24/38 Report of the Independent Expert on the promotion of a democratic and equitable international order, Alfred-Maurice de Zayas
Document Type: Final Report
Date: 2013 Jul
Session: 24th Regular Session (2013 Sep)
Agenda Item: Item3: Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights, including the right to development
GE.13-15365
Human Rights Council Twenty-fourth session
Agenda item 3 Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil,
political, economic, social and cultural rights,
including the right to development
Report of the Independent Expert on the promotion of a democratic and equitable international order, Alfred-Maurice de Zayas*
Summary
The Independent Expert submits this progress report in accordance with Human Rights Council resolutions 18/6 and 21/9. It summarizes activities undertaken from August 2012 to June 2013, and addresses the spectrum of issues inherent in the mandate. For ease of reference, 14 documents and declarations have been included as annexes to the report. The Independent Expert understands the mandate as universal, aiming at the convergence of civil, cultural, economic, political and social rights into a coherent synthesis necessary for the process of achieving an international order that is more democratic and equitable. The vast scope of the resolutions manifest the Council’s vision and call for the formulation
of pragmatic recommendations to States, civil society, National Human Rights Institutions and the Council itself. A peaceful and just international order can be achieved when stakeholders collaborate to change paradigms and apply international law uniformly, in keeping with the United Nations Charter and human rights treaties
* The annex to the present report is circulated as received, in the language of submission
only.
Contents Paragraphs Page
I. Introduction ............................................................................................................. 1–4 3
II. Activities ................................................................................................................ 5–11 3
III. Democratic and equitable deficits ........................................................................... 12–24 4
IV. Obstacles ................................................................................................................ 25–41 10
V. Good practices ......................................................................................................... 42–50 14
VI. Conclusions and recommendations ......................................................................... 51–60 16
A. Recommendations to States ............................................................................ 54–56 17
B. Recommendations to the Council ................................................................... 57 20
C. Recommendations to Civil Society and National Human Rights Institutions 58–60 21
Annex
Excerpts or full texts of relevant documents .................................................................................... 23
I. Introduction
1. “The will of the people shall be the basis of the authority of government; this will shall be expressed in periodic and genuine elections which shall be by universal and equal suffrage and shall be held by secret vote or by equivalent free voting procedures.” Article 21(3), Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
2. “All peoples have the right of self-determination. By virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development.” Article 1, International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR).
3. “Democracy is based on the freely expressed will of the people to determine their own political, economic, social and cultural systems and their full participation in all aspects of their lives.” Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action, paragraph 8.
4. This report of the Independent Expert is submitted to the Human Rights Council pursuant to Council resolutions 18/6 and 21/9, covering multiple aspects of the mandate, with emphasis on the fostering of full, equitable and effective participation.
II. Activities
5. In the period from 1 August 2012 to 14 June 2013, the Independent Expert deployed manifold activities directly associated with the different aspects of the mandate. He forwarded two questionnaires to States, intergovernmental organizations, national human rights institutions and non-governmental organizations. He expresses thanks for all responses received.
6. On 16 May 2013, he convened an expert consultation in Geneva with the aim of gathering inputs for this report. On 6 June 2013, he convened a consultation on global enforcement mechanisms as a means to achieve an international order, which will be subject of his report to the General Assembly.
7. He was invited to and participated in numerous events pertinent to the mandate during the twenty-first, twenty-second and twenty-third sessions of the Council. While in New York to present his first report to the General Assembly in October 2012, he had the opportunity to meet with numerous Permanent Missions, United Nations Special Procedures mandate holders and other stakeholders.
8. He further took part in other events related to his mandate:
(a) From 1–3 October 2012, he delivered a paper on democratic governance at the Council’s Social Forum on people-centered development and globalization.1
(b) From 4–5 December 2012, he participated in the first annual Forum on Business and Human Rights.
(c) As a follow-up to a closed expert meeting on the Advisory Committee Declaration on the right to peace held 26–27 November 2012 in Caux-Sur-Montreux, Switzerland, which he attended, he took part in the first session of the Open-ended Intergovernmental Working Group on a Draft United Nations Declaration on the Right to Peace in February 2013.
1 Martin Khor, “Globalization and the South”, Third World Network, Penang 2002.
(d) On 5 April 2013, he contributed a paper to the Workshop on the impact of unilateral coercive measures on the enjoyment of human rights.2
9. Furthermore, he participated, inter alia, in: (a) A conference hosted by Earth Focus in Geneva, on 10 December 2012, on the
occasion of 2012 Human Rights Day.
(b) A panel discussion commemorating the 10th anniversary of the International Day of Zero Tolerance to Female Genital Mutilation, organized by several missions and UNICEF on 6 February 2013.
(c) A meeting analysing the Declaration on the right to peace, organized by the CSO Coalition on the Human Right to Peace, on 11 March 2013.
(d) A lecture on the scope of his mandate at the University of Middlesex 7–8 March 2013; and two lectures at the University of Nottingham, on 8 and 9 March 2013.
(e) A seminar, entitled “A Democratic New International Economic Order”, organized by the International Association of Democratic Lawyers, in Paris, 23–24 May
2013.
10. In light of Council resolution 21/9, the Independent Expert interacted with academia, think tanks and research institutes, including the South Center, the Inter-Parliamentary Union, the Committee for a Democratic United Nations, the Kofi Annan Foundation, the International Commission of Jurists, and CETIM. On 11 October 2012 he held a working session with the Executive Director of South Center and also met with the Secretary General of the Geneva-based Inter-Parliamentary Union. On 25 February he met with professors of the Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights concerning the Swiss Initiative to Commemorate the 60th Anniversary anniversary of the Universal of Human Rights, and on 6 March with representatives of the International Commission of Jurists on the World Court on Human Rights.3
11. In December 2012 he published, together with Ms. Aurea Roldan, an analysis of the Human Rights Committee’s General Comment 34 on “Freedom of Opinion and Freedom of Expression” in the Netherlands International Law Review (vol. LIX, pp. 425-455), and the role of access to information and freedom of the media in ensuring a democratic international order.
III. Democratic and equitable deficits
12. A democratic and equitable international order is inherent in the fundamental human rights that humanity shares.4 It is achievable, step-by-step, when every country and people act at the local, regional and international levels, aware that such an international order must be based on the United Nations Charter and the human rights treaties, which together make up what we can safely call the Constitution of the modern world, subject, of course,
2 See http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Seminars/Pages/WorkshopCoerciveMeasures.aspx,
chapter 7.1 on United States exceptionalism and unilateralism in Rosa Freedman, The United Nations Human Rights Council, Routledge 2013, pp. 151–154.
3 See http://www.udhr60.ch/docs/World-court-final1211%20.pdf; http://www.udhr60.ch/ 4 See e.g. http://www.un.org/en/globalissues/democracy/human_rights.shtml;
http://www.un.org/en/globalissues/democracy/democracy_and_un.shtml; http://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/rule_of_law/democracy.htm;
Democracy, Human Rights and the Emerging Global Order, a Workshop hosted by the Brookings Institution’s Managing Global Order project, 29–30 November 2012.
to necessary reforms. The Preamble and articles 1 and 2 of the Charter lay down the intention of the “peoples of the United Nations” to build an international order of peace,
human rights and development.
13. With regard to an international democratic and equitable order, it is obvious that such international order depends on the sovereign equality of States, the right of peoples to self-determination and on a commitment to sharing the riches of the planet in a spirit of international solidarity.5 While self-determination is closely related to the idea of democracy, participation in international decision-making is still far from equal or even equitable. Indeed, the United Nations Security Council is not democratic, nor are the Bretton Woods institutions. There are other players which are not democratic in their structure or in their modus operandi, including certain elitist organizations such as the Trilateral Commission, the Atlantic Council and the Bilderberg Group, as well as better- known conferences of the G-8, G-20, the World Economic Forum, and military alliances such as the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Meanwhile, transnational corporations exert increasing influence on global decision-making and impact on the options of sovereign States and on the enjoyment of human rights.6 Corporations – whether national or multinational – do not operate on the basis of democratic principles but seek primarily profit, and their decisions affect the international order. Reforms are necessary so as to ensure the equitable participation of States, large and small, in global decision- making, especially concerning decisions on peacekeeping, the environment, trade relations and the common heritage of humankind.
14. In a democracy, it is the people who are sovereign. Therefore, with regard to the promotion of democracy at the local, country and regional levels, civil society must have a stronger voice in all political processes. The situation in some countries is grave, since freedom of expression, peaceful assembly and association, and free and fair elections, are not ensured; opposition leaders are arrested or killed; journalists, whistleblowers and bloggers are harassed, intimidated and detained; public demonstrations are prohibited; peaceful demonstrators massacred, elections are reduced to masquerades, etc. Several Rapporteurs have documented these violations,7 the Human Rights Council has adopted pertinent resolutions, and the Human Rights Committee has adopted important jurisprudence thereon.8 The Independent Expert is highly concerned about such situations where the rule of law and the respect for key principles such as free, fair and competitive elections are blatantly violated.
15. It is crucial that electoral systems be free and fair, ensure the free formation and operation of political parties, in accordance with best practices related to freedom of association,9 and respect the principle of non-discrimination so that all groups, including opposition groups or groups promoting dissenting views, can take part in the electoral process. These rules should apply not only for general or important elections, but also in
5 Report of the Independent Expert on human rights and international solidarity, A/HRC/23/45 and
Add.1. 6 Salvador Allende at the United Nations 1972, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=knewNLlpkMw. 7 See, inter alia, reports from Independent Expert on minority issues: Special Rapporteur on the
Independence of Judges and Lawyers; Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression; Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights while countering terrorism; Special Rapporteur on the promotion of truth, justice, reparation and guarantees of non-recurrence; Special Rapporteur on the situation of Human Rights Defenders; and Special Rapporteurs on Belarus, Cambodia, Côte d’Ivoire, Eritrea, Islamic Republic of Iran and Sudan.
8 Jakob Möller and Alfred de Zayas, United Nations Human Rights Committee Case Law, 2009. 9 See Report A/HRC/20/27 of the Special Rapporteur on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly
and of association.
local consultations. Participation is more than casting votes: it implies the ability for individuals and people to freely express their views, and for this voice to be heard “to shape
the decisions that affect their community”.10
16. But even in ostensibly democratic States, there is no reason for complacency. Although formally free elections are held, the electoral process in many countries is dysfunctional and election results do not always correspond to the wishes of the electorate. In order to satisfy democratic requirements, there must be consultation of the public and the choice of candidates must be free and transparent. Methods to determine the will of the people, for instance, through frequent opinion polling and through referenda, should be put in place. As many observers note, representative democracy frequently manifests a disconnect between parliamentarians and the people, so that parliamentarians have agendas that do not correspond with the wishes of the electorate. This has led in many countries to apathy, cynicism and large-scale absenteeism in elections. What is needed is not only parliaments, but parliamentarians who genuinely represent the wishes of the electorate. In almost all countries, women are underrepresented and in many countries women are essentially disenfranchised.11 Such disenfranchisement is undemocratic and demands corrective measures. Women must be empowered so that they can meaningfully participate in decision-making.12
17. This second report to the Council, which covers multiple aspects of Council resolutions 18/6 and 21/9, focuses primarily on the issue of participation. It is not a compilation of facts and figures, but an attempt at defining concepts and identifying obstacles. The concept of democracy – whether we mean international democracy or domestic democracy – can be defined. Yet, international organizations that call themselves democratic are not, and some countries that invoke democracy reveal themselves as autocratic or oligarchic in practice. “Representative democracy” betrays the electorate when laws have no roots in the people but in oligarchies. Studies on the concept and modalities of direct democracy are therefore becoming more topical.13
18. Democracy entails a correlation between the public interest as expressed by a majority of the population and the governmental policies that affect them. The term encompasses various manifestations, including direct, participatory and representative democracy, but Governments must be responsive to people and not to special interests such as the military-industrial complex, financial bankers and transnational corporations. Democracy is inclusive and does not privilege an anthropological aristocracy. It requires that the basic rules establishing and organizing the State and its relationship with society be put in place and accepted by the citizens. It requires consultation with the people and
10 See www.un.org/en/events/humanrightsday/2012/message.shtml. 11 Concluding observations of the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women
(CEDAW), report A/HRC/23/50 of the Working Group on the issue of discrimination against women in law and in practice.
12 CEDAW General Recommendation 23 and CESCR General Comment 15, para. 16a; Human Rights Committee, General Comment 28.
13 Global Forum on Modern Direct Democracy, Montevideo 14-16 November 2012 http://2012globalforum.com/, http://movementfordirectdemocracy.com/strategy.html, http://www.directdemocracynow.org/, Centre for Direct Democracy, University of Zürich http://www.c2d.ch/, World Conference on Direct Democracy http://www.tfd.org.tw/iri- asia/?mod=News&page=Direct_Democracy_Developments&id=465.
Andrea Good/Bettina Platipodis, Direkte Demokratie, Bern 2013. Daniel Thürer, “Völkerrechtliches Jus Cogens und Volkssouveränität” in Good/Platipodis, pp. 439-452. Daniel Thürer, Direkte Demokratie. Eine Form des Widerstands? in Hans v. Arnim (ed.) Widerstand, Berlin 2012, pp. 63 ff. René Roca, Wenn die Volkssouveränität wirklich eine Wahrheit werden soll. Zürich 2012; Paul Widmer, Die Schweiz als Sonderfall, Zurich 2008.
respect of the will of the voters. Although founded on majority rule, a democratic society must recognize and apply individual, minority and group rights. In other words, majority rule must be understood within the context of the rule of law and human dignity. As highlighted by the European Court of Human Rights, “Pluralism, tolerance and
broadmindedness are hallmarks of a ‘democratic society’. Although individual interests
must on occasion be subordinated to those of a group, democracy does not simply mean that the views of a majority must always prevail: a balance must be achieved which ensures the fair and proper treatment of people from minorities and avoids any abuse of a dominant position.”14 This resolves the tension between populism and human rights, since democracy must not be abused to diminish human rights, e.g. by legitimizing torture or capital punishment, even if public opinion could be invoked or manipulated to demand it. Thus, it is necessary to strengthen the enforcement of national and regional bills of rights to provide a process and atmosphere for democracy to flourish, ensured by an independent judiciary that provides the necessary protection of both majority and minority interests.
