
290. Taller
Salud,
Puerto
Rico
291. TANGO,
The
Gambia
292. Teatro
Cabaret
Reinas
Chulas,
AC,
Mexico
7/7
293. Terre
Des
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will succeed the Millennium Development Goals in 2015. As human
rights and social justice organizations worldwide, we feel compelled
to lay out some of the baseline implications of embedding human
rights into the core of the sustainable development agenda this time
around.
At its essence, a post-2015 framework anchored in human rights
moves from a model of charity to one of justice, based on the inherent
dignity of people as human rights-holders, domestic governments as
primary duty-bearers, and all development actors sharing common
but differentiated responsibilities. Accordingly, the post-2015
framework should be designed as a tool to empower and enable
people—individually and collectively—to monitor and hold their
governments, other governments, businesses, international
institutions and other development actors to account for their conduct
as it affects people’s lives within and beyond borders. A sustainable
development framework founded in human rights can serve as an
instrument for people and countries to help unseat the
structural obstacles to sustainable, inclusive and just
development, prevent conflict and stimulate implementation and
enforcement of all human rights—civil, political, economic, social
and cultural rights, the right to development, and to a healthy
environment.
The post-2015 framework must then at the very least respect and
reflect pre-existing human rights legal norms, standards and
political commitments to which governments have already
voluntarily agreed. International human rights, environmental and
humanitarian law, the Millennium Declaration, as well as related
international consensus documents agreed in Rio, Vienna, Cairo,
Beijing, Monterrey and Copenhagen and their follow-up agreements
must form its non-negotiable normative base.
If it is going to incentivize progress while also preventing backsliding
and violations, human rights principles and standards must go
beyond the rhetorical, and have real operational significance this time
around. Among other things, anchoring the post-2015 agenda in
human rights for current and future generations implies that the
framework:
1. Upholds all human rights for all. The framework should
stimulate improved human rights process and outcomes for all
people, especially the most vulnerable, in all countries global
North and global South. Along with economic, social,
2/7
cultural and environmental rights, any successor framework must include commitments
to protect freedom of association, expression, assembly and political participation if
it is to ensure an enabling environment for an empowered civil society, and protect
human rights defenders, including women human rights defenders, as central agents
translating international political commitments into lived realities.
2. Stimulates transparency and genuine participation in decision-making at all levels,
throughout all policies including budget, financial, and tax policies. Access to information
and meaningful and effective participation are not only fundamental human rights, but will
also be critical to developing, implementing, and monitoring an effective and responsive
post-2015 framework.
3. Integrates meaningful institutions and systems to ensure human rights
accountability of all development actors. Lofty aspirations for a post-2015 agenda will
surely fail if proper citizen-led systems of monitoring and human rights accountability
are not built into the very DNA of the framework, with clear and time-bound commitments of
all relevant actors. While states must remain the primary duty-holder in development, all
development actors, including third-party states, the private sector and international
financial institutions should be made responsive and accountable for achieving and not
undermining global goals. Integrating substantive human rights criteria into assessments of
progress towards development goals and commitments means monitoring both the
policy and budgetary efforts of governments alongside development outcomes. Any
post-2015 monitoring mechanism should complement and reinforce the Universal Periodic
Review process for all states. A framework for ensuring accountability would benefit from
constructive interaction with the existing human rights protection regime, as well as
other relevant accountability mechanisms. In this context, we call for an accountability
framework with binding commitments, supported by effective monitoring and enforcement
mechanisms, to be agreed at the global level. This framework should reaffirm the spirit of
the 1986 Declaration on the Right to Development and it should be based on three
fundamental principles: mutual accountability (donors and partners are equally
accountable for development progress); democratic ownership of partner countries
(alignment of donor countries to policy objectives set by developing countries, through
inclusive and democratic processes); and inclusive partnerships (participation of different
varieties of development stakeholders, State and non-State actors).
4. Is backed by national mechanisms of accountability, such as judiciaries, parliaments,
national human rights institutions, reinforced by regional and international human rights
mechanisms such as the treaty bodies and the Universal Periodic Review mechanism, so
as to ensure the implementation of the post-2015 commitments. The post-2015
development agenda is well-placed to encourage governments to improve access to
justice for people living currently in poverty by monitoring measures to eradicate
existing barriers.
