Why Global Efforts To Tackle Climate Change And Sustainable Development Must ‘Leave No One Behind’
Opinions & Features
By Danny Sriskandarajah
Two weeks after the Paris Climate Change Agreement officially came into force - marking the first time that governments have agreed legally binding limits to global temperature rises - the leaders of 195 countries are meeting in Marrakech for a critical climate change conference.
Political crisis in the DRC: the AU must be proactive and learn from the past
Opinions & Features
By David Kode
On Saturday 5th October, police in Democratic Republic of Congo reportedly used tear gas and armoured vehicles to break up a demonstration organised by members of the opposition, who were gathering in spite of an official ban on protest in place since 22 September.
Many US citizens may instinctively believe they still live in the land of the free, but a new global rights rating system shows the country is far less tolerant than they may think.
The CIVICUS monitor – Informing the fightback against closing civic space
Opinions & Features
After two years of deep thinking and hard work, the global civil society alliance CIVICUS has launched the beta version of the CIVICUS Monitor – the first ever online tool specifically designed to track and rate respect for civic space, in as close to real-time as possible.
Human rights activists are being portrayed as terrorists and foreign puppets
Opinions & Features
After being detained for 50 days, World Vision’s operations manager in the Gaza Strip, Mohammad Halabi, has been charged by the Israeli authorities with channelling millions of dollars of charitable funds to Hamas.
Leaving No One Behind: Land and environmental defenders at the heart of sustainable development goals
Opinions & Features
The phrase "leaving no one behind" is used no fewer than six times in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development agreed by global leaders as a plan of action for people, planet and prosperity.
Why We Need To Make The Next Olympics 'The People’s Games'
Opinions & Features
As the world tunes into the Rio 2016 Olympics, I feel ambivalent: torn between hoping the Games will deliver for Rio and for Brazil and knowing that, without radical reform, the selection processes for Olympic host cities will continue to have serious negative consequences, often for the most disadvantaged in our societies.
UN Spotlight for Dark Shadow over Civil Society Rights
Opinions & Features
With more and more governments narrowing space for dissent and activism, the UN has emerged as a key platform to air concerns about acute rights violations and develop protections for civil society and other vulnerable groups.
Egypt: Targeting Mozn harmful to MENA regional gender justice struggle
Opinions & Features
When the Women Human Rights Defenders (WHRD) Regional Coalition for Middle East and North Africa met this past week in Beirut, one seat was noticeably empty.
Putting citizens at its heart: The UN needs a 21st century makeover
Opinions & Features
Most of today’s intergovernmental institutions – the UN included – were designed in the 1940s and 50s, with the pre-eminence of states in their blueprint and post-War hierarchies at their heart.
An open letter to our fellow activists across the globe: Building from below and beyond borders
Opinions & Features
French | Spanish
Dear friend,
Six decades after the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was adopted, creating a global covenant affirming the fact that ‘all human beings are born equal in dignity and rights,’ the vision lies in tatters, made worthless by the ever-increasing chasm between haves and have-nots.
Investigations into the 2011 human rights violations in Yemen are a matter of urgency
Opinions & Features
On 29 January 2014, I attended the side meeting on Yemen, organized by CIVICUS and its partners, as well as the 18th Session of the United Nations Universal Periodic Review (UPR) on Yemen.