19. Democracy has an old evolutionary history and has been adjusted to the needs of many different societies and cultures. There is no single “model” of democracy,15 and no one should pretend that “one size fits all” and that one particular manifestation of
democracy should be exported to countries that function differently, where the political process corresponds to other traditions. When approaching the concept of democracy, one should look beyond the label and ask the crucial question: What is the correlation between the needs and the will of the people and the political decision-making affecting them? A corollary to that question is: To what degree was truthful, reliable and pluralistic information available to facilitate genuine participation by the people in the development of law and practice? Democracy is not the end product, but the means to the end, which is the enjoyment of human rights by all.
20. In order to test the existence or otherwise of international democracy in recent times, one may ask whether States and peoples, including non-represented peoples, have had a democratic opportunity of participating in decisions concerning important issues, such as war and peace, global warming, the environment, trade relations, access to medicine and the common heritage of humankind. More concretely, would a majority of States approve the application of sanctions regimes selectively and not uniformly? Would they have approved the use of force against Serbia in 1999, against Iraq in 2003 and against Libya in 2011? Should the international community have had a voice in determining whether all avenues of peaceful negotiation had been exhausted? Should civil society be allowed a degree of participation on “technical” decisions on free trade and other agreements that
result in widespread unemployment? And with regard to regional arrangements and regional constitutional law, should the citizens of the countries concerned be allowed to vote directly in favour or against treaties entailing a significant restriction of national sovereignty, e.g. should the citizens of the European Union have had an opportunity to vote by referendum on the adoption of the Treaty of Lisbon? Should they have had a say in decisions to impose or lift embargoes in situations of civil war? With regard to the reunification of the island of Cyprus, would a constitutional convention in which all Cypriot communities would have had an opportunity to negotiate a grass-roots constitution have resulted in a democratic instrument that could have bridged the impasse by involving all stakeholders?16 This non-exhaustive list of international disorder illustrates that
14 European Court of Human Rights, Case of Leyla Sahin vs. Turkey, Application no. 44774/98,
para. 108. 15 Preamble, Human Rights Council Resolution 19/36, 23 March 2012. 16 Andreas Auer et al. A principled basis for a just and lasting Cyprus settlement in Light of
International and European Law, Brussels, 2005. Andreas Auer/Vasiliki Triga, A Constitutional
consultation has been flawed or entirely missing, precisely in cases where public participation would have been most necessary.
21. In order to test the existence or otherwise of domestic democracy in recent times, it may be instructive to explore how decisions such as those on the increasing electronic and video surveillance of individuals, arrest, indefinite detention, social security, health care, employment, marriage, abortion, etc. have been taken and are being taken, and the degree of genuine public participation in these decisions. More concretely, would a majority of the population accept the grave restrictions of human rights following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001? Would it accept the priorities imposed by Governments with regard to so-called “austerity measures”? Would it approve the bailout of the banks? Would it approve increasing militarization and the enormous slice of the budget allocated to the “defence” industry? Would it consent to the participation of their respective countries in military adventures not supported by resolutions of the Security Council and not allowed under Article 51 of the United Nations Charter? Would it consent to the sale of weapons to belligerents in foreign civil wars? Would it consent to the use of drones regardless of civilian casualties and collateral damage? Would the citizens of the 54 nations that cooperated with the system of rendition, secret prisons, “black holes”, etc. have approved illegal acts committed in the name of the “war against terrorism”?17 Would they consent to the use of military commissions to try civilians? What has been the role of some media in creating an atmosphere of imminent threat and fear through disinformation and skewed reporting, in contravention of the prohibition of war propaganda stipulated in article 20 ICCPR? Would a public referendum approve adoption of infants by same-sex couples? What does it mean when mass protests demanding democratic reforms and human rights are met with excessive use of force by police? Can laws be adopted top-down without public debate and in spite of widespread protest by the population? Are populations hostage of parliamentarians and incapable of influencing policy until the next elections, which may or may not allow a choice of policies but only of candidates whose decisions are sometimes a surprise to the electorate? Many of these issues demand public debate and consultation and should not be short-circuited and decided over the heads of the people.
22. Undoubtedly, there is room for improvement in each and every country. No country has a perfect report card. While some countries have strong points in specific areas, they may have serious lacunae in other areas. For instance, some countries have made enormous progress on civil and political rights, but lag in the implementation of economic, social and cultural rights. In some States and territories there are minorities, indigenous populations, people under occupation, unrepresented people and persons living in extreme poverty,18 who lack the possibility to effectively participate in decision–making19. Effective measures, including a judicial system of enforceable rights, should be adopted to empower women, minorities, indigenous populations, unrepresented peoples, persons with disabilities, etc., so that they can meaningfully participate in the political process and in the decisions affecting them, their right to self-determination, their traditional environment, their culture and beliefs.
Convention for Cyprus , Berlin, 2009. A de Zayas, “The Annan Plan”, The Cyprus Yearbook of International Relations, 2006, pp. 163–178.
17 See A/HRC/22/52. 18 See http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=13369&LangID=E. 19 A/HRC/13/25 Recommendations of the second session of the Forum on Minority Issues on minorities
and effective political participation. Reports of the Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights, Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous peoples, Working Group on the issue of discrimination against women in law and in practice.
23. Each country has the responsibility to make improvements to its economic, judicial, political and social systems. Civil society should be given every opportunity to contribute to this process. If every country takes a step forward, all populations will benefit and international solidarity will be served.
24. Many observers have exposed the democracy deficits of the international and domestic order; identified threats to international peace; warned against the military- industrial complex; and denounced the retrogression in social justice and the crisis of democracy, which some see in the absence of public participation, and the imposition of a kind of lobby-democracy, post-democracy or pseudo-democracy, democratic only in name, because real decisions are taken by corporations and financial institutions that are not elected and not accountable to the people. Among them: Samir Amin,20 Francis Boyle,21 Noam Chomsky,22 Ramsey Clark,23 Marjorie Cohn,24 Giovanni Cornia,25 David Cromwell,26 Colin Crouch,27 Barbara Ehrenreich,28 Diane Elson,29 Glenn Greenwald,30 Stephany Griffith-Jones,31 Chris Harman,32 David Harvey,33 Edward Herman,34 Richard Jolly,35 Naomi Klein,36 Robert McChesney,37 Justin Lewis,38 Jeanne Mirer,39 Ralph Nader,40 Isabel Ortiz,41 Karen Parker,42 Ruth Pearson,43 John Pilger,44 Arundhati Roy,45 Frances Stewart,46 Alejandro Teitelbaum,47 Tzvetan Todorov,48 Roland Weyl,49 Luis Roberto
20 Maldevelopment - Anatomy of a Global Failure, 2nd edition, Oxford, 2011. 21 World Politics and International Law, 2005. 22 Hopes and Prospects, London 2010. 23 From Civil Rights to Human Rights, http://ddce.utexas.edu/news/2012/11/07/nov-12-from-civil-
rights-to-human-rights-talk-by-ramsey-clark/ 24 See http://www.marjoriecohn.com/. 25 See http://www.wider.unu.edu/aboutus/people/external-project-directors/en_GB/cornia-external/. 26 Why are we the Good Guys? Reclaiming Your Mind from the Delusions of Paranoia. Winchester
2012. 27 Post-Democracy, Cambridge 2004 28 Nickel and Dimed: On (not) Getting by in America, 2001,
http://www.barbaraehrenreich.com/nickelanddimed.htm. 29 “Emerging Issues with a Focus on Economic Decision-Making” in United Nations Economic
Commission for Europe (ed.) Gender Gaps and Economic Policy, UNECE, Geneva, 2007. 30 With Liberty and Justice for some: How the Law is Used to Destroy Equality and Protect the Poweful,
New York, 2012. 31 Stephanie Griffith-Jones et al. (eds.), Time for a Visible Hand: Lessons from the 2008 World
Financial Crisis, Oxford, 2010. 32 Economics of the Madhouse: Capitalism and the Market Today, London, 1995. 33 A Brief History of Neoliberalism, Oxford, 2005. 34 The Myth of the Liberal Media: An Edward Herman Reader, 1999. 35 Richard Jolly et al., Be Outraged: There are alternatives, 2012. 36 The Shock Doctrine: The Rise of Disaster Capitalism, 2007. 37 Rich Media, Poor Democracy: Communication Politics in Dubious Times, New York, 2000. 38 Constructing Public Opinion: How Political Elites Do What They Like and Why We Seem to Go
Along With It, New York, 2001. 39 See http://www.iadllaw.org/en/node/390. 40 The Good Fight: Declare your Independence and Close the Democracy Gap, 2004. 41 See http://www.isabelortiz.info/. 42 Association of Humanitarian Lawyers http://www.humanlaw.org/. 43 See http://www.polis.leeds.ac.uk/about/staff/pearson/. 44 The New Rulers of the World, London 2002. 45 Listening to Grasshoppers: Field Notes on Democracy, New Delhi, 2009. 46 Horizontal Inequalities and Conflict: Understanding Group Conflict in Multiethnic Societies,
Basingstoke, United Kingdom, 2008. 47 See http://www.rebelion.org/mostrar.php?tipo=5&id=Alejandro%20Teitelbaum&inicio=0. 48 Les ennemis intimes de la démocratie, Paris 2012. 49 Nous peuples des Nations Unies: Sortir le droit international du placard, CETIM, Geneva, 2008.
Zamora,50 Jean Ziegler51 and Howard Zinn.52 The diagnosis is clear, but changing the status quo has proven difficult, because often those who are elected do not govern, and those who do govern are not elected.
IV. Obstacles
25. Numerous answers to the questionnaires, presentations at the consultations of 16 May and 6 June 2013, as well as communications received by the Independent Expert reveal dysfunctions in the democratic and equitable participation of stakeholders both at the international and the national levels.
26. Obstacles to genuine participation in decision–making in the international arena are many. A democratic and equitable international order entails a commitment to dialogue without preconditions in which all States and peoples have an opportunity to participate in global decision-making. War constitutes a breakdown of the friendly relations among States stipulated in General Assembly Resolution 2625, and a violation of Articles 2(3) and 2(4) of the United Nations Charter. The war industries in many countries and the enormous trade in weapons of all kinds generate corruption and fuel conflict throughout the world, since there is profit to be made. The existence of an immensely powerful military-industrial complex constitutes a danger to democracy, both internationally and domestically, because it follows its own logic and operates independently of popular participation. United States President Dwight Eisenhower signaled this danger on 17 January 1961.53 The huge proportion of budgets devoted to the activities of the armaments and other war industries leaves little space for the promotion of human rights. Moreover, in a time of weapons of mass destruction, there is no alternative to peaceful coexistence. Unilateralism is by its very nature incompatible with an international democratic order. In spite of the will of the international community and in violation of nearly unanimous General Assembly resolutions, some States continue to rely on unilateralism with total impunity.
27. The reality of economic, political and military imbalance leads to pressures on the weak that have little choice but to bend to various forms of coercion, threats, sanctions or carrot-and-stick practices. This asymmetry has led to the organization of the Non-Aligned movement, and numerous regional organizations (ALBA, CELAC, MERCOSUR, OIC), whose members do not always apply democratic rules, that attempt to balance out the overwhelming economic and political power of a few nations.
28. During the expert consultation convened by the Independent Expert in Geneva on 16 May 2013, participants expressed the hope for reform in the way decisions on global issues are taken, including decisions on war and peace, trade imbalances, commodity prices, financial markets, the environment and international peacekeeping. In the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, voting systems are not equitable insofar as the majority of the votes are given to developed country governments, which results in favouring the financial interests of elites at the expense of the disadvantaged. The reform of
50 See http://www.nlgazcentral.org/luis-roberto-zamora-bolanos-speaks-on-peace/, and
http://www.peaceasahumanright.org/Peace/HOME.html. 51 Destruction massive : Géopolitique de la faim, Paris, 2011. 52 The Historic Unfulfilled Promise, New York 2012. 53 President Dwight D. Eisenhower, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8y06NSBBRtY. Public Papers
of the Presidents of the United States, Dwight D. Eisenhower, pp. 1035-40.
these institutions54, the Security Council55, and the World Trade Organization is necessary. Maybe alternative institutions should be devised.56
29. In the domestic arena, there are as many obstacles. Communications received from civil society organizations claim that, for a variety of reasons, which vary from country to country, some people cannot participate in decision-making. As highlighted by the Working Group on the issue of discrimination against women in law and in practice, structural and social discrimination against women prevent them from taking part in political and public life in all almost all countries in the world.57 It is unacceptable that a number of women who have taken part in peaceful protests in some parts of the world have met with violence, including sexual violence. States must demonstrate determination in putting an end to structural violence, and implementing positive measures to ensure the participation of more than half of the Earth’s population in public and political life.