5. Ensures that the private sector, at the very least, does no harm. The post-2015
framework must reflect current international consensus that governments have a duty to
protect human rights through the proper oversight and regulation of private actors,
especially of business and private financial actors, to guarantee in practice that they
respect human rights and the environment, including in their cross-border activities.
At the very least, no governments should allow their territory to be used for illegal or
criminal activities elsewhere, such as tax evasion, depositing assets obtained through
3/7
corruption, environmental crimes or involvement in human rights violations, no matter the
perpetrator.
6. Eliminates all forms of discrimination and diminishes inequalities, including
socioeconomic inequalities. Human rights can only be realised within socio-economic
and environmental boundaries if we also reduce inequalities of wealth, power and
resources. Governments have a particular obligation under human rights law to protect the
rights of the most marginalized and excluded, and to take additional measures to ensure
that they enjoy their rights on an equal basis with others. Protecting decent work, and
diminishing unfair wage disparities is also fundamental to reducing socio-economic
inequality, as is reforming tax and fiscal policy and promoting human rights
alternatives to austerity nationally and globally to unleash the resources necessary to
finance human rights fulfillment. The timely collection and disaggregation of data on the
basis of various grounds of compound discrimination is essential to identify, make visible
and respond to inequalities and violations of human rights and to increase accountability. At
a national level, data should be collected and disaggregated based on country-relevant
factors as defined by rights-holders.
7. Specifically and comprehensively supports women's rights. Addressing genderbased
violence, guaranteeing sexual and reproductive rights, ensuring women’s rights
to and control over land, property and productive resources and their economic
independence, recognizing the care economy and ensuring women’s rights to social
protection and the equal distribution of paid and unpaid work, and their rights to
participation in decision-making are critical, not only to realize women's human rights
and achieve gender equality, but for enabling women’s full and active participation in
economic, political and social life.
8. Enables the currently disadvantaged and commonly discriminated against and
excluded groups to be effective agents of their own development by drawing on the
provisions of human rights standards aimed at eliminating discrimination on grounds such
as race, disability, migrant or indigenous status, age, sexual orientation, gender identity,
etc.
9. Upholds the legal obligation to fulfill the minimum essential levels of economic,
social, and cultural rights, without retrogression. This would imply a focus on
universal or “zero” targets, such as the provision of comprehensive social protection
floors, universal health coverage, minimum food security guarantees, and other floors
below which no one anywhere will be allowed to fall.
10. Tackles structural drivers of inequality, poverty and ecological devastation at the
global level. A genuine and balanced global partnership then would enable people and
institutions to monitor the common but differentiated responsibilities of all actors to
eliminate rather than perpetuate these global obstacles. To be good-faith partners then,
governments, business and international institutions must assess the human rights
impact beyond their borders of their policies and agreements in areas such as
corporate accountability, environment, trade, investment, aid, tax, migration,
intellectual property, debt, weapons trade and military cooperation, monetary
policies and financial regulation. Existing human rights norms can provide a common set
of standards and useful yardstick to assess policy coherence for sustainable development.
At a time of great uncertainty, multiple crises and increasing insecurity and conflict, let us not found
the 21st century sustainable development framework on 'bracketed rights’ and broken promises,
but instead on a bold reaffirmation of human rights for all.
