The equal enjoyment of economic, social, and cultural rights is fundamental to sustainable development leaving no one behind, to democratic resilience, and to the prevention of instability and crisis. Without equal and adequate access to quality education, quality healthcare, food, water and sanitation, and housing, grievances grow, and society becomes fractured. This is especially the case for groups living in …
Connecting the dots between inequality, poverty, and ‘human rights beyond growth’
‘What use is growing the global economy when it is burning the planet and funnelling the majority of its wealth to the super-rich?’ This question encapsulates the priorities that the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, Olivier De Schutter, has pursued since starting his second term in 2023, priorities premised on a belief that the traditional model of growing …
In a ‘broken system,’ can the UN human rights machinery tilt the balance to help reverse rising inequalities?
‘We are going backwards, inequalities are skyrocketing, climate change is burning and pounding our planet, and the number of people living in severe poverty has risen, for the first time in a generation. […] The system is broken.’ These were the sombre words chosen by the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk, to open the Sixth Intersessional Meeting of the …
Inequality takes centre stage at the Human Rights Council
We are living in ‘an age of massive concentration of wealth, and unprecedented inequalities,’ an ‘abyss [has opened] between rich and poor [that] harms everyone.’ With these words, pronounced in his opening global update at the 54th session of the Human Rights Council, High Commissioner Volker Türk cast the spotlight on inequality, an issue that has been gaining ground in the human rights …
It’s high time human rights practitioners join conversations on taxation
In recent weeks, conversations about taxation seem to have moved out from the shadows of bureaucratic policy making and placed front and center of the international geopolitical stage. The reason in one word: COVID-19. However, while there is a growing momentum to establish a new international tax regime that addresses pervasive inequalities, accompanied by greater political will to discuss States’ …
The end of the COVID-19 pandemic may finally be in sight, but is everyone included?
Addressing the opening of the 74th World Health Assembly in Geneva on Monday, UN Secretary-General António Guterres warned that ‘unless we act now, we face a situation in which rich countries vaccinate the majority of their people and open their economies, while the virus continues to cause deep suffering by circling and mutating in the poorest countries.’ This sharp criticism of …
The class-blindness of human rights
If you are reading this piece, it’s unlikely that you are, or that you originate from, a working-class background. I say this not as a rebuke. Nor do I intend to question your commitment to social justice and human rights. As a class migrant myself, I am also not claiming that the human rights community doesn’t include people who still …
Biden’s American Rescue Plan has the potential to greatly impact children living in poverty
Despite the growing feeling that the end of the COVID-19 pandemic may be in sight, a staggering number of people worldwide continue to suffer from the consequences wrought. The imperative to provide support to those who have suffered the most and the opportunity to ‘build back better’ have never been more evident. The Biden administration seems to recognise this, as …
Is returning to pre-COVID-19 levels of ‘equality’ enough?
Oxfam recently published a new report, ‘ The Inequality Virus ’, which offers startling new data on the state of inequality around the world as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. It demonstrates that COVID-19 has the potential to increase inequalities in almost every country at once – the first time this has happened since records began over a century ago. The virus …
Inequitable access to Covid-19 vaccines threatens the human rights of millions and must be addressed
Covid-19 has shone a stark light onto inequalities between countries. So far, high-income countries have recorded the most cases and deaths, but the economic impact of Covid-19 has been disproportionately harmful to lower-income countries, where governments and citizens have fewer resources to weather the storm. Despite their declarations against ‘vaccine nationalism’, richer countries have paid to get to the front …