30. Indigenous groups58 maintain that they have been denied effective representation and that their participation is essentially pro forma, since, regardless of their views, governments pursue their own agendas and only perfunctorily listen to them. In particular, some indigenous claim material breaches of treaties59 made by their ancestors with the European powers, others claim deception when the treaties were made. They maintain their right to self-determination, autonomy and identity, including sovereignty over their natural resources, which have been taken from them without their consent and without appropriate compensation, in contravention of common article 1 of the ICCPR and ICESCR. A fundamental issue to many indigenous is that of their status as peoples, since they do not want to have the citizenship of the country which colonized them; in some cases, they challenge self-determination referenda in which they claim they had little or no possibility to manifest their will.60 They maintain that the right of self-determination cannot be exercised against the will of the population concerned, and that self-determination referenda should only allow the indigenous to vote and not the colonizers.
31. Many other groups at risk – including human rights defenders, students, minorities and people living in poverty – suffer from a lack of genuine participation in society and in decision-making. It is crucial that States take appropriate measures to ensure that obstacles
54 Yilmaz Akyüz, Reforming the IMF : Back to the Drawing Board, Third World Network, Penang,
Malaysia, 2006. 55 International Law Association, Study Group on United Nations Reform,
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1971008; Hague Academy Lectures of Vera Gowlland, “The Relationship between the Security Council and the International Criminal Court” http://untreaty.un.org/cod/avl/ls/Gowlland-Debbas_PS.html; “The Relationship between Collective Security and State Responsibility” http://untreaty.un.org/cod/avl/ls/Gowlland-Debbas_S.html; Alejandro Teitelbaum, “Naciones Unidas: Reformarla o Reconstruirla?” published in Derechos de los pueblos y gobernanza mundial, Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educación (HUHEZI) de la Universidad de Mondragón), Iruñea, 2007, pp. 77–118; Erskine Childers and Brian Urquhart, Renewing the United Nations System, Uppsala 1994; Joseph Schwartzberg, Revitalizing the United Nations, New York 2004.
56 Samir Amin, Global History - a View from the South, Oxford, 2010; Samir Amin, Ending the Crisis of Capitalism or Ending Capitalism? Oxford, 2011.
57 A/HRC/23/50. 58 See reports of the Special Rapporteur on Indigenous Issues. See also the statement of Special
Rapporteur on Indigenous Issues on the occasion of the Twelfth Session of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, 22 May 2013.
59 See http://www.unhchr.ch/Huridocda/Huridoca.nsf/0/696c51cf6f20b8bc802567c4003793ec. 60 See, for instance, “shadow reports” submitted to the Human Rights Committee and to the Committee
on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination by indigenous groups, and the recommendations in the relevant concluding observations http://www1.umn.edu/humanrts/usdocs/hruscomments2.html.
do not “exacerbate their exclusion and often perpetuate the privilege of elites who are able
to influence policy directly”.61
32. The concerns of mass protesters demanding democratic reforms as well as of the Indignados and Occupy movements deserve greater democratic attention and corrective action. Democratic participation cannot mean only elections; it implies direct influence in the democratic process, however that is achieved. Dictatorial regimes that conduct no elections, semi-democratic regimes with rigged elections and dysfunctional democracies with pro forma elections hinder the international democratic order. Electoral systems should be gradually improved and electoral monitoring worldwide should be welcomed by Governments62. But genuine participation starts at the grassroots and must include a reliable system of selecting candidates who are truly representative of the voters. When the candidates are selected by party machines and the only persons who are ever selected are the elites, then the system is dysfunctional, producing candidates who are not committed to their constituents but to party discipline and to those who finance the party.
33. By definition, democracy is oriented toward the public interest, not toward shareholder profit or the market. Aspects of unregulated capitalism and privatization are simply incompatible with the idea of democracy – because they are demonstrably not what the demos wills or even needs, but what a handful of investors want in order to maximize profits with the excuse that the “trickle down” effect will ultimately help the poor. But do the people agree to the trickle down philosophy, which mostly does not work? How can the financial institutions be held to account when unregulated markets fail and general unemployment ensues? Yet, Governments have “rescued” the banking industry, bailed out at the expense of the “trickle down” poor, who are defenceless against the generalized abuse of power.
34. Privatization of public functions constitutes an attack on democracy, because the public interest can only be protected by a public entity, whether a municipal administration or parliament, and not by a board of directors of a corporation oriented toward profit and expanding markets.
35. My initial report to the Council identified a number of obstacles, including those of a semantic nature. Undoubtedly, language itself interferes with the proper analysis of social and economic issues, when the terminology used is vague or misleading, or when different countries and media use the words “democracy”, “freedom”, “rule of law”, “international
community”, “consensus”, “globalization”, “peace”, “terrorism”, etc. with different
meanings. There are also generic obstacles such as hubris, self-righteousness, moral cynicism, moral nihilism, and those artificial, self-imposed thinking barriers such as the idea that only positivistic law is law, only positivistic rights are rights. Another obstacle is the lack of solidarity among civil society representatives, who should demonstrate a commitment to the equality in human dignity of all victims and reject media focus on “politically correct” victims and systematic blackout of others. Competition among victims is a sad phenomenon manifesting double standards. Civil society has not only rights but also duties, which it must exercise ethically and responsibly. States, National Human Rights Institutions, intergovernmental organizations and non-governmental organizations must demonstrate the same commitment to the brotherhood of humankind and the universality of human rights – not just to rights à la mode.
36. One premise of this report is that democracy requires a free press that informs the public, enabling it to exercise conscientious judgment, free of government censorship and
61 A/HRC/23/36, para. 14. 62 Global Commission on Elections, Democracy and Security, Deepening Democracy: A Strategy for
Improving the Integrity of Elections Worldwide.
corporate–media manipulation. There is a legitimate democratic expectation that the media will have not only diversity of ideas but also diversity of ownership. Domestically, each government should take a close look at its telecommunications legislation, at the concentration of ownership in the media, and utilize anti-trust legislation to break up conglomerates that hinder open debate and diversity. What passes for journalism in many countries actually leaves the population indoctrinated, not informed. Too often journalism reflects a structural bias for the elites, the government and corporate interests.
37. Whereas freedoms of opinion, the media, peaceful assembly and association are absolutely essential to every democracy, these rights are lacking in some countries and hollowed out elsewhere. State censorship constitutes an obvious violation of article 19 of ICCPR, but censorship is also practiced by the private sector, engendering the same undemocratic result: a manipulated public. State interference with the media and Internet is a worldwide problem. On 17 July 2011, the Human Rights Committee adopted General Comment 34, in which it addressed the threats to freedom of opinion and expression, including defamation laws, blasphemy laws, and memory laws, which interfere with the free flow of ideas and necessary debate thereon:
(a) “Defamation laws must be crafted with care to ensure that they …do not serve, in practice, to stifle freedom of expression. All such laws, in particular penal defamation laws, should include such defences as the defence of truth …” (paragraph 47);
(b) “Prohibitions of displays of lack of respect for a religion or other belief system, including blasphemy laws, are incompatible with the Covenant…” (paragraph 48).
(c) “Laws that penalize the expression of opinions about historical facts are incompatible with the obligations that the Covenant imposes on States parties in relation to the respect for freedom of opinion and expression. The Covenant does not permit general prohibition of expressions of an erroneous opinion or an incorrect interpretation of past events…” (paragraph 49).
38. Such laws have totalitarian implications and consequences, violate human dignity, the right to open debate, academic freedom, and ultimately lead to intellectual stagnation and self-censorship63, which have adverse consequences on the ability of people to participate in decision–making.
39. Access to truthful and reliable information from diverse sources is indispensable to a responsible citizenry and to the exercise of the vote. Freedoms of expression and peaceful assembly are not only rights but also civic duties that should be exercised freely and openly in every democracy. Freedom of expression is not just the right to echo politically correct ideas, but the right to express one’s personal convictions, which necessarily includes the right to be wrong. In some countries, the right to demonstrate is significantly curtailed and plagued by red tape; in others, demonstrators are arrested or even killed.
40. Increasingly, it seems that some media carry primarily the views of the elites. Even on controversial issues, there is lack of balance and little competitive opportunity for views other than those of the advertisers. Relentless advertising and hyper-commercialization of the media also have the effect of misleading the public, distracting their attention from real issues and making the audience addicted to sensationalist, trivial or trash news. A corporate media that only seeks profit and neglects public interest fails the test of a democratic media.
63 Human Rights Committee General Comment No. 25, para 4, Human Rights Committee General
comment 34, para. 49. Alfred de Zayas and Aurea Roldan Martín, “Freedom of Opinion and Freedom of Expression: Some Reflections on General Comment No. 34 of the UN Human Rights Committee” in Netherlands International Law Review, 2012, pp. 425–454.
Quite generally, it must be recognized that the profit system all too frequently trumps civil society.
41. A democratic and equitable international order cannot be achieved as long as civil society lacks mechanisms to ensure change, e.g. by democratically enforcing a shift in priorities away from military expenditures and toward general disarmament, away from surveillance of citizens and toward the prosecution of corruption and criminality, away from “austerity measures” and toward social justice.
V. Good practices
42. The Independent Expert welcomes a number of legislative measures adopted by numerous States aimed at enhancing participation, and encourages States to put these into practice.
43. Among good practices, the Independent Expert hails the ratification by States of the Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and its entry into force on 5 May 2013, as well as the ratification of the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance,64 which entered into force on 15 February 2012. He encourages further ratifications. He recalls the entry into force on 3 May 2008 of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, pursuant to which States parties undertake to “Ensure that persons with disabilities can effectively and fully participate in
political and public life on an equal basis with others, directly or through freely chosen representatives…”65 The Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities is already establishing important jurisprudence through its Concluding Observations and examination of individual cases through its Optional Protocol procedure.66
44. Several initiatives endeavour to advance a democratic and equitable international order by providing judicial and constitutional review as well as enforcement mechanisms, in particular the proposal of the Tunisian Government to establish an International Constitutional Court.67 Proposals for the establishment of a World Court of Human Rights have been endorsed by the Swiss Initiative to Commemorate the 60th anniversary of the Universal of Human Rights,68 the International Commission of Jurists and the International Bill of Rights Association.69 The Initiative of the United Nations University for Peace70 and the Stakeholder Forum for a Sustainable Future aimed at the creation of an International Court for the Environment71 were discussed at Rio+20.
64 See http://www.ipu.org/idd-E/afr_charter.pdf. 65 Art. 29, http://www.un.org/disabilities/convention/conventionfull.shtml. 66 See http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/CRPD/Pages/CRPDIndex.aspx. 67 Comité ad hoc pour la Création d’une Cour Constitutionnelle Internationale, Project de Création
d’une Cour Constitutionelle Internationale, Tunis 2013. 68 See http://www.udhr60.ch/report/hrCourt-Nowak0609.pdf; see also Julia Kozma and Manfred
Nowak, “A World Court of Human Rights, Consolidated Draft Statute and Commentary”, May 2010, http://www.eui.eu/Documents/DepartmentsCentres/Law/Professors/Scheinin/ConsolidatedWorldCour tStatute.pdf.
69 A/HRC/19/NGO/124, http://www.internationalbillofrights.org/. 70 Joost Pauwelyn, “A World Environment Court”, International Environmental Governance (Gaps and
Weaknesses/Proposals for Reform) Working Paper, Tokyo, UNU-IAS, 2002. Cf. Ellen Hey Reflections on an Int'l Environmental Court, 2000; Ole Pedersen, An International Environmental Court, Oxford 2012
71 See http://www.uncsd2012.org/rio20/index.php?page=view&type=400&nr=222&menu=45 and http://effectius.com/yahoo_site_admin/assets/docs/InternationalCourtForTheEnvironment_StephenHo ckmanQC_Effectius_Newsletter14.21260322.pdf.
45. Progress toward the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals and the ongoing efforts to make the post-2015 sustainable development agenda meaningful are commendable. The summit of the Peoples of Latin American and the Caribbean and Europe in January 2013 on the theme “For social justice, international solidarity and sovereignty of
peoples” rejected the commercialization of nature and life, and led to the adoption of the
Declaración de Santiago de Chile.
46. He welcomes the Quito Communiqué of the Inter-Parliamentary Union, adopted on 27 March 2013 by the 128th IPU Assembly, stipulating in part, “well-being policies require all citizens, and particularly vulnerable groups such as women, youth, indigenous peoples and the poor, to participate in decision-making. Being able to participate in the decisions that affect our lives and the social and environmental context around us is in itself a key dimension of well-being. Inversely, well-being is also necessary for citizens to participate effectively in the management of public affairs. Participation and its attendants of transparency and accountability are in turn key pillars of democracy and of the way democracy applies to the functioning of government at all levels - global, national and local - and in response to citizens’ needs.”72 All parliaments worldwide should act in accordance with this declaration.
47. Public initiatives and referenda that lead to democratic change should be applauded, e.g. the Swiss referendum on executive pay of 3 March 2013, aimed at a more equitable domestic order. This is direct democracy in action.73
48. He welcomes the fact that civil society is becoming increasingly vocal in advancing initiatives. An example of a civil society initiative that has grown universal, leading to the adoption of the Declaración de Santiago de Compostela74 of 10 December 2010, Oswiecim Declaration
75 of 16 May 2013 and workshops throughout the world,76 is the Declaration on the Right to Peace. Worldwide participation in this movement has placed the imperative of peace-making on the agenda of the Human Rights Council77 and its Advisory Committee,78 and will no doubt lead to an increased awareness of the core value of peace as a condition for a just and sustainable world order.
