International Human Rights Monitoring
International Human Rights Monitoring We know that political leaders will not follow human rights obligations without pressure from attentive and informed residents working to ensure that international rights standards are honored in local practices. This takes work to learn about what specific legal obligations national and local leaders have and to monitor local practices to make sure they conform to international expectations. Through the US Human Rights Network, we're able to come together as grassroots US human rights organizers to draw international attention to the gaps between US international legal commitments and the actual practices in the communities where we live.
Universal Periodic Review The next US UPR runs from April 2019 through September 2019.
- On May 11, 2015 the United States human rights record was reviewed by the United Nations Human Rights Council during the Universal Periodic Review (UPR), which resulted in 348 recommendations to the U.S. Government. In September the U.S. Government will decide which recommendations they will accept and which they will reject. USHRN has compiled this brief overview of some of the top recommendations to help U.S. advocates raise awareness and advocate for adoption of these recommendations.
- UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights--Resource page on Universal Periodic Review
- Statistics Database: Look up recommendations made to all governments to improve human rights practices--this website allows users to track progress and view government responses to UPR recommendations.
Prior UPR Documentation
- 2015 US Human Rights Network Compilation
- 2010 Shadow Report- USHRN
- 2010 submission on racial health disparities and discrimination
Background on Human Rights International Monitoring and Review Processes
- Advancing Racial Justice and Human Rights: Rights-Based Strategies for the Current Era: On June 1, 2018, the Human Rights Institute at Columbia University Law School convened its 15th annual CLE Symposium on Human Rights in the United States, a signature event of the Human Rights Institute’s Bringing Human Rights Home Lawyers’ Network. The day-long event brought together more than 150 leading U.S. lawyers, activists, and academics, along with federal and local government representatives to share strategies to advance racial justice within a domestic and global context increasingly hostile to human rights.
- UN Training Manual
- UN Human Rights Handbook
Toolkits
Expert working group on People of African Descent: Submission Template for US Civil Society
Documentation on US Human Rights Practices
- UN Expert Working Group on People of African Descent-US Country Report
- USHRN Report: 2018 Status of Human Rights in the United States
Other International Monitoring Bodies