Thinking Internationally - Acting
Locally
by Judith Blau
www.commondreams.org/, December
6, 2007
Americans ignored Martin Luther King when
he urged that the civil rights movement broaden to become a human
rights movement just as the nation earlier ignored FDR when he
proposed a bold human rights framework for the US. Human rights
are not part of the American psyche, are not part of our laws,
are rarely mentioned in the media, and they are not in the US
Constitution. To be sure, Civil and Political Rights are part
of our Constitution, but these are citizens' rights, not human
rights. America had a short flirtation with human rights, in the
disorienting post-World War II period. Europe was in ruins and
America was magnanimous. Shortly after the UN was founded in 1945,
a small committee was formed to draft the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights. The US was supportive and the committee was chaired
by Eleanor Roosevelt. The US signed the 1948 UDHR, not a legal
treaty but a document of great international significance, still
today.
The initial idea in 1948 was to redraft
the UDHR as a treaty and send it out to states for their signatures
and ratification, but the United States became increasingly adamant
as the Cold War dragged on that it would not ratify a treaty that
was such a bold challenge to the rights of capitalists. The UDHR
advances civil and political rights as well as property rights,
but it also encompasses social security, freedom from discrimination,
and spells out certain rights - the right to work, to an adequate
standard of living, to adequate food, to medical care, to assistance
in old age, to special protections for mothers and children, and
to education. The stalemate was finally broken when the UDHR was
divided into two: International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights (ICCPR) and the International Covenant on Economic, Social
and Cultural Rights (ICESCR). The truth of the matter is that
the US is party to neither. It uses a legal loophole so that its
signature on the ICCPR is not binding ("not self executing").
Students in my two classes this semester
read the constitutions of other countries. In one class the focus
was human rights (housing rights, gay and lesbian rights, rights
of indigenous peoples, rights to peace, healthcare rights, rights
of women, and so forth). In the other, the focus was labor rights
(collective bargaining, decent pay, maternity leave, vacation
with pay, and so forth). University of Richmond Law School provides
online access to almost all state constitutions with English translations.
Remarkably, most countries have recently revised and expanded
their constitutional human rights provisions along the lines of
international human rights law.
Empowered, the students decided to have
a Mock Constitutional Convention where they would ceremoniously
unfurl their nearly 60 Amendments they had written during the
semester. We invited a few local leaders to join the conversation
and to briefly speak - the Mayor of Chapel Hill, the Mayor of
Carrboro, labor organizers from the University of North Carolina,
NAACP members, and local activists. The two mayors are justifiably
proud of their progressive cities. They have collective bargaining
whereas the state and university do not. The residents of Carrboro
recently voted to impeach Bush. Chapel Hill is one of the nation's
leading cities on green energy, and both mayors are pleased their
municipalities advance the rights of gays and lesbians. Both mayors
described their towns as having (their words) "human rights
orientations."
Is there a problem? You bet there is.
Like all American cities Carrboro and Chapel Hill are plagued
by human rights abuses: homelessness, inadequate health care,
food insecurity, inadequate labor protections, low wages, long
work hours, migrants who live in terror of raids, discrimination,
obscene gaps between black and white incomes, and growing numbers
without health insurance. Protection of farmers' rights is incomplete
as is realization of equality for African Americans and other
minorities, and since human rights and environmental protections
go hand in hand, it is imperative that the two cities cut carbon
emissions, reduce reliance on private automobiles, and have race-
and class-neutral policies for waste sites.
We have come full circle. Chapel Hill
and Carrboro cities are situated in capitalist America, a nation
where the gap between the wealthy and the poor is greater than
any other industrialized country, a nation with the highest child
poverty rates among all the OECD countries, and, indeed, the US
has not ratified a single human rights treaty. Is it hopeless?
Set this aside for a moment and consider that countries around
the world, all mostly poor, all much poorer than the US, have
revised their constitutions to embrace human rights. My next point
has astonishing implications. An international network, People's
Movement for Human Rights Education, is assisting cities around
the world to become Human Rights Cities. Most that have started
pilot projects face far more complex challenges than any American
city does, including deep, structural poverty (Timbuktu, Mali)
and one, decades of civil war and genocide (Musha, Rwanda). Others
in the network are in capitalist countries, including Winnipeg,
Canada, and one American city, Eugene, Oregon is not in the network
but models itself along similar lines.
Before we shrug and toss off the idea
that American cities do not have the democratic capacity for such
projects, we should recall that when Tocqueville came to America
in 1831 he found communities to be animated, inclusive, and highly
participatory. Because many American cities are still today potentially
democratic, we can turn to them again to advance deeper forms
of democracy and to propose they be Human Rights Cities. This
requires building broad coalitions and partnerships, and beyond
that, reaching out and involving all citizens as economic and
social security expands and becomes universal, and as cultural
and social pluralism more securely anchored.
Judith Blau teaches at the University
of North Carolina, Chapel Hill and is president of the US chapter
of Sociologists without Borders.
Human Rights watch
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