49. For many decades, the idea of a World Parliamentary Assembly79 or a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly has been under discussion. The idea is to address democracy deficits by giving expression to global public opinion and including citizens in global decision-making through elected officials. Such an Assembly could be set up by a vote of the United Nations General Assembly under Article 22 of the United Nations Charter, or it could be created on the basis of a new international treaty between governments, followed by an agreement linking it to the United Nations. Neither
72 See http://www.ipu.org/conf-e/128/quito-comm.htm. 73 See http://www.loc.gov/lawweb/servlet/lloc_news?disp3_l205403530_text. 74 See http://www.aedidh.org/?q=node/1292. 75 See http://www.aedidh.org/?q=node/2191. 76 A/HRC/14/38. See http://www2.ohchr.org/english/issues/rule_of_law/workshop/. 77 See
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/HRC/RightPeace/Pages/WGDraftUNDeclarationontheRightto Peace.aspx; Report of the Open-Ended Inter-Governmental Working Group on the Draft United Nations Declaration of the Right to Peace, A/HRC/WG.13/1/2.
78 See http://www.ohchr.org/EN/HRBodies/HRC/AdvisoryCommittee/Pages/RightToPeace.aspx; and http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/advisorycommittee/docs/session6/A.HRC.AC.6.CRP .3_en.pdf.
79 Joseph Schwartzberg, Creating a World Parliamentary Assembly, Committee for a Democratic United Nations, Berlin, 2012. Richard Falk and Andrew Strauss, “Toward Global Parliament”, Foreign Affairs 2001, http://ssrn.com/abstract=1130417; A Global Parliament, 2011.
mechanism requires Charter reform. Former United Nations Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali has been an advocate of such an assembly. In a comment published at OpenDemocracy, Boutros-Ghali made the case for the establishment of a Parliamentary Assembly at the United Nations. In order to solve global crises more effectively, a “direct democratic connection between the world’s citizens and the world’s governance needs to be created”. He welcomed the expansion of democracy at the national level throughout the world, observing that emerging States are increasingly included in global intergovernmental deliberations. He noted, “a third dimension of democratization is almost completely neglected: Developing global democracy beyond States”.80 Johan Galtung, founder of the Peace Research Institute in Oslo, wrote “For anyone who believes in democracy — rule by the consent of the ruled – a world democracy is part of it. A democratic United Nations with an evolving world parliamentary assembly is the way to go.”81 Indeed, global decisions would have greater legitimacy through citizen input and involvement, if the General Assembly represented people as well as States.
50. Other civil society initiatives that deserve support are: P.E.N. International’s 2012 Declaration on Digital Freedom82; the 2008 Appel de Blois,83 issued by Liberté Pour l’Histoire; the World Forum of Alternative’s Universal Declaration for the Common Good of Humanity84 of 15 March 201385; and the International Association of Democratic Lawyer’s Paris Declaration of 25 May 2013.86
VI. Conclusions and recommendations
51. Resolution 18/6 created a broad mandate aimed at the convergence of civil, cultural, economic, political and social rights. Each country is urged to take one step
forward and review obstacles to democratic processes and equity and implement
targeted measures that will enhance participation by all persons under its jurisdiction.
This requires a change of paradigm and mindset, goodwill and self-criticism.
Complacency is invariably an obstacle to progress.
80 See http://en.unpacampaign.org/news/379.php; Joseph Schwartzberg writes in Creating a World
Parliamentary Assembly, “Our increasingly interdependent world can no longer function without an effective UN system. But for a variety of reasons –mainly related to the obsolescent mindsets and dubious diplomatic practices of a world still guided mainly be Realpolitik—a large proportion of the human family has lost faith in the UN… A democratically constituted WPA will go far toward correcting these deficiencies and would do much to promote more legitimate, transparent, representative, accountable and responsive governance at the national, as well as at the international level. Providing the diverse strands of humankind, in whose interests the UN was founded, with a meaningful voice in making the decisions that will shape their destiny will do more to legitimize the global organization than any other reform I can think of” (p. 96). Saul Mendlovitz and Barbara Walker (eds.) A Reader on Second Assembly and Parliamentary Proposals, Centre for UN Reform Education, Wayne, New Jersey, United States, 2003. See also Dieter Heinrich, The Case for a United Nations Parliamentary Assembly, World Federalist Movement, Amsterdam 1992; and Andreas Bummel, The Composition of a Parliamentary Assembly at the United Nations, Berlin 2010.
81 Quoted in Schwartzberg, p. 6. 82 Adopted at the 78th PEN Annual Congress in the Republic of Korea 2012, http://www.pen-
international.org/pen-declaration-on-digital-freedom/. 83 See annexes, http://www.lph-
asso.fr/index.php?Itemid=14&id=47&lang=fr&option=com_content&view=article. 84 See http://www.especieenpeligro.cult.cu/index.php/debates-y-alternativas/articulos/1521-universal-
declaration-for-the. 85 See http://www.forumdesalternatives.org/en/universal-declaration-for-the-common-good-of-
humanity-project. 86 See http://www.iadllaw.org/.
52. It would be good to report that States and civil society are advancing in the promotion of a culture of democratic thinking, democratic feeling and democratic
acting. Unfortunately, most areas of human activity seem to be locked into their own
logic and dynamic, where democracy is conjured to legitimize the status quo, while
doing little to give life to the concepts of participation and consultation or to core
values of the United Nations, including transparency and accountability. Yet, the
spirit of democracy resides in the minds of women and men, and step by step each
community, State, and region can claim and reclaim it. This culture of democracy
must be home-grown and cannot be exported or imposed top-down. Crucial remains
the conviction that the government should serve the people and that its powers must
be circumscribed by a Constitution and the rule of law. Juvenal’s question quis
custodiet ipsos custodes (who guards the guardians?) remains a central concern of
democracy, since the people must always watch over the constitutional behaviour of
the leaders and impeach them if they act in contravention of their duties.
Constitutional courts must fulfil this need and civil society should show solidarity with
human rights defenders and whistleblowers who, far from being unpatriotic, perform
a democratic service to their countries and the world.
53. The “vital interests” of States must be made to conform to the Purposes and Principles of the United Nations, while respecting the sovereignty of States and the
self-determination of peoples. The problem remains that, although there is talk on
reforms, vested interests prevent their implementation; although there are Indignados
and occupy movements, there is no effective mechanism to translate public protest
into concrete reform. Soon everything returns to business as usual and the public
remains irrelevant. Since access to information, freedom of expression and the media
are indispensable to carry out reforms, it is crucial to ensure the democratization of
the media, so that it exercises its watchdog function. An unfree media controlled by
the State or held hostage by corporate interests undermines democracy. And whereas
media hype can negatively impact decision-making, responsible media can advance a
human rights agenda through information and education. The gap between
institutionalized power and the people must be bridged. It bears repeating:
Democracy means participation. “Formal democracy” is no democracy.
A. Recommendations to States
54. The Independent Expert recalls the language of article 28 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which stipulates “Everyone is entitled to a social and
international order in which the rights and freedoms set forth in this Declaration can
be fully realized.”
55. With regard to participation at the international level:
(a) States should cooperate to reform the Security Council, so as to expand
its membership and give all States, large and small, rich and poor, greater democratic
participation in global decision–making. In the dynamic context of an ever-changing
world, regular reforms are a condition of stability.
(b) To the extent that the Security Council is blocked by the use or
threatened use of the veto power by one of the P5 States, State members and observers
at the General Assembly should revitalize the General Assembly, so that it henceforth
exercises a greater role in international decision-making. For instance, the General
Assembly should urge States to impose economic sanctions on States that refuse to
abide by Security Council, General Assembly, and Human Rights Council resolutions.
The General Assembly should also refer legal questions to the International Court of
Justice for advisory opinions on matters relating to democracy, participation,
equitable distribution of the world’s resources, the common heritage of humankind
and self-determination of peoples.
(c) States should ensure more democratic and equitable participation of all
States in the financial institutions such as the World Bank, the International
Monetary Fund and the World Trade Organization (WTO),87 for instance by placing
them under the authority of the United Nations and subordinating them to the
Purposes and Principles of the United Nations Charter, pursuant to Articles 57 and 63
of the Charter. Moreover, membership in WTO could be conditioned upon
acceptance of an international bill or rights, much as, for instance, membership in the
Council of Europe is conditioned on acceptance of the European Convention on
Human Rights.
(d) States should apply international law uniformly and abandon over-
reliance on “positivism” and efforts to circumvent obligations stipulated in human
rights treaties. There are no “legal black holes” in human rights, since all human
beings are entitled to all rights deriving from human dignity.
(e) States should ratify the core United Nations human rights treaties and
their protocols, the relevant complaints mechanisms, the Statute of the International
Criminal Court, and relevant International Labour Organization Conventions,
including convention 169. States should allow full participation of individuals, civil
society and national human rights institutions in the preparation of reports to the
United Nations treaty bodies and to the Council’s Universal Periodic Review (UPR).
(f) States should practice what they preach and test their actions, in good
faith, for consistency with the Purposes and Principles of the United Nations, knowing
that the end does not justify the means, and that international law is by definition
universal and must not be applied à la carte.
(g) Most importantly, States should rigorously observe the obligations
contained in Article 2, paragraph 3, of the United Nations Charter, which enjoins all
States to settle disputes by peaceful means, and in Article 2, paragraph 4, which
prohibits the threat of or the use of force.88 States must negotiate in good faith and
refrain from bullying, drawing “red lines” or formulating “ultimatums”. States
should recognize a right and a duty to peace and to solidarity in their Constitutions
and statutes.
(h) States should abandon reliance on unilateral measures, particularly
when such measures hinder international cooperation and give rise to unnecessary
tensions in the international community; in particular, States should refrain from
direct and indirect interference in other countries.
(i) States should impose controls on financial and commodity markets,
prohibit “shadow banking” and regulate speculation. An international conference to
resolve the problem of financial domination should be convened.
87 Martin Khor, Implications of Some WTO Rules on the Realization of the MDGs, Penang, Malaysia
2005; M. Khor, The Impact of Trade Liberalism on Agriculture in Developing Countries, 2008; Yilmaz Akyüz, The WTO Negotiations on Industrial Tariffs.: What is at Stake for Developing Countries, 2005.
88 Antonio Cassese (ed.): Realizing Utopia-the Future of International Law, Oxford 2012, “A Plea for a Global Community Grounded in a Core of Human Rights”, and “For an enhanced Role of Jus Cogens.”
56. Concerning participation at the domestic level:
(a) States should strengthen the rule of law and implement the principle of
separation of powers. In particular, States should take all necessary legislative and
administrate measures to make civil society participation in decision-making more
effective, in particular by allowing more direct democracy through the instruments of
popular initiative, referenda, recall and impeachment. Moreover, not only the law but
also the actual practice must be assessed. Empowerment of the public requires
education programmes on human rights, including the right to peace.
(b) States should adopt the necessary legislative, administrative and judicial
measures to give effect to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and States
parties to the ICCPR should implement articles 2, 19, 21, 22 and 25 ICCPR, consistent
with the principle expressed in the Advisory Opinion of the Permanent Court of
International Justice, “according to which a State which has contracted valid
international obligations is bound to make in its legislation such modifications as may
be necessary to ensure the fulfilment of the obligations undertaken”.89
(c) States are invited to go beyond the provisions of article 25 ICCPR to
ensure pluralism in elections and enhanced consultation with stakeholders. In
particular, States should implement the participation and consultation
recommendations in the relevant General Comments of the United Nations treaty
bodies.
(d) Multiparty electoral systems and the establishment of political parties
representing a wide diversity of points of view should be facilitated. States should
review their legislation on the establishment and prohibition of political parties. One-
party systems suffer from an obvious democratic deficit, and if only one political party
is allowed to operate, provision should be made to facilitate and encourage public
participation in the formulation of policies and the possibility or articulating a
diversity of views within the party.
(e) States should ensure access to public information90 and repeal legislation
that is incompatible with articles 18 and 19 ICCPR; in particular, blasphemy and
memory laws and any laws that hinder open discussion of political and historical
events. States should refrain from misusing anti-terror legislation to intimidate and
suppress dissent and thus undermine participation in the democratic process.91 States
should ensure freedom of expression online and refrain from censorship except for
reasons of health and morals.
(f) States should never impose reprisals against human rights defenders and
repeal laws that hinder the right to peaceful assembly in public and private spheres,
impose unreasonable fines or imprisonment on demonstrators, or restrict the right to
association and collective bargaining.
(g) States should ensure accountability of all State organs, and revitalize
elected parliaments so that the executive power cannot circumvent the democratic
process through directives or executive agreements not subject to advice and consent.
89 Advisory opinion concerning the Exchange of Greek and Turkish Populations Case
http://www.worldcourts.com/pcij/eng/decisions/1925.02.21_greek_turkish.htm. 90 2009 Council of Europe Convention on Access to Documents; Draft Model Law for African Union
Member States on Access to Information; OAS model law on Access to Public Information. 91 How fusion centers spied on Occupy Wall Street http://ufppc.org/us-a-world-news-mainmenu-
35/11479/see also Sheldon Wolin, Democracy Incorporated: Managed Democracy and the Specter of Inverted Totalitarianism, 2008.
(h) States should bear in mind the significant risks related to the
privatization of essential public services. Privatized services must observe human
rights standards including on non-discrimination, accessibility, affordability, quality
and adequacy, bearing in mind that when non-State actors are involved in service
provision, there is a shift to an even stronger focus on the obligation of the State to
protect.
(i) States should ensure access to truthful and reliable information by the
population, encourage pluralism and the democratization of the media, online and
offline, if necessary through the use of anti-trust legislation to break down cartels and
media conglomerates, which undermine the diversity of opinion and debate
indispensable to the democratic process.