4/7
This joint statement is supported by the following organizations:
1. Action
Canada
for
Population
and
Development
(ACPD),
Canada
2. Active
Remedy
LTD,
UK
3. ADD
International,
United
Kingdom
4. ADRA
Germany,
Germany
5. Adventist
Development
and
Relief
Agency,
International
6. Global
Afluentes
SC,
México
7. African
Foundation
for
Environment
and
Development
(AFED),
Nigeria
8. African
Indigenous
Women's
Organization,
Eastern
and
Southern
Africa
9. African
Women's
Development
and
Communication
Network
(FEMNET),
Kenya
10. Age
International,
United
Kingdom
11. Centro
de
Estudios
para
la
Promoción
y
Defensa
de
los
Derechos
Fundamentales
y
Generacionales
(AGORA),
Peru
12. Agricultural
Missions,
USA
13. Alianza
Democratica
de
Organizaciones
Civiles
ADOC,
México
14. Alliance
contre
la
Pauvreté
au
Mali,
Mali
15. Alliance
Sud,
Switzerland
16. Amnesty
International,
International
17. Antalya
Kadin
Danisma
Merkezi
ve
Dayanisma
Dernegi,
Turkey
18. Anti
Corruption
Coalition
Uganda
(ACCU),
Uganda
19. Arab
NGO
Network
for
Development
(ANND),
International
20. ARCA,
Costa
Rica
21. Article
19
(Global
Campaign
for
Free
Expression),
UK/International
22. ASCA,
España
23. Asia
Pacific
Alliance
for
Sexual
and
Reprodustive
Health
and
Rights
(APA),
Thailand
24. Asociación
Nacional
de
Organizaciones
de
la
Sociedad
Civil
(SINERGIA),
Venezuela
25. Asosacion
Gestion
Salud
Poblacion
(AGSP),
Peru
26. Associação
Brasileira
de
Direitos
e
Bens
Comuns
(Abong),
Brazil
27. Association
Camerounaise
pour
la
prise
en
charge
des
Personnes
Agées
(ACAMAGE),
Cameroon
28. Association
Démocratique
des
Femmes
du
Maroc,
Morocco
29. Association
for
emancipation,
solidarity
and
equality
of
women
in
Macedonia
(ESE),
Macedonia
30. Association
for
Women’s
Rights
in
Development
(AWID),
International
31. Association
pour
le
développement
et
de
la
promotion
des
droits
humains,
Mauritanie
32. ASTRA
Network,
International
33. Atasehir
Kent
Konseyi,
Turkey
34. ATD
Fourth
World,
International
35. Australian
Centre
for
International
and
Tropical
Health,
the
University
of
Queensland,
Australia
36. Avocats
Sans
Frontières
(ASF),
Belgium
37. AWAZ
Foundation
Pakistan:
Centre
for
Development
Services
(AWAZCDS-‐Pakistan),
Pakistan
38. Ayvalık
Bağımsız
kadın
İnisiyatifi,
Türkiye
39. Balance
Promoción
para
el
Desarrollo
y
Juventud,
México
40. BOHP,
Turkey
41. Cameroon
Youths
and
Students
Forum
for
Peace
(CAMYOSFOP),
Cameroon
42. Canadian
Council
for
International
Co-‐operation
(CCIC),
Canada
43. Católicas
por
el
derecho
a
decidir,
México
44. Centro
de
Justicia
Internacional
(CDJI),
México
45. Center
for
Economic
and
Social
Rights
(CESR),
International
46. Center
for
International
Environmental
Law
(CIEL),
USA
47. Center
for
International
Human
Rights
(CIHR),
USA
48. Center
for
Reproductive
Rights
(CRR),
International
49. Center
for
Women
Policy
Studies,
USA
50. Center
for
Women’s
Global
Leadership
at
Rutgers
University
(CWGL),
USA
51. Center
for
Youth
Development
&
Sustainable
Democracy
(CEYDESUD),
Liberia
52. Center
of
Concern,
USA
53. Centre
For
21st
Century
Issues
(C21st),
Nigeria
54. Centre
for
Research
and
Advocacy,
Manipur
(CRAM),
India
55. Centre
tricontinental
–
CETRI,
Belgium
56. Centro
de
Documentacion
en
Derechos
Humanos
"Segundo
Montes
Mozo
S.
J."
