Title: Human Rights and Poverty
1 Human Rights and Poverty
- Human rights as a concept
- Poverty as a concept
- Relationship between human rights and poverty
- Normative framework
- Other related notions
- Human rights principles underlying poverty
reduction strategies
2 Human rights as a concept
- Values about the protection of human dignity,
laid down in legal texts, that entail rights for
individuals and obligations for states. - Requirements for a right to be recognized as a
human right - Object substance or content of a right
- Subject right holder
- Duty bearer duty holder
3Categories of human rights
- Civil and political rights
- Economic, social and cultural rights
- Collective or group rights
4Economic, social and cultural rights
- Different definitions
- Rights relating to an adequate standard of
living - Conditions under which people live and work
- Claims to the fulfilment of basic needs
- Claims relating to the quality of life from a
material and immaterial perspective - Claims relating to opportunities to make a living
and - the protection of working conditions.
5Poverty as a concept
- Amartya Sens capability approach
- A persons freedom or opportunities to achieve
well-being. - Poverty low levels of capability.
- Sen the failure of basic capabilities to reach
certain minimally acceptable levels. - Basic capabilities being adequately nourished,
clothed and sheltered, avoiding preventable
morbidity, taking part in the life of a community
and being able to appear in public with dignity.
6Poverty as a broad concept
- Inadequate command over economic resources (work
generated income) - Insufficient command over publicly provided goods
and services (housing, health, education) - Inadequate command over or access to resources
that are made available through formal and
informal networks of support (social security and
social assistance)
7Voices of the Poor (World Bank, 2000)
- Poverty is lack of freedom, enslaved by crushing
daily burden, by depression and fear of what the
future will bring. (Georgia) - For a poor person everything is terrible
illness, humiliation, shame. We are cripples we
are afraid of everything we depend on everyone.
No one needs us. We are like garbage that
everyone wants to get rid of. - (A blind woman from Tiraspol, Moldova.)
8- Poverty is like living in jail, living under
bondage, waiting to be free. (Jamaica) - If you want to do something and have no power to
do it, it is talauchi (poverty). (Nigeria)
9Extreme poverty
- The combination of
- Income poverty lack of income or purchasing
power to secure basic needs. - Human development poverty extreme or severe
deprivation of elements of well-being, such as
health, education, food, housing. - Social exclusion When as a consequence of
marginalization, discrimination and exclusion in
social relations, people lack basic security and
the capability to lead a life of value.
10Impoverishment
- A worsening of the poverty situation of people
as a result of a deliberate policy of the state
or a failure or indifference by the state to
embark on an active and effective policy of
poverty eradication.
11Relationship between poverty and human rights
- The capability approach defines poverty as the
absence or inadequate realization of certain
basic freedoms. - These freedoms should be understood as negative
and positive freedoms - Negative non-interference with the pursuit of
freedoms - Positive creation of an enabling environment.
12- Basic freedoms, both negative and positive ones,
are considered as fundamental for minimal human
dignity. -
- Consequently, poverty can be defined as
- Either the failure of basic freedoms (from the
perspective of capabilities) - Or the non-fulfilment of rights to those freedoms
(from the perspective of human rights) -
13- Non-fulfilment of human rights would count as
poverty when it meets the following two
conditions - The human rights involved must be those that
correspond to the capabilities that are
considered basic by a given society. - Inadequate command over economic resources must
play a role in the causal chain leading to the
non-fulfilment of human rights.
14 Poverty seen through a human rights lens
- A human condition characterized by sustained or
chronic deprivation of the resources,
capabilities, choices, security and power
necessary for the enjoyment of an adequate
standard of living and other civil, cultural,
economic, political and social rights. - Poverty constitutes a denial of human rights.
- (UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights, Statement on Poverty, 2001)
15Disputed definition of poverty from a human
rights perspective
- Poverty as a massive and ongoing violation of
human rights. Poverty is seen as a mass,
structural and enduring phenomenon, in which
individuals and families are subjected to poverty
by external forces and decisions which have
nothing to do with them and over which most of
the time they have no control. - Poverty appears as an arbitrary imposition on
certain individuals and groups, and constitutes a
flagrant type of discrimination.
16Poverty as a violation of human rights?
- What is a violation? A violation is an act or
omission (failure to act) which destroys or harms
the enjoyment of a right which a state is under
an obligation to respect or to fulfil. - Of which legal norm? There is no human right not
to be poor. - By whom? ? Who is the duty bearer?
- ? Who is the perpetrator?
17The United Nations position
- The United Nations presently sees poverty as a
cause and a product of human rights violations. - Poverty is characterized by discrimination,
unequal access to resources and social and
cultural stigmatization. It amounts to a denial
of human rights and human dignity. - Fighting poverty is a matter of obligation, not
of aspiration or charity.
18General Assembly of the United Nations
- The existence of widespread extreme poverty
inhibits the full and effective enjoyment of
human rights and might, in some situations,
constitute a threat to the right to life.
19Normative Legal Framework
- International Covenant on Economic, Social and
Cultural Rights (1966) Article 2(1) 6-15 - Declaration on the Right to Development (1986)
- Vienna Declaration World Conference (1993)
- All human rights are universal, indivisible and
interdependent and interrelated.
20Core human rights obligations
- (...) the Committee is of the view that a
minimum core obligation to ensure the
satisfaction of, at the very least, minimum
essential levels of each of the rights is
incumbent upon every State party. - Thus, for example, a State party in which any
significant number of individuals is deprived of
essential foodstuffs, of essential primary health
care, of basic shelter and housing, or of the
most basic forms of education is, prima facie,
failing to discharge its obligations under the
Covenant. - UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights, General Comment no. 3, 10.
21 UN-Millennium Declaration (2000)
- We will spare no efforts to free our fellow
men, women and children from the abject and
dehumanizing conditions of extreme poverty, to
which more than a billion of them are currently
subjected. We are committed to making the right
to development a reality for everyone and to
freeing the entire human race from want. -
22Human Rights Principles Underlying Poverty
Reduction Strategies
- Universality and Indivisibility
- Equality and Non-Discrimination
- Participation and Inclusion
- Empowerment of Poor People
- Accountability and the Rule of Law
- State obligations progressive realization of
esc-rights - Obligation of International Cooperation
23- Poverty reduction is clearly a human rights
obligation. ? Failure to overcome poverty implies
a failure to implement human rights. - Lack of anti-poverty policies and programs may
give rise to a violation of human rights
obligations.
24- Poverty reduction strategies should depart from a
human rights based approach - ? national level pro-poor programs aimed at
vulnerable and marginalized groups require
priorities in the budget -
- ? IMF and World Bank programs
- ? Bilateral development cooperation.
25Added Value of a human rights based approach to
poverty reduction
- International legal human rights obligations
accepted voluntarily add legitimacy to poverty
reduction. - Recognition of complementarities between
economic, social and cultural rights and civil
and political rights. - Focus on both processes and goals of development.
- Emphasis on legal obligations to realize
essential services. - Accountability of policy-makers.