(j) States should build spaces and create conditions conducive to free debate
and the expression of diverse views on issues of public concern.
B. Recommendations to the Council
57. The Independent Expert makes the following recommendations:
(a) The Independent Expert welcomes the progress made by the Human
Rights Council in discussing the Draft Declaration on the Right to Peace elaborated
by the Advisory Committee, and encourages the Council to continue its deliberations
as a constructive step toward a democratic and equitable international order. The
declaration should be referred to the General Assembly for adoption.
(b) The Independent Expert notes that the self-determination item was a
permanent item on the agenda of the Commission on Human Rights. Bearing in mind
that self-determination is a pillar of the Charter and that it has not been achieved by
many indigenous peoples, minorities, unrepresented peoples, and peoples under
occupation, the Council should resume consideration of self-determination as part of
items 3 and 4 of its agenda.
(c) The Council should consider holding a workshop on self-determination
and genuine participation. A democratic deficit is ultimately a deficit in self-
determination.
(d) The Council should consider assigning to its Advisory Committee (i) an
update of the 1999 Treaty study conducted by the Sub-Commission92; (ii) the
elaboration of a strategy to revitalize the 2004 Cardoso report on United Nations-Civil
Society Relations (A/58/817), with a view to enhancing the role of civil society in the
work of the Council, and granting non-governmental organizations at least as much
time and opportunity to participate in its work as in the former Commission on
Human Rights; (iii) a study on how a World Parliamentary Assembly may advance
genuine participation; (iv) a study on strengthening the enforcement of its own
resolutions, UPR recommendations, as well as decisions and views of the treaty bodies,
including by ensuring Special Procedures mandate holders can provide advisory
services and technical assistance to States in the drafting of enabling legislation; and
(v) a study on the added value of establishing a World Court of Human Rights.
(e) The Council should recommend to the General Assembly the adoption of
a resolution streamlining the procedure for granting consultative status to non-
92 See E/CN.4/Sub.2/1999/20
http://www.unhchr.ch/Huridocda/Huridoca.nsf/0/696c51cf6f20b8bc802567c4003793ec.
governmental organizations so as to eliminate politicization and enhance civil society
access to the Council.
(f) The Council should consider recommending to the General Assembly to
bring specific legal questions concerning self-determination, war, peace, democracy,
corporate social responsibility and debt cancellation to the International Court of
Justice for advisory opinions.
C. Recommendations to Civil Society and National Human Rights
Institutions
58. Article 29 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights stipulates, “Everyone has duties to the community in which alone the free and full development of his
personality is possible.” The Independent Expert is aware that in many countries
there is little space for civil society to operate and articulate legitimate demands.
Nevertheless, he encourages civil society to:
(a) Take on this challenge as a civic duty and reclaim its rights, demand
consultation and effective participation in decision-making, reliable opinion polling
and referenda as a right, in particular on matters of State-ordered surveillance, which
affects civil and political rights, and on matters of retrogression93 in social services,
including “austerity measures”, privatization of essential public responsibilities, etc.
Civil society should take advantage of new digital technologies and social media to
revitalize democracy, e.g. by demanding social services, regulation of the financial
markets, denouncing war mongering and human rights violations;
(b) Invoke United Nations procedures, including the new Optional Protocol
to ICESCR. They should call their representatives to account and engage domestic
and international tribunals, including regional instances of examination and
settlement, and United Nations treaty bodies;
(c) Engage in peaceful resistance against structural violence imposed on
them by governments and corporations. The right to freedom of peaceful assembly
and of association should be invoked in order to restore democratic participation94;
(d) Insist on accountability of government officials and expose violations of
human rights by their governments. In particular, civil society should investigate and
take action on the revelations by whistleblowers, when it becomes apparent that
democratically elected governments have acted or are acting ultra vires and in
contravention of international law, including United Nations human rights treaties,
and the 1949 Geneva Conventions and 1977 Additional Protocols. Civil society should
reject impunity for crimes committed by their political leaders and for white-collar
crimes of financiers and corporate magnates;
(e) Make greater use of direct democracy, if available, or demand that its
representatives elaborate, discuss and adopt appropriate legislation to facilitate public
initiative, referenda, recall and impeachment. Civil society should demand frequent
opinion polling at both the international and national levels. Crucial is the right to
93 Article 2(1) of the ICESCR establishes the principle of non-retrogression. The Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights also recognizes the “obligacion de progresividad” in article 26 of the American Convention on Human Rights
94 Stéphane Hessel, Indignez–Vous, 2011. Norman Finkelstein, Gandhi, 2012.
choose policies and not just the right to vote for a particular candidate, when the
possibility of influencing the nomination of candidates is more formal than real;
(f) Discuss the pros and cons of establishing, as a consultative body, a world
parliamentary assembly of directly elected representatives, which could operate
within or without the United Nations;
(g) Vindicate its right to access to truthful and reliable information and
insist that their governments implement articles 19 and 25 ICCPR and practice
transparency. Civil society should demand media reform, so as to ensure pluralism
and respect of the watchdog function of journalism. Disinformation and manipulation
should be exposed. In particular, grassroots participation and interaction should be
facilitated, including in the allocation of the airwaves, which belong to the people, not
to multinational corporations or media magnates. The linkage of news and advertising
must be revisited, since the public has a democratic right to truthful information and
a variety of interpretations. They should demand that news services be neutral, and
that news be separated from commentary. When broadcasting depends on the
advertisers, objectivity is compromised;
(h) Denounce media dissemination of propaganda for war in contravention
of article 20 ICCPR, or in apology of war crimes and crimes against humanity.
Moreover, civil society could call for the adoption of effective anti-trust legislation or
for the enforcement of existing anti-trust laws so as to break up media conglomerates
and monopolistic practices that hinder pluralism. They should demand public
participation in the allocation and regulation of airwaves, which must be considered
as a public domain;
(i) Demand that corporations observe the guiding principles on business
and human rights, and that governments implement the “United Nations Protect,
Respect and Remedy Framework”.
59. National Human Rights Institutions working in accordance with the Paris Principles should promote and facilitate public participation in public affairs.
95 They
should expose pseudo-democratic processes and insist on the uniform application of
international law. They should advise governments on the human rights implications
of proposed legislation and act as watchdogs of constitutionality.
60. The Independent Expert acknowledges the fact that much progress has been achieved since the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948.
Norms and mechanisms are in place. Admittedly, an implementation gap persists. But
a more democratic and equitable international order is no utopia. It can and will be
achieved when individuals, civil society, States and the United Nations work together
to make this aspiration a reality for our time. It is our responsibility to ensure that the
Purposes and Principles of the United Nations Charter go beyond mere promises and
produce fruit for generations to come.
95 Danish Institute for Human Rights, NHRIs and Public Participation, Issue Paper, April 2013.
Annex
[English only]
Excerpts or full text of relevant documents
I. Universal Declaration on Democracy, Declaration adopted without a
vote by the Inter-Parliamentary Council at its 161st session, Cairo,
16 September 1997 (excerpts)1
1. Democracy is a universally recognised ideal as well as a goal, which is based on common values shared by peoples throughout the world community irrespective of cultural, political, social and economic differences. It is thus a basic right of citizenship to be exercised under conditions of freedom, equality, transparency and responsibility, with due respect for the plurality of views, and in the interest of the polity.
2. Democracy is both an ideal to be pursued and a mode of government to be applied according to modalities which reflect the diversity of experiences and cultural particularities without derogating from internationally recognised principles, norms and standards. It is thus a constantly perfected and always perfectible state or condition whose progress will depend upon a variety of political, social, economic, and cultural factors.
3. As an ideal, democracy aims essentially to preserve and promote the dignity and fundamental rights of the individual, to achieve social justice, foster the economic and social development of the community, strengthen the cohesion of society and enhance national tranquillity, as well as to create a climate that is favourable for international peace. As a form of government, democracy is the best way of achieving these objectives; it is also the only political system that has the capacity for self-correction.
4. The achievement of democracy presupposes a genuine partnership between men and women in the conduct of the affairs of society in which they work in equality and complementarity, drawing mutual enrichment from their differences.
5. A state of democracy ensures that the processes by which power is acceded to, wielded and alternates allow for free political competition and are the product of open, free and non-discriminatory participation by the people, exercised in accordance with the rule of law, in both letter and spirit.
6. Democracy is inseparable from the rights set forth in the international instruments recalled in the preamble. These rights must therefore be applied effectively and their proper exercise must be matched with individual and collective responsibilities.
16. Individual participation in democratic processes and public life at all levels must be regulated fairly and impartially and must avoid any discrimination, as well as the risk of intimidation by State and non-State actors.
17. Judicial institutions and independent, impartial and effective oversight mechanisms are the guarantors for the rule of law on which democracy is founded. In order for these institutions and mechanisms fully to ensure respect for the rules, improve the fairness of the processes and redress injustices, there must be access by all to administrative and judicial remedies on the basis of equality as well as respect for administrative and judicial decisions
1 http://www.ipu.org/cnl-e/161-dem.htm#Reserve
both by the organs of the State and representatives of public authority and by each member of society.
22. The institutions and processes of democracy must accommodate the participation of all people in homogeneous as well as heterogeneous societies in order to safeguard diversity, pluralism and the right to be different in a climate of tolerance.
23. Democratic institutions and processes must also foster decentralised local and regional government and administration, which is a right and a necessity, and which makes it possible to broaden the base of public participation.
24. Democracy must also be recognised as an international principle, applicable to international organisations and to States in their international relations. The principle of international democracy does not only mean equal or fair representation of States; it also extends to the economic rights and duties of States.
25. The principles of democracy must be applied to the international management of issues of global interest and the common heritage of humankind, in particular the human environment.
26. To preserve international democracy, States must ensure that their conduct conforms to international law, refrain from the use or threat of force and from any conduct that endangers or violates the sovereignty and political or territorial integrity of other States, and take steps to resolve their differences by peaceful means.
27. A democracy should support democratic principles in international relations. In that respect, democracies must refrain from undemocratic conduct, express solidarity with democratic governments and non-State actors like non-governmental organisations which work for democracy and human rights, and extend solidarity to those who are victims of human rights violations at the hands of undemocratic régimes. In order to strengthen international criminal justice, democracies must reject impunity for international crimes and serious violations of fundamental human rights and support the establishment of a permanent international criminal court.
II. Inter-Parliamentary Union Quito Communique, Adopted by the 128th
IPU Assembly, Quito, 27 March 2013 (excerpts)2
By definition, well-being policies require all citizens, and particularly vulnerable groups such as women, youth, indigenous peoples and the poor, to participate in decision-making. Being able to participate in the decisions that affect our lives and the social and environmental context around us is in itself a key dimension of well-being. Inversely, well- being is also necessary for citizens to participate effectively in the management of public affairs. Participation and its attendants of transparency and accountability are in turn key pillars of democracy and of the way democracy applies to the functioning of government at all levels - global, national and local - and in response to citizens’ needs.
Participation, transparency and accountability constitute the core of democratic governance, which is an end in itself and an enabler of sustainable development. There can be no true prosperity without respect for the universal values of democracy, the rule of law and human rights. Democratic governance should therefore be a stand-alone goal among the new Sustainable Development Goals, as well as a dimension of other goals that will be part of the future development framework. This is further supported by the results of a survey of hundreds of members carried out during the Assembly.
2 http://www.ipu.org/conf-e/128/quito-comm.htm
To help steer sustainable development on a new course, a rebalancing of the role of the market and that of government is called for. Effective ways to help reconcile market needs with social imperatives include the development of private-public partnerships, community- based enterprises and other forms of cooperative models. Government intervention to guarantee the rights of the very poor and to safeguard the natural resource base will also be needed. The interdependent challenges of sustainable development require a concerted approach that only governments can initiate and help implement.
To this end, it will be more important than ever for parliaments to assert their legitimate place in the decision-making process at the national and international levels. The institution of parliament is pivotal to the entire architecture of democratic governance and needs to be strengthened virtually everywhere in the world, with greater oversight capacities and legislative authority. More specifically, stronger parliaments will have to play a central role in the implementation of the future Sustainable Development Goals. This will include ensuring that development policies and plans are drawn up through participatory and inclusive processes, and with regular progress reports submitted to parliament for review.
This debate should continue in national parliaments as a way of engaging them in the global consultations foreseen in the Rio outcome document, aptly called The Future We Want.
III. Rio Declaration on Environment and Development, 12 August 1992
(excerpts)3
The United Nations Conference on Environment and Development,
Having met at Rio de Janeiro from 3 to 14 June 1992,
Reaffirming the Declaration of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment, adopted at Stockholm on 16 June 1972, and seeking to build upon it,
With the goal of establishing a new and equitable global partnership through the creation of new levels of cooperation among States, key sectors of societies and people,
Working towards international agreements which respect the interests of all and protect the integrity of the global environmental and developmental system,
Recognizing the integral and interdependent nature of the Earth, our home,
Proclaims that:
Principle 10
Environmental issues are best handled with participation of all concerned citizens, at the relevant level. At the national level, each individual shall have appropriate access to information concerning the environment that is held by public authorities, including information on hazardous materials and activities in their communities, and the opportunity to participate in decision-making processes. States shall facilitate and encourage public awareness and participation by making information widely available. Effective access to judicial and administrative proceedings, including redress and remedy, shall be provided.
Principle 20
Women have a vital role in environmental management and development. Their full participation is therefore essential to achieve sustainable development.