(CSMM),
Ecuador
57. Centro
de
Estudios
Sociales
y
Culturales
Antonio
de
Montesinos
AC
(CAM),
Mexico
58. Centro
de
Información
y
Desarrollo
de
la
Mujer
–
CIDEM,
Bolivia
59. Centro
de
Investigación
para
la
Acción
Femenina
(CIPAF),
Dominican
Republic
60. Centro
de
Investigación
y
Educación
Sexual
(CIES-‐ ÑEPYRU),
Paraguay
61. Centro
Juana
Azurduy,
Bolivia
62. Challenging
Heights
(CH),
Ghana
63. CHOICE
for
Youth
and
Sexuality,
The
Netherlands
64. Christian
Aid,
UK
65. Church
of
Sweden,
Sweden
66. CIVICUS:
World
Alliance
for
Citizen
Participation,
International
67. Civil
Society
MDG
Campaign/GCAP
Zambia
(CSMDGC/GCAP
Zambia),
Zambia
68. Climate
Change
&
Development
NGO
Alliance,
International
69. Closet
de
Sor
Juana,
Mexico
70. Colectivo
Feminista
Panteras
Rosas,
Nicaragua
71. Collective
For
Research
and
Training
on
Development-‐ Action
(CRTD-‐A),
Lebanon
72. Colour
of
Poverty
-‐
Colour
of
Change,
Canada
73. Comision
Ecumenica
de
Derechos
Humanos
(CEDHU),
Ecuador
74. Commonwealth
Medical
Trust
(Commat),
UK
75. Community
And
Family
Aid
Foundation,
Ghana
76. CONCORD,
Sweden
77. Confederación
Colombiana
de
ONG,
Colombia
78. CONGCOOP,
Guatemala
79. Constitution
Research
Fund
NGO,
Azerbaijan
80. COUP
DE
POUCE
ONGD
(COUPDEPOUCE/ONGD),
Democratic
Republic
of
Congo
81. Colectivo
Regional
De
Adolescentes
Y
Jóvenes
Por
La
Prevención
Del
Embarazo
En
Adolescentes
(CRAJPEA),
Peru
82. Centre
for
Research,
Communication
and
Gender
in
Early
Childhood
Education
(CRECHE),
Kenya
83. CYINDEP,
Cyprus
84. Defensores
PROCDN,
Puerto
Rico
85. Desarrollo,
Educación
y
Cultura
Autogestionarios
Equipo
Pueblo
(DECA
Equipo
Pueblo),
Mexico
86. Development
Alternatives
with
Women
for
a
New
Era
(DAWN),
International
87. Dharti
Development
Foundation
Sindh,
Pakistan
88. DIGNITY
-‐
Danish
Institute
Against
Torture,
Denmark
89. Deutsche
Stiftung
Weltbevölkerung
(DSW),
Germany
90. Ecological
Society
of
the
Philippines,
Philippines
5/7
91. Egyptian
Center
for
Economic
and
Social
Rights
(ECESR),
Egypt
92. Egyptian
Initiative
for
Personal
Rights
(EIPR),
Egypt
93. ELDER
KDM,
Turkey
94. End
Water
Poverty
(EWP),
UK
95. ENDA
Tiers
Monde,
Sénégal
96. EOTO
World,
USA
97. Equality
Monitoring
Women's
Group
(ESITIZ),
Turkey
98. Equidad
de
Género,
Ciudadanía,
Trabajo
y
Familia
(Equidad),
Mexico
99. Equilibres
&
Populations
(EquiPop),
France
100. Espacio
de
Coordinación
de
Organizaciones
Civiles
sobre
Derechos
Económicos,
Sociales
y
Culturales
(Espacio
DESC),
Mexico
101. European
Network
of
Migrant
Women
(ENoMW),
Belgium
102. European
NGOs
for
Sexual
and
Reproductive
Health
and
Rights,
Population
and
Development
(EuroNGOs),
International
103. European
Womens
Lobby
Coordination
for
Turkey
(EWL
Turkey),
Turkey
104. Ev
Eksenli
Calisan
Kadinlar
Calisma
Grubu,
Turkey
105. Fair
Trade
Advocacy
Office
(FTAO),
Belgium
106. Fairtrade
Sweden,
Sweden
107. FANCA,
Costa
Rica
108. Federacion
de
Estudiantes
de
la
Universidad
de
Costa
Rica,
Costa
Rica
109. Federation
for
Women
and
Family
Planning,
Poland
110. Feminist
Atolye
(FEMA),
Cyprus
111. FemLINKPACIFIC,
Fiji
112. FIAN
International,
International
113. FIDA,
International
