On December 10, 1948, the United Nations General Assembly adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). The declaration consists of 30 articles that specify the rights the General Assembly agreed are Human Rights guaranteed to all people. If, like me, you have only heard repeated references to the Declaration of Human Rights but haven't read it for yourself, now is a great time to click on over to the UN page where they have it translated in many different languages. (The Guinness Book of Records places the UDHR as the most translated document in the world!)
In honor of the document's 60th Anniversary, UBUNTU (World Forum of Civil Society Networks) has written a statement emphasizing that all Human Rights are "universal, indivisible, and interdependent." They further call for:
1. The Human Right to Peace.
2. The Human Right to Development (including food, water, the satisfaction of basic needs)
3. The Human Right to the Environment. (acknowledging that "current production and consumption models are unsustainable")
EarthAction was one of the first 50 signatories on the UBUNTU document, alongside other supporters such as Noam Chomsky and Adolfo Pérez Esquivel (Nobel Peace Prize Laureate). You can click here to read the statement in full and to sign your name. It's a great opportunity to evaluate how we are protecting those rights that are expressed in the original Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and what steps need to be taken for a sustainable future.
(Image is of Eleanoor Roosevelt reading a Spanish translation of the UDHR, author unknown)
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