3 http://www.un.org/documents/ga/conf151/aconf15126-1annex1.htm
Principle 22
Indigenous people and their communities and other local communities have a vital role in environmental management and development because of their knowledge and traditional practices. States should recognize and duly support their identity, culture and interests and enable their effective participation in the achievement of sustainable development.
IV. ILO Declaration on Social Justice, 10 June 2008 (excerpts)4
Scope and principles
The Conference recognizes and declares that:
A. In the context of accelerating change, the commitments and efforts of Members and the Organization to implement the ILO’s constitutional mandate, including through inter- national labour standards, and to place full and productive employment and decent work at the centre of economic and social policies, should be based on the four equally important strategic objectives of the ILO, through which the Decent Work Agenda is expressed and which can be summarized as follows:
(i) promoting employment by creating a sustainable institutional and economic environment in which:
• individuals can develop and update the necessary capacities and skills they need to enable them to be productively occupied for their personal fulfilment and the common well-being;
• all enterprises, public or private, are sustainable to enable growth and the generation of greater employment and income opportunities and prospects for all; and societies can achieve their goals of economic development, good living standards and social progress;
(ii) developing and enhancing measures of social protection – social security and labour protection – which are sustainable and adapted to national circumstances, including:
• the extension of social security to all, including measures to provide basic income to all in need of such protection, and adapting its scope and coverage to meet the new needs and uncertainties generated by the rapidity of technological, societal, demographic and economic changes;
• healthy and safe working conditions; and
• policies in regard to wages and earnings, hours and other conditions of work, designed to ensure a just share of the fruits of progress to all and a minimum living wage to all employed and in need of such protection;
(iii) promoting social dialogue and tripartism as the most appropriate methods for:
• adapting the implementation of the strategic objectives to the needs and circumstances of each country;
• translating economic development into social progress, and social progress into economic development;
4 http://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/@ed_norm/@relconf/documents/meetingdocument/wcms_
094042.pdf
• facilitating consensus building on relevant national and international policies that impact on employment and decent work strategies and programmes; and making labour law and institutions effective, including in respect of the recognition of the employment relationship, the promotion of good industrial relations and the building of effective labour inspection systems; and
(iv) respecting, promoting and realizing the fundamental principles and rights at work, which are of particular significance, as both rights and enabling conditions that are necessary for the full realization of all of the strategic objectives, noting:
• that freedom of association and the effective recognition of the right to collective bargaining are particularly important to enable the attainment of the four strategic objectives; and
• that the violation of fundamental principles and rights at work cannot be invoked or otherwise used as a legitimate comparative advantage and that labour standards should not be used for protectionist trade purposes.
B. The four strategic objectives are inseparable, interrelated and mutually supportive. The failure to promote any one of them would harm progress towards the others. To optimize their impact, efforts to promote them should be part of an ILO global and integrated strategy for decent work. Gender equality and non-discrimination must be considered to be cross-cutting issues in the abovementioned strategic objectives.
C. How Members achieve the strategic objectives is a question that must be determined by each Member subject to its existing international obligations and the fundamental principles and rights at work with due regard, among others, to:
(i) the national conditions and circumstances, and needs as well as priorities expressed by representative organizations of employers and workers;
(ii) the interdependence, solidarity and cooperation among all Members of the ILO that are more pertinent than ever in the context of a global economy; and
(iii) the principles and provisions of international labour standards.
Method of implementation
The Conference further recognizes that, in a globalized economy:
A. The implementation of Part I of this Declaration requires that the ILO effectively assist its Members in their efforts. To that end, the Organization should review and adapt its institutional practices to enhance governance and capacity building in order to make the best use of its human and financial resources and of the unique advantage of its tripartite structure and standards system, with a view to:
(i) better understanding its Members’ needs, with respect to each of the strategic objectives, as well as past ILO action to meet them in the framework of a recurring item on the agenda of the Conference, so as to:
• determine how the ILO can more efficiently address these needs through coordinated use of all its means of action;
• determine the necessary resources to address these needs and, if appropriate, to attract additional resources; and
• guide the Governing Body and the Office in their responsibilities;
(ii) strengthening and streamlining its technical cooperation and expert advice in order to:
• support and assist efforts by individual Members to make progress on a tripartite basis towards all the strategic objectives, through country programmes for decent work, where appropriate, and within the framework of the United Nations system; and
• help, wherever necessary, the institutional capacity of member States, as well as representative organizations of employers and workers, to facilitate meaningful and coherent social policy and sustainable development;
(iii) promoting shared knowledge and understanding of the synergies between the strategic objectives through empirical analysis and tripartite discussion of concrete experiences, with the voluntary cooperation of countries concerned, and with a view to informing Members’ decision-making in relation to the opportunities and challenges of globalization;
(iv) upon request, providing assistance to Members who wish to promote strategic objectives jointly within the framework of bilateral or multilateral agreements, subject to their compatibility with ILO obligations; and
(v) developing new partnerships with non-state entities and economic actors, such as multinational enterprises and trade unions operating at the global sectoral level in order to enhance the effectiveness of ILO operational programmes and activities, enlist their support in any appropriate way, and otherwise promote the ILO strategic objectives. This will be done in consultation with representative national and international organizations of workers and employers.
B. At the same time, Members have a key responsibility to contribute, through their social and economic policy, to the realization of a global and integrated strategy for the implementation of the strategic objectives, which encompass the Decent Work Agenda outlined in Part I of this Declaration. Implementation of the Decent Work Agenda at national level will depend on national needs and priorities and it will be for member States, in consultation with the representative organizations of workers and employers, to determine how to discharge that responsibility. To that end, they may consider, among other steps:
(i) the adoption of a national or regional strategy for decent work, or both, targeting a set of priorities for the integrated pursuit of the strategic objectives;
(ii) the establishment of appropriate indicators or statistics, if necessary with the assistance of the ILO, to monitor and evaluate the progress made;
(iii) the review of their situation as regards the ratification or implementation of ILO instruments with a view to achieving a progressively increasing coverage of each of the strategic objectives, with special emphasis on the instruments classified as core labour standards as well as those regarded as most significant from the viewpoint of governance covering tripartism, employment policy and labour inspection;
(iv) the taking of appropriate steps for an adequate coordination between positions taken on behalf of the member State concerned in relevant international forums and any steps they may take under the present Declaration;
(v) the promotion of sustainable enterprises;
(vi) where appropriate, sharing national and regional good practice gained from the successful implementation of national or regional initiatives with a decent work element; and
(vii) the provision on a bilateral, regional or multilateral basis, in so far as their resources permit, of appropriate support to other Members’ efforts to give effect to
the principles and objectives referred to in this Declaration.
C. Other international and regional organizations with mandates in closely related fields can have an important contribution to make to the implementation of the integrated approach. The ILO should invite them to promote decent work, bearing in mind that each agency will have full control of its mandate. As trade and financial market policy both affect employment, it is the ILO’s role to evaluate those employment effects to achieve its
aim of placing employment at the heart of economic policies.
Final provisions
A. The Director-General of the International Labour Office will ensure that the present Declaration is communicated to all Members and, through them, to representative organizations of employers and workers, to international organizations with competence in related fields at the international and regional levels, and to such other entities as the Governing Body may identify. Governments, as well as employers’ and workers’
organizations at the national level, shall make the Declaration known in all relevant forums where they may participate or be represented, or otherwise disseminate it to any other entities that may be concerned.
B. The Governing Body and the Director-General of the International Labour Office will have the responsibility for establishing appropriate modalities for the expeditious implementation of Part II of this Declaration.
V. African Charter on democracy, elections and governance, 30 January
2007 (excerpts)5
Preamble
We, the Member States of the African Union (AU);
Inspired by the objectives and principles enshrined in the Constitutive Act of the African Union, particularly Articles 3 and 4, which emphasise the significance of good governance, popular participation, the rule of law and human rights;
Recognising the contributions of the African Union and Regional Economic Communities to the promotion, nurturing, strengthening and consolidation of democracy and governance;
Reaffirming our collective will to work relentlessly to deepen and consolidate the rule of law, peace, security and development in our countries;
Chapter 2
Objectives
Article 2
The objectives of this Charter are to:
1. Promote adherence, by each State Party, to the universal values and principles of democracy and respect for human rights;
5 http://www.achpr.org/instruments/charter-democracy/
2. Promote and enhance adherence to the principle of the rule of law premised upon the respect for, and the supremacy of, the Constitution and constitutional order in the political arrangements of the State Parties;
3. Promote the holding of regular free and fair elections to institutionalize legitimate authority of representative government as well as democratic change of governments;
4. Prohibit, reject and condemn unconstitutional change of government in any Member State as a serious threat to stability, peace, security and development;
5. Promote and protect the independence of the judiciary;
6. Nurture, support and consolidate good governance by promoting democratic culture and practice, building and strengthening governance institutions and inculcating political pluralism and tolerance;
7. Encourage effective coordination and harmonization of governance policies amongst State Parties with the aim of promoting regional and continental integration;
8. Promote State Parties’ sustainable development and human security;
9. Promote the fight against corruption in conformity with the provisions of the AU Convention on Preventing and Combating Corruption adopted in Maputo, Mozambique in July 2003;
10. Promote the establishment of the necessary conditions to foster citizen participation, transparency, access to information, freedom of the press and accountability in the management of public affairs;
11. Promote gender balance and equality in the governance and development processes;
12. Enhance cooperation between the Union, Regional Economic Communities and the International Community on democracy, elections and governance; and
13. Promote best practices in the management of elections for purposes of political stability and good governance.
Article 3
State Parties shall implement this Charter in accordance with the following principles:
1. Respect for human rights and democratic principles;
2. Access to and exercise of state power in accordance with the constitution of the State Party and the principle of the rule of law;
3. Promotion of a system of government that is representative;
4. Holding of regular, transparent, free and fair elections;
5. Separation of powers;
6. Promotion of gender equality in public and private institutions;
7. Effective participation of citizens in democratic and development processes and in governance of public affairs;
8. Transparency and fairness in the management of public affairs;
9. Condemnation and rejection of acts of corruption, related offenses and impunity;
10. Condemnation and total rejection of unconstitutional changes of government;
11. Strengthening political pluralism and recognising the role, rights and responsibilities of legally constituted political parties, including opposition political parties, which should be given a status under national law.
Chapter 4
Democracy, Rule of Law and Human Rights
Article 4
1. State Parties shall commit themselves to promote democracy, the principle of the rule of law and human rights.
2. State Parties shall recognize popular participation through universal suffrage as the inalienable right of the people.
VI. The Dar Es Salaam Declaration on budget transparency, accountability
and participation, 18 November 2011 (excerpts)6
The world we want.
It is often the case that citizens, and particularly those most marginalized, are excluded from participating in public budget decisions. It is both essential and possible to transform this current paradigm, by adhering to the following core principles:
• Public budgets must be transparent, meaning that all information related to the way in which public money is raised, allocated, spent and accounted should be made available to the general public in an accessible, timely and comprehensible way.
• Budget processes must be inclusive, ensuring open and ample opportunities for all citizens to fulfill their right to know about, participate in, and influence all decisions with regard to the collection, allocation and management of public funds.
• Budgets must be raised and spent efficiently, effectively, and equitably and must ensure that public resources achieve the greatest impact possible, in the elimination of poverty and the achievement of equity.
• Budget data must be accurate, relying on publicly known estimates and ensuring that governments spend public monies on the priorities for which they were approved, thereby reducing the room for leakages, corruption and inefficiencies.
• Budgets have to be comprehensive, encompassing all revenues and expenditures, regardless of their origin -- including international aid, para-statal funds and the management of internal and external debt.
• Budgets have to be sustainable, ensuring that public finances serve common objectives over the long term, for current and future generations.
• Budgets have to be regularly and consistently reported against by all levels of government.
6 http://www.aefgh.org/website/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=104:the-dar-es-
salaam-declaration-on-budget-transparency-accountability-and-participation&catid=1:latest- news&Itemid=2
• Budgets must be the object of permanent monitoring, oversight and accountability by legislatures, internal and external audit institutions, the media and citizens.
We call upon:
All governments at the national and subnational levels to:
1. Recognize, legislate, enact and operationalize the right to information generally and to public budget information specifically;
2. Actively engage citizens and all other stakeholders in setting public budget priorities-- including para-statal and para-fiscal funds-- as early and inclusively as possible,
3. Produce, and publicly discuss, in a timely fashion, at least eight key budget documents: re-budget statement, executive’s budget proposal, enacted budget, citizens budget, in-year report, mid-year review, end-year report, audit report;
4. Comprehensively report on all public financial flows and institutions, including those that are managed outside of the formal budget process;
5. Include all resources used for the implementation of public, fiscal and economic policies, regardless of their origin, in their public budget documents and processes;
6. Ensure that legislatures and auditors are independent of government and have sufficient resources to increase their capacity and thus fulfill their oversight mandates effectively.
7. Publish and disseminate budget information in easy and accessible formats through all possible means, including digital open data formats through the internet, public libraries, information centers, etc.
VII. European Grid Declaration on Transparency and Public Participation,
5 December 2012 (excerpts)7
1.1 The Parties aim to improve the public acceptability of grid development to accommodate renewable energy in Europe, by increasing transparency and enabling public participation. Trustful cooperation is the basis to deliver solutions jointly for best practice in grid planning processes.
1.2 The Parties recognise the need to undertake suitable initiatives to improve public acceptability, and jointly to communicate the necessity of grid development in the transition towards renewable energy. These steps are needed so that:
• renewable electricity generation is not constrained by bottlenecks in the transmission system; and
• plans and investments to accommodate renewable energy enjoy greater understanding, provoke less public opposition and encounter fewer delays.