114. FIFCJ,
Argentina
115. Finnish
NGDO
platform
to
the
EU
Kehys,
Finland
116. Forest
Peoples
Programme,
UK
117. Forum
for
Women
and
Development
(FOKUS),
Norway
118. Forum
Syd,
Sweden
119. Four
Freedoms
Forum,
USA
120. Fundacion
Arcoiris,
Mexico
121. Fundacion
Construir,
Bolivia
122. Fundación
de
Desarrollo
Integral
Causana,
Ecuador
123. Fundación
Diversencia,
Bolivia
124. Fundación
para
Estudio
e
Investigación
de
la
Mujer
– FEIM,
Argentina
125. Fundación
Reflejos
de
Venezuela
(FRV),
Venezuela
126. FUNETAP,
Colombia
127. Future
Worlds
Center,
Cyprus
128. GCAP
China,
China
129. GCAP
Pakistan,
Pakistan
130. Gender
at
Work
(G@W),
International
131. Género,
Etica
y
Salud
Sexual
AC
(GESS),
Mexico
132. Gestos-‐Hiv,
Communication
and
Gender,
Brazil
133. Global
Alliance
Against
Traffic
in
Women
(GAATW),
International
Secretariat
134. Thailand
135. Global
Call
to
Action
Against
Poverty
(GCAP)-‐Kenya,
Kenya
136. Global
Campaign
for
Education
(GCE),
International
137. Global
Fund
for
Women
(GFW),
USA
138. Global
Initiative
for
Economic,
Social
and
Cultural
Rights,
International
139. Global
Resposibility
Platform,
Austria
140. Good
Energies
Alliance
Ireland
(GEAI),
Ireland
141. Gram
Bharati
Samiti
(GBS),
India
142. Gray
Panthers,
USA
143. Green
Earth
Zambia
(GEZ),
Zambia
144. Greentreen,
Bangladesh
145. Grupo
Artemisa
Honduras,
Honduras
146. Grupo
De
Mujeres
de
San
Cristobal
Las
Casas,
AC
–
Colem,
Mexico
147. Grupo
de
Trabajo
Cambio
Climático
y
Justicia
(GTCCJ),
Bolivia
148. Grupo
Diver
Radio,
Honduras
149. Grupo
Safo,
Nicaragua
150. Habitat
International
Coalition
-‐
Housing
and
Land
Rights
Network,
Egypt
151. Hawai'i
Institute
for
Human
Rights,
Hawaii
(USA)
152. Help
and
Development
Organization
(HDO),
Pakistan
153. HelpAge
International,
UK
154. HERA
-‐
Health
Education
and
Research
Association,
Macedonia
155. Hope
for
the
Needy,
Internatiaonal
156. Human
Development
Society-‐
HDS,
Pakistan
157. IBON
International,
International
158. Instituto
de
Investigación
Cultural
para
Educación
Popular
(INDICEP),
Bolivia
159. Indigenous
Information
Network,
Kenya
160. Indigenous
Peoples'
Rights
Activists
Network
(IPRAN),
Nepal
161. Institute
of
Cultural
Affairs
(ICA)-‐Benin,
Benin
162. Instituto
Mexicano
de
Derechos
Humanos
y
Democracia
A.C.,
Mexico
163. Instituto
Qualivida,
Brasil
164. Integrated
Regional
Support
Programme
(IRSP),
Pakistan
165. Interculturalidad,
Salud
y
Derechos
AC
(INSADE),
Mexico
166. International
AIDS
Women
Caucus
(IAWC),
International
167. International
Alliance
Of
Women,
Greece
168. International
Associattion
of
Religious
Freedom
South
Asia
(IARF
SACC),
India
169. Centre
International
de
Droit
Comparé
de
l'Environnement
(CIDCE),
International
170. International
Council
on
Social
Welfare
(ICSW),
Netherlands
171. International
HIV/AIDS
Alliance,
UK
172. International
Network
for
the
Prevention
of
Elder
Abuse
(INPEA),
USA
173. International
Planned
Parenthood
Federation,
International
174. International
Planned
Parenthood,
East
&
South
East
Asia
&
Oceania
Region,
Malaysia
175. International
Presentation
Association
of
the
Sisters
of
the
Presentation,
