Development and Human Rights

By Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

Development and Human Rights

📅 15 March – 25 April 2023
Virtual
Registration deadline: 14 March 2023

This certificate course offered by the Human Rights Center of the University for Peace introduces participants to the major themes and debates concerning the relationship between human rights and development. The course begins with an examination of the different conceptions of ‘development’, including its evolution in theory, policy, and practice, and its linkages with human rights.

Participants analyze the concept of human rights to development, which treats development itself as a human right and not just a process that leads to improvement in human rights.

The doctrinal and policy implications of adopting a ‘human rights-based approach to development’, and the related ‘right to development framework’, are discussed along with what such approaches mean, and what are the tools to implement them in the field. Participants will also explore the new streams of critique that have enabled a confluence as well as a questioning of the human rights-development linkages.

These include a critical analysis of the successes and failures of the UN Millennium Development Goals from a human rights perspective and the implications for the new post-2015 Sustainable Development Goals. The role of strategic litigation in achieving the right to development, whether using that terminology or not, is then looked at with the help of case studies from around the world.

The impacts of big projects on indigenous communities are specifically inquired into. In the latter part of the course, selected current issues in the human rights-development interface that are salient from a policy perspective will be examined, including the role of trade, finance, investment, development aid, and aid for trade. The course is based on a dynamic pedagogy including reading materials, video clips, case studies, and interactive webinars with the instructor.

Registration