1.3 The Parties recommend adapting planning and permitting practices so that:
• investments are planned, consented and undertaken in a more transparent way;
• stakeholders have access to all relevant information that they need to form and express their views;
7 http://renewables-
grid.eu/fileadmin/user_upload/Files_RGI/European_Grid_Declaration_2nd_Part.pdf
• there are opportunities for dialogue and participation as well as formal consultation processes in place for stakeholders’ and the public’s knowledge and views to be
expressed, at a point in time when their input can still be taken into account;
3.1 Coherent need definition at EU and national levels
3.1.1 The Parties agree it is desirable to establish the need for new infrastructure development through consistent, coherent and transparent methodologies and participation/consultation processes, including at EU and national levels.
3.1.2 They also recognise the benefits of public participation and consultation at these levels, in order to build support for later, more local planning procedures.
3.6 Early and continuous involvement to allow substantial participation.
3.6.1 Ensuring that stakeholder and local knowledge are brought into the discussions at an early stage can lead to decisions which are supported by a broader community. In addition, the involvement of stakeholders, including relevant authorities at an early stage can reduce later disagreements and delays.
The Parties therefore agree on the desirability and need to:
• engage with stakeholders and the public at an early point in the process so that their contributions can be taken into account and plans modified accordingly where appropriate, without risking another loss in time; this may require engagement before official procedures are initiated.
• ensure that in time of public consultation phases, sufficient information and time
are provided to enable substantial input, and that time is allocated to discuss and to explain resulting decisions.
• support the implementation of decision-making processes that enable and promote the consideration of reasonable alternatives suggested by the public, where these are relevant to the stage of decision-making in question.
• promote opportunities to engage in ways that are convenient and effective for as many as possible in society; this can be achieved by developing a “concept for
public participation” for each project, with detailed stakeholder mapping and
identifying channels and formats to involve them from an early stage.
• promote the establishment, where necessary, and support the work of (i) strategic multistakeholder working groups to deal with questions of general relevance for grid development, and (ii) project-specific working groups specifically to find solutions on topics of local concern.
3.7 Dialogue as a means to enhance relationships and build trust
3.7.1 The Parties recognise that a culture of dialogue, debate and collaboration is necessary to find solutions that are widely acceptable. They therefore seek to:
• promote a culture of dialogue and debate, e.g. by including elements of direct dialogue and deliberation in participation concepts, and improving communication of the solutions found through participation and consultation procedures.
• professionally organise dialogue and, especially in situations of conflict or high potential forconflict, consider the use of independent facilitation to help ensure deliberations are as constructive as possible.
VIII. Declaration of the Social Movements Assembly of the World Social
Forum, Tunisia, 29 March 2013 (excerpts)8
People all over the world are suffering the effects of the aggravation of a profound crisis of capitalism, in which its agents (banks, transnational corporations, media conglomerates, international institutions, and governments complicit with neoliberalism) aim at increasing their profits by applying interventionist and neocolonial policies.
War, military occupations, free-trade neoliberal treaties and “austerity measures” are expressed in economic packages that privatise the common good and public services, cut wages and rights, increase unemployment, overload women's care work and destroys nature.
Such policies strike the richer countries of the [global] North harder and are increasing migration, forced displacement, evictions, debt and social inequalities such as in Greece, Cyprus, Portugal, Italy, Ireland and the Spanish state.
They reinforce conservatism and the control over women´s bodies and lives. In addition, they seek to impose”green economy” as a solution to the environmental and food crisis, which not only exacerbates the problem, but leads to commodification, privatisation and financialisation of life and nature.
We denounce the intensification of repression to people´s rebellions, the assassination of the leadership of social movements, the criminalisation of our struggles and our proposals.
We assert that people must not continue to pay for this systemic crisis (...) This is why we, social movements, struggle:
Against transnational corporations and the financial system (IMF, WB and WTO), which are the main agents of the capitalist system, privatising life, public services and common goods such as water, air, land, seeds and mineral resources, promoting wars and violations of human rights. Transnational corporations reproduce extractionist practices endangering life and nature, grabbing our lands and developing genetically modified seeds and food, taking away the peoples’ right to food and destroying biodiversity.
We fight for the cancellation of illegitimate and odious debt which today is a global instrument of domination, repression and economic and financial strangulation of people. We reject free trade agreements that are imposed by States and transnational corporations and we affirm that it is possible to build another kind of globalisation, made from and by the people, based on solidarity and on freedom of movement for all the human beings.
For climate justice and food sovereignty, because we know that global climate change is a product of the capitalist system of production, distribution and consumption. Transnational corporations, international financial institutions and governments serving them do not want to reduce greenhouse gases. We denounce “green economy” and refuse false solutions to
the climate crisis such as biofuels, genetically modified organisms and mechanisms of the carbon market like REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation), which ensnare impoverished peoples with false promises of progress while privatising and commodifying the forests and territories where these peoples have been living for thousands of years.
We defend the food sovereignty and support sustainable peasant agriculture which is the true solution to the food and climate crises and includes access to land for all who work on
8 http://occupywallst.org/tag/global%20solidarity/
it. Because of this, we call for a mass mobilisation to stop the landgrab and support local peasants struggles.
Against violence against women, often conducted in militarily occupied territories, but also violence affecting women who are criminalised for taking part in social struggles. We fight against domestic and sexual violence perpetrated on women because they are considered objects or goods, because the sovereignty of their bodies and minds is not acknowledged. We fight against the traffic of women, girls and boys.
For peace and against war, colonialism, occupations and the militarisation of our lands. We denounce the false discourse of human rights defence and fight against fundamentalism, that often justifies military occupations such as in Haiti, Líbia, Mali and Syria. We defend the right to people’s sovereignty and self-determination such as in Palestine, Western Sahara and Kurdistan. We denounce the installation of foreign military bases to instigate conflicts, to control and ransack natural resources, and to foster dictatorships in several countries.
IX. Universal Declaration for the Common Good of Humanity (excerpts)9
Article 7 (To promote dignified and non-exploitative labor)
Processes of production and circulation should ensure workers a dignified, participatory job that is adaptive to family and cultural life,that fosters their skills and ensures them an adequate material existence. All modern forms of slavery, servitude and labor exploitation, especially of children, for the purposes of individual profit or private accumulation of surplus value as well as limitations on labor organizing are inconsistent with the Common Good of Humanity and Good Life (Buen Vivir) and are therefore prohibited.
Article 8 (To reconstruct territories)
Facing “globalization” which has favored a unipolar economy, the concentration of
decision-making powers, the hegemony of financial capital and the irrational circulation of goods and services, it is indispensible to reconstruct territories as a base for food, energetic sovereignty and for the main exchanges, to regionalize economies and base them on principles of complementarity and solidarity; and for the peripheral regions, to “disconnect”
from the hegemonic economic center, in order to assure commercial, financial and productive autonomy. The constitution of monopolies and oligopolies, whatever their area of productive or financial activity is, is inconsistent with the Common Good of Humanity and are therefore prohibited.
Article 9 (To guarantee access to common goods and universal social protection)
There are certain common goods that are indispensible for the collective life of individuals and peoples and that constitute inalienable rights. These are: food, housing, health, education, and material and immaterial communication. Various forms of citizen control or social property exist for the effective organization of access to these goods. “Universal
protection” is a right of all peoples and individuals, a responsibility of public authorities that should be assured by an adequate fiscal policy. The privatization of public services in order to contribute to capital accumulation is inconsistent with the Common Good of Humanity and is therefore prohibited. The following are susceptible for sanctions:
9 http://www.especieenpeligro.cult.cu/index.php/debates-y-alternativas/articulos/1521-universal-
declaration-for-the
speculating on food, housing, health, education, communication as is corruption while exercising these rights.
Article 10 (To generalize democracy and the construction of the subject)
All peoples and human beings are subjects of their histories and have the right to a collective social and political organization that guarantees this. This organization must ensure harmony with nature and access to the material needs of life trough production and circulation systems built on social justice principles. To achieve these goals, collective organization should allow everyone’s participation in the production and reproduction of
the life of the planet and human beings, i.e., of the Common Good of Humanity. The organizing principle of this goal is to spread democracy into all social relationships: family, gender, work, political authority, between peoples and nations and in all social, political, economic, cultural and religious institutions. Along with political forms of participatory democracy, participation should be organized in all sectors of common life, economic, social, cultural.
All non-democratic forms of organizing society’s political, economic, social and cultural life are inconsistent with the Common Good of Humanity and the Good Life (Buen Vivir) and are therefore prohibited. Genocides are condemned as irreparable acts of discrimination. Susceptible to sanctions are all discriminations based on gender, race, nation, culture, sexual orientation, physical or mental capacity, religion or ideological affiliation. Along with political forms of participatory democracy, participation should be encouraged in all sectors of common life.
Article 11 (To build equality between men and women)
Particular importance will be given to relations between men and women, unequal since time immemorial in the various types of societies that have existed during human history. All institutions and all social and cultural systems should recognize, respect and promote the right to a life in plenitude for women in equality with men. Social and economic practices, institutions and cultural or religious systems that defend discrimination or actively discriminate against women are inconsistent with the Common Good of Humanity. All forms of masculine domination, particularly differences in wage income and the non- recognition of family domestic work linked to the reproduction of life, are susceptible to sanctions.
Article 12 (To prohibit war)
Democratic international relations do not allow the use of war to resolve conflicts. In this day and age, peace is not guaranteed by an arms race. The availability of nuclear, biological, chemical weapons directly jeopardizes the life of Humanity. Arms have become a business. Their production causes an enormous waste of energy, natural resources and human talents; their use means, aside from the loss of lifes, serious environmental destruction.
The manufacture, possession and use of weapons of mass destruction, the accumulation of conventional weapons to guarantee regional hegemony and control of natural resources, hegemonic regional pacts, military solutions to solve internal political problems are inconsistent with the Common Good of Humanity and are therefore prohibited.
Article 13 (To build the State on the basis of Common Good)
The role of the State, as collective administrator, is to guarantee the Common Good, i.e. the public interest, as compared to individual or private interests. Democratic participation is therefore needed to define the Common Good (constitutions) and how it will be applied. All
peoples and communities of the earth, in the plurality of each of their members, organizations and social movements, have the right to political systems of direct or delegated participation with a revocable mandate. Regional governments and international organizations, particularly the United Nations, must be constructed on democratic principles. The same is true for all institutions that represent specific interests or business sectors, such as industrial companies, estates, financial or commercial organisms, political parties, religious institutions or trade unions, NGOs, sports or cultural groups, humanitarian organizations.
All dictatorial or authoritarian forms of exercising political or economic power, where no representative minorities, formal or informal, monopolize decisions without participation, initiative or popular control, are inconsistent with the Common Good of Humanity and are therefore prohibited. Also prohibited are public subsidies for organizations, social movements, political parties or religious institutions that do not respect democratic principles or that practice gender or racial discrimination.
X. Paris Appeal for a New Democratic International Economic Order,
International Association of Democratic Lawyers, 25 May 2013
(excerpts)10
We, democratic lawyers, recognize the United Nations Charter along with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the UN Conventions on Human Rights constitute the Constitution of the modern world. These important documents prohibit the threat of and use of force, recognize the sovereign equality of states and the right of self-determination, and guarantee that everyone has the right to a social and international order in which the rights and freedoms in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights can be fully realized.
The United Nations Charter in its Preamble replaced the old vertical logic of power over peoples by horizontally organizing power of the peoples based on the exercise of and respect for self-determination and their exclusive mastery over their own affairs in equality and universality. However, the economic management of the world has been “entrusted” by
the Bretton Woods agreements to international financial institutions, but these institutions are based on the old vertical logic of power over the peoples that do not comply with the principal of equality and universality. This has allowed the peoples of the world to be diverted from their mission as States with the economic power of these institutions being used as instruments of domination and policing in their own self-interest and the interest of large economies.
Peoples’ power requires not only the first generation of civil and political rights but also the
second generation of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Peoples’ Power cannot be complete without economic power.
The conclusion from the experience of decolonization necessitated the adoption of the United Nations Resolution of 1971 proclaiming peoples’ sovereignty over their natural
resources. However, it became clear that even with such resolutions peoples remain dependent because of the so-called “laws” of the market with its domination by industrial and financial monopolies, continue undermine the Human Rights Covenants and raise public debt.
We have been denouncing for decades not only the injustice and illegitimacy of the public debt of developing countries but also its illegality and nullity.
10 http://www.iadllaw.org/
Today the inequality bequeathed by colonialism and maintained by the post colonialism remains unbearable, the public debt is now a heavy burden on the economies of the majority of states and leads them to inflict austerity policies on their people to the detriment of the necessary satisfaction of their most basic economic, social and cultural rights as proclaimed by the United Nations Covenant in 1966. These policies violate the social development goals defined by Articles 55 et seq., of the United Nations Charter and confirmed by U.N. General Assembly Resolution of 4 December 1986 on the Right to Development.
The result is a fundamental economic political and societal crisis on a scale constituting a crisis of civilization, posing the most serious dangers to humanity.
However, this situation is not an accident of fate. It is the result of the management of the world’s economy, based on the savagery of economic liberalism and the resulting dictatorship of financial markets. The world’s economy is governed by a system which
exploits the world’s resources, not as a function of their value to humanity but of their value
as profit for finance capital.
Even the so-called "local conflicts" are in fact conflicts between the powers that compete for resources and markets, in which the arms trade plays a particularly burdensome role. Massive violations of human rights that appear as purely internal are most often the work of dictatorships established by the neo-colonizer guaranteeing them economic mastery and security of access to resources and markets.