International
176. International
Trade
Union
Confederation
(ITUC),
International
177. International
Women's
Health
Coalition
(IWHC),
International
178. International
Women
in
Law
and
Development
in
Africa
(WiLDAF/FeDDAF-‐WASRO/BSRAO),
International
179. Ipas,
International
180. IRIS
Esitlik
Gozlem
Grubu,
Turkey
181. Isis
International,
Philippines
182. İstanbul
University,
Turkey
183. Jeunes
Volontaires
pour
l'Environment
Nepal
(JVE-‐ NEPAL),
Nepal
184. Jeunes
Volontaires
pour
l'Environnement,
Togo
185. Jeunesse
Active
de
Guinee
(JAG),
Guinea
186. Juventud
Frente
Amplio,
Costa
Rica
187. Kadin
Calismalari
Dernegi,
Turkey
188. Kadin
Partisi
Girisimi,
Turkey
189. Kadın
Adayları
Destekleme
Derneği
(KA.DER),
Turkey
190. KAMER
Vakfi,
Turkey
191. Karadeniz
İlleri
Kadın
Platformu
Trabzon
derneği
KİKAP
TRABZON,
Turkey
6/7
192. Karadeniz
Kadın
Dayanışma
Derneği
(KARKAD-‐DER),
Turkey
193. Keig
Platform
(Women's
Labor
and
Employment
in
Turkey),
Turkey
194. Kejibaus,
Nigeria
195. Kenya
Debt
Relief
Network
(KENDREN),
Kenya
196. Kepa,
Finland
197. Kikandwa
Environmental
Association
(KEA),
Uganda
198. Kikap
Trabzon,
Turkey
199. Kirmizi
Biber
Dernegi,
Turkey
200. Kolectiva
Rebeldías
Lésbicas,
Peru
201. KULU-‐Women
and
Development,
Denmark
202. Fundación
Red
Nicaraguense
de
Comercio
Comunitario
(RENICC),
Nicaragua
203. Red
Latinoamericana
de
Católicas
por
el
Derecho
a
Decidir
(CDD-‐AL),
International
204. Landesa,
USA
205. Latin-‐American
Campaign
for
the
Right
to
Education
(CLADE),
International
206. Leonard
Cheshire
Disability
(LCD),
UK
207. Liga
Brasileira
de
Lésbicas,
Brazil
208. Lithuanian
National
Non-‐Governmental
Development
Cooperation
Organisations'
Platform,
Lithuania
209. National
Council
of
Swedish
Youth
Organizations
(LSU),
Swedish
210. Manodiversa
Asociacion
Civil,
Bolivia
211. Mavigöl
Kadin
Dernegi,
Turkey
212. MCP
Bolivia
Fondo
Mundial,
Bolivia
213. Medicos
del
Mundo,
Spain
214. Mercy
Sisters,
Ireland
215. MGLT,
Peru
216. Missionary
Oblates
of
Mary
Immaculate
(OMI),
Italy
217. Model
Mission
of
Assistance
in
Africa
(MOMI
AFRICA),
Nigeria
218. Mor
Salkim
Kadin
Dayanisma
Dernegi,
Turkey
219. Mother
Child
with
AIDS
Support
Organisaton
(MOCASO),
Kenya
220. Mother
of
Hope
Cameroon-‐MOHCAM,
Cameroon
221. Mouvement
Français
pour
le
Planning
Familial
(MFPF),
France
222. Mujer
Y
Salud
–
MYSU,
Uruguay
223. MujeresMundi,
Belgium
224. Mus
kadin
Dernegi
–
MUKADDER,
Turkey
225. MyRight,
Sweden
226. Nagle
Community,
Ireland
227. National
Coalition
Against
Racial
Discrimination
(NCARD),
Nepal
228. National
Council
for
Research
on
Women,
USA
229. National
Fisheries
Solidarity
Movement,
Sri
Lanka
230. National
Indigenous
Women
Federation
(NIWF),
Nepal
231. Neighbourhood
Community
Network,
India
232. NGO
Committee
on
Ageing
,
USA
233. NGO
Federation
of
Nepal
(NFN),
Nepal
234. Niger
Delta
Women's
Movement
for
Peace
and
Development,
Nigeria
235. NOMREK
Legal
Consultants
and
Advocates,
Uganda
236. OceaniaHR,
USA
237. Ohaha
Family
Foundation
(TTOFF),
Nigeria
238. One
Million
Voices
for
Nicaragua-‐
ANSC,
Nicaragua
239. One
Small
Voice,
USA
240. Ordu
Kadini
Guclendirme
Dernegi,