The future of Humanity is at stake as long as the political power of the peoples is not completed by their economic power. This completion will permit placing the organization of world economic management under international universal and egalitarian law of the United Nations Charter and replacing non-egalitarian International financial institutions by people’s instruments of cooperation allowing the planet’s resources to be directed to the
exclusive satisfaction of peoples’ and the environments respective and common needs.
We believe that the world’s lawyers should serve the people in the front line of this struggle, which calls on them to use and improve their professional skills in the service of peoples to achieve the common goal of Peoples’ Power. We have therefore decided to
establish a permanent consultative working group to define those steps which should be taken immediately to counter effectively the malfunctioning of the current order and towards establishing a new democratic international economic order.
XI. Appel de Blois, Liberté pour l'histoire, 2008 (full text)11
Concerned about the retrospective moralization of history and intellectual censure, we call for the mobilization of European historians and for the wisdom of politicians. History must not be a slave to contemporary politics nor can it be written on the command of competing memories. In a free state, no political authority has the right to define historical truth and to restrain the freedom of the historian with the threat of penal sanctions.
We call on historians to marshal their forces within each of their countries and to create structures similar to our own, and, for the time being, to individually sign the present appeal, to put a stop to this movement toward laws aimed at controlling history memory. We ask government authorities to recognize that, while they are responsible for the maintenance of the collective memory, they must not establish, by law and for the past, an
11 http://www.lph-asso.fr/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=47&Itemid=14&lang=en
official truth whose legal application can carry serious consequences for the profession of history and for intellectual liberty in general. In a democracy, liberty for history is liberty for all.
XII. Declaration on Digital Freedom, Adopted by the PEN International
Congress Gyeongju, South Korea, September 2012 (full text)12
PEN International promotes literature and freedom of expression and is governed by the PEN Charter and the principles it embodies unhampered transmission of thought within each nation and between all nations.
PEN recognizes the promise of digital media as a means of fulfilling the fundamental right of free expression. At the same time, poets, playwrights, essayists, novelists, writers, bloggers, and journalists are suffering violations of their right to freedom of expression for using digital media. Citizens in many countries have faced severe restrictions in their access to and use of digital media, while governments have exploited digital technologies to suppress freedom of expression and to surveil individuals. The private sector and technology companies in particular have at times facilitated government censorship and surveillance. PEN therefore declares the following:
1. All persons have the right to express themselves freely through digital media without fear of reprisal or persecution.
a. Individuals who use digital media enjoy full freedom of expression protections under international laws and standards
b. Governments must not prosecute individuals or exact reprisals upon individuals who convey information, opinions, or ideas through digital media.
c. Governments must actively protect freedom of expression on digital media by enacting and enforcing effective laws and standards.
2. All persons have the right to seek and receive information through digital media.
a. Governments should not censor, restrict, or control the content of digital media, including content from domestic and international sources.
b. In exceptional circumstances, any limitations on the content of digital media must adhere to international laws and standards that govern the limits of freedom of expression, such as incitement to violence.
c. Governments should not block access to or restrict the use of digital media, even during periods of unrest or crisis. Controlling access to digital media, especially on a broad scale, inherently violates the right to freedom of expression.
d. Governments should foster and promote full access to digital media for all persons.
3. All persons have the right to be free from government surveillance of digital media.
a. Surveillance, whether or not known by the specific intended target, chills speech by establishing the potential for persecution and the fear of reprisals. When known, surveillance fosters a climate of self-censorship that further harms free expression.
12 http://www.pen-international.org/pen-declaration-on-digital-freedom/
b. As a general rule, governments should not seek to access digital communications between or among private individuals, nor should they monitor individual use of digital media, track the movements of individuals through digital media, alter the expression of individuals, or generally surveil individuals.
c. When governments do conduct surveillance in exceptional circumstances and in connection with legitimate law enforcement or national security investigations— any surveillance of individuals and monitoring of communications via digital media must meet international due process laws and standards that apply to lawful searches, such as obtaining a warrant by a court order.
d. Full freedom of expression entails a right to privacy; all existing international laws and standards of privacy apply to digital media, and new laws and standards and protections may be required.
e. Government gathering and retention of data and other information generated by digital media, including data mining, should meet international laws and standards of privacy, such as requirements that the data retention be time-limited, proportionate, and provide effective notice to persons affected.
4. The private sector, and technology companies, in particular, are bound by the right to freedom of expression and human rights.
a. The principles stated in this declaration equally apply to the private sector.
b. Companies must respect human rights, including the right to freedom of expression, and must uphold these rights even when national laws and regulations do not protect them.
c. Technology companies have a duty to determine how their products, services, and policies impact human rights in the countries in which they intend to operate. If violations are likely, or violations may be inextricably linked to the use of products or services, the companies should modify or withdraw their proposed plans in order to respect human rights.
d. Technology companies should incorporate freedom of expression principles into core operations, such as product designs with built-in privacy protections.
e. If their operations are found to have violated the right to freedom of expression, technology companies should provide restitution to those whose rights were violated, even when governments do not provide remedies.
XIII. Final Report of the Sub-Commission’s Special Rapporteur on Treaties with Indigenous Peoples, Miguel Alfonso Martinez, 1999 (excerpts)13
306. Earlier in the present report (para. 261) the Special Rapporteur noted the generalized opinion that, in the light of the situation endured by indigenous peoples today, the existing mechanisms, either administrative or judicial, within non-indigenous spheres of government have been incapable of solving their difficult predicament. This forces him to advance a number of recommendations on this subject.
307. He first recommends the establishment within States with a sizeable indigenous population of an entirely new, special jurisdiction to deal exclusively with indigenous issues, independent of existing governmental (central or otherwise) structures, although
13 http://www.unhchr.ch/Huridocda/Huridoca.nsf/0/696c51cf6f20b8bc802567c4003793ec
financed by public funds, that will gradually replace the existing bureaucratic/administrative government branches now in charge of those issues.
308. This special jurisdiction, in his view, should have four distinct specialized branches (permanent and with adequate professional staffing):
(i) an advisory conflict-resolution body to which all disputes, including those relating to treaty implementation, arising between indigenous peoples and non- indigenous individuals, entities and institutions (including government institutions) should be mandatorily submitted, and which should be empowered to encourage and conduct negotiations between the interested parties and to issue the recommendations considered pertinent to resolve the controversy;
(ii) a body to draft, through negotiations with the indigenous peoples concerned: (a) new juridical bilateral, consensual, legal instruments with the indigenous peoples interested and (b) new legislation and other proposals to be submitted to the proper legislative and administrative government branches in order gradually to create a new institutionalized legal order applicable to all indigenous issues and that accords with the needs of indigenous peoples;
(iii) a judicial collegiate body, to which all cases that after a reasonable period of time have not been resolved through the recommendations of the advisory body, should be mandatorily submitted. Such a body should be empowered to adjudicate these cases and should be capable of making its final decisions enforceable by making use of the coercive power of the State;
(iv) an administrative branch in charge of all logistical aspects of indigenous/non- indigenous relations.
309. The Special Rapporteur is fully aware of many of the obstacles that such an innovative, far-reaching approach might encounter. To mention only one, it is not difficult to appreciate the many vested interests that might be affected by the redundancy of the structures now existing to deal with indigenous issues in many countries. Only strong political determination, particularly on the part of the leadership of the non-indigenous sector of the society, can make this approach viable. One other essential element is also clear: the effective participation of indigenous peoples - preferably on a basis of equality with non-indigenous people - in all four of the recommended branches is absolutely central to the "philosophy" presiding over the Special Rapporteur's overall approach to this question.
310. It is obvious that the above is a mere sketch of the new institutionality recommended. Much lies ahead in terms of filling in its quite visible lacunae. While the Special Rapporteur does not lack ideas on how to fill some of the gaps, he has considered it wise to allow for the required fine-tuning to be done at a later stage, around a negotiating table, by the interested parties themselves in the different countries. The way in which such a negotiation process is organized and conducted may well be the true litmus test eventually of the merits of his recommendation and of the viability of the structure proposed in a given socio-political context.
311. In advancing the recommendations set forth above, the Special Rapporteur has benefited from the highly interesting ideas on the same subject formulated in the final report (1996) of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples established by the Government of Canada. (71)
312. While it is generally held that contentious issues arising from treaties or constructive arrangements involving indigenous peoples should be discussed in the domestic realm, the international dimension of the treaty nevertheless warrants proper consideration.
313. A crucial question relates to the desirability of an international adjudication mechanism to handle claims or complaints from indigenous peoples, in particular those arising from treaties and constructive arrangements with an international status.
314. The Special Rapporteur is quite familiar with the reticence expressed time and again, by States towards the question of taking these issues back to open discussion and decision- making by international forums. In fact, he might even agree with them that for certain issues (for example, disputes not related to treaty implementation and observance) it would be more productive to keep their review and decision exclusively within domestic jurisdiction until this is completely exhausted.
315. However, he is of the opinion that one should not dismiss outright the notion of possible benefits to be reaped from the establishment of an international body (for example, the proposed permanent forum of indigenous peoples) that, under certain circumstances, might be empowered - with the previous blanket acquiescence, or acquiescence on an ad hoc basis, of the State concerned - to take charge of final decision in a dispute between the indigenous peoples living within the borders of a modern State and non-indigenous institutions, including State institutions.
316. At any rate, the Special Rapporteur recommends that a United Nations-sponsored workshop be convened, at the earliest possible date and within the framework of the International Decade of the World's Indigenous People, to open an educated discussion on the possible merits and demerits of the establishment of such an international body.
317. One last point on the subject: with the growing international concern about all human rights and related developments, one element appears very clear in the mind of the Special Rapporteur: the more effective and developed the national mechanisms for conflict resolution on indigenous issues are, the less need there will be for establishing an international body for that purpose. The opposite is also true: the non-existence, malfunctioning, anti-indigenous discriminatory approach or ineffectiveness of those national institutions will provide more valid arguments for international options. This may be one of the strongest arguments possible for the establishment (or strengthening) of proper, effective internal channels for the implementation/observance of indigenous rights and conflict resolution of indigenous-related issues.
318. Another recommendation which it seems timely to address to State institutions empowered to deal with indigenous issues is that, in the decision-making process on issues of interest to indigenous peoples, they should apply and construct (or continue to do so) the provisions of national legislation and international standards and instruments in the most favourable way for indigenous peoples, particularly, in cases relating to treaty rights. In all cases of treaty/agreement/constructive arrangement relationships, the interpretation of the indigenous party of the provisions of those instruments should be accorded equal value with non-indigenous interpretation of the same provisions.
319. The Special Rapporteur also recommends the fullest possible implementation in good faith of the provisions of treaties/agreements between indigenous peoples and States, where they exist, from the perspective of seeking both justice and reconciliation. In the event that the very existence (or present-day validity) of a treaty becomes a matter of dispute, a formal recognition of that instrument as a legal point of reference in the State's relations with the peoples concerned would contribute greatly to a process of confidence- building that may bring substantial benefits. In this context, the completion of the ratification process of draft treaties/agreements already fully negotiated with indigenous people is strongly recommended by the Special Rapporteur.
320. In the case of obligations established in bilateral or multilateral treaties concluded by States - to which indigenous peoples are third parties - that may affect those peoples, the Special Rapporteur recommends that the State parties to such instruments seek the free and
educated acquiescence of the indigenous parties before attempting to enforce those obligations.
XIV. The realization of economic, social and cultural rights, Final report
submitted by Mr. Danilo Türk, Special Rapporteur,
E/CN.4/Sub.2/1992/16, 3 July 1992 (excerpts)14
177. Decades of pleas for increasing levels of participation in the development process, principles about which are included, for instance, in the 1986 Declaration on the Right to Development, have clearly yet to bear fruit.
178. According to one commentator: "Though the World Bank claims that 'it seeks to meet the needs of the poorest people', at no stage in what it refers to as 'the project cycle', however, does it actually take time to ask the poor themselves how they perceive their needs; neither does it canvass their views on how they feel these needs might best be met. Indeed, from the identification of a possible Bank project right through to its ex post evaluation, the poor are entirely left out of the decision-making process - almost as if they did not exist".
179. Even the Bank itself has recognized this inadequacy, admitting in 1988 that: "the principles guiding beneficiary participation in Bank-financed projects have been quite abstract and of limited operational impact. Beneficiaries were not assigned a role in the decision-making process, nor was their technological knowledge sought prior to designing project components". Though non-governmental organization participation in World Bank projects has increased in the past three years, by far the greatest share of this "participation" was in project implementation, with substantially smaller emphasis being placed on design, advice, monitoring and evaluation.
180. The declining capacities of the State and the resolute inability of the market or private sector, coupled with measures of adjustment, and an overall global economic decline have led to the evolution of new citizen movements, new coalitions and new political processes, all but ignored in the literature of the international financial agencies and by much of the United Nations system. Within these new movements is where real participation occurs, where much of real development takes place and where the legitimate needs of people are increasingly being demanded.
181. Much debate has taken place recently about the obvious relationship between development, democracy and human rights, implying, of course, the issue of citizen participation in all political processes associated with development. One United Nations agency has provided support in the following terms: “An essential part of any political process to benefit the poor is a high degree of participation. Encouraging the autonomy of citizens is, indeed, an end in itself. And participation is a means to ensure the efficient provision and more equitable distribution of goods and services. If people are involved in decision-making, policies and projects tend to be more realistic, more pragmatic and more sustainable.”
14 http://www.unhchr.ch/huridocda/huridoca.nsf/%28Symbol%29/E.CN.4.Sub.2.1992.16.En?Opendocument