Turkey
241. Organisation
pour
la
Promotion
du
Tourisme
de
l'Education
et
de
l'Environnement
(OPTEE/ONG),
Madagascar
242. Oxfam
Interantional,
International
243. Parahita
Foundation,
Indonesia
244. Participatory
Research
Action
Network
(PRAN),
Bangladesh
245. Peace
Movement
Aotearoa
(PMA),
New
Zealand
246. People's
Health
Movement,
International
247. Personas,
Sexualidades
y
Generos
(PSG),
Costa
Rica
248. Peruvian
American
Medical
Society
(PAMS),
USA-‐Peru
249. Plan
International
International/UK
250. Planned
Parenthood
Association
of
Thailand
(PPAT),
Thailand
251. Plataforma
Interamericana
de
Derechos
Humanos,
Democracia
y
Desarrollo
(PIDHDD),
International
252. Population
Matters,
UK
253. Portuguese
NGDO
Platform,
Portugal
254. Presentation
Ireland,
Ireland
255. Presentation
Justice
Network
Ireland
(PJNI),
Ireland
256. Presentation
Sisters
South
East,
Ireland
257. Presentation
Sisters
Western
Australia,
Australia
258. Presentation
Sisters,
Northern
Province
PBVM,
Ireland
259. Presentation
Sisters,
Wagga
Wagga
PBVM,
Australia
260. Profamilia,
Puerto
Rico
261. Realizing
Sexual
and
Reproductive
Justice
(RESURJ),
International
262. Red
Departamental
de
Mujeres
Chocoanas
RDMUCHO,
Colombia
263. Red
Multicultural
de
Mujeres
Trans
de
Guatemala
(REDMMUTRANS),
Guatemala
264. Red
Nicaraguense
de
Comercio
Comunitario
(RENICC),
Nicaragua
265. Research
Institute
Without
Walls
(RIWW),
USA
266. Réseau
des
Organisations
de
Développement
et
Associations
de
Défense
des
Droits
de
l'Homme
et
de
la
Démocratie
(RODADDHD),
Niger
267. Ruah
Community
Services,
Australia
268. Rwanda
Union
Of
The
Youth
And
Children
With
Disabilities,
Rwanda
269. Sampark
Trust,
India
270. Sedane
Labour
Resource
Center
(Lips),
Indonesia
271. Seeds
India,
India
272. Service
de
Renforcement
et
d'Appuis
Aux
Communautés
de
Base
et
aux
organisations
de
la
Société
Civile
en
Afrique
Centrale
(SERACOB),
Democratic
Republic
of
Congo
273. République
Démocratique
du
Congo
(RDC)
274. Servicios
Ecumenicos
Para
Reconciliacion
Y
Reconstruccuion
(SERR),
USA
275. Shelter
and
Settlements
Alternatives:Uganda
Human
Settlements
Network
(SSA:UHSNET),
Uganda
276. Sisters
of
Mercy,
Ireland
277. Slow
Food
Tanganyika,
Democratic
Republic
of
Congo
278. Social
Watch,
International
279. Menschen
fuer
Solidaritaet,
Oekologie
und
Lebensstil
(SOL),
Austria
280. Soroptimist
International,
International
281. Southern
Africa
Human
Rights
NGO
Network
(SAHRINGON),
Tanzania
282. Southern
African
Faith
Communities'
Environment
Institute
(SAFCEI),
South
Africa
283. Spanish
Federation
for
Family
Planning,
Spain
284. Sri
Lanka
United
Nations
Friendship
Organisation
(SUNFO),
Sri
Lanka
285. Stand
Up
For
Your
Rights,
The
Netherlands
286. Stop
AIDS
Alliance,
Belgium
287. Study
Center
for
Gobernability
and
Democracy
(CEGODEM),
Nicaragua
288. Support
for
Women
in
Agriculture
and
Environment
(SWAGEN),
Uganda
289. Sustainable
Environment
Development
Watch
(SusWatch-‐Kenya),
Kenya
290. Taller
Salud,
Puerto
Rico
291. TANGO,
The
Gambia
292. Teatro
Cabaret
Reinas
Chulas,
AC,
Mexico
7/7
293. Terre
Des
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