Volunteers and IGGs on quality research trip at Pagsung shea butter center |
When our media sub team
asked me to write a blog, it didn’t take me long to decide what I wanted to
write about. Human Rights Day is this coming Saturday 10th December
and it has got me thinking. The organisation that I am doing my International
Citizens Service scheme through, International Service, is a human rights NGO,
but how have human rights actually played a role in my last six months on
placement? What relevance do human rights have to the people we work with?
My Ghanaian counterpart,
Francis, and I have led two groups of volunteers since June on a project that
is by now very dear to my heart. Our project works with rural people in the
Tolon district of Northern Ghana to improve their income generating activities,
and to assist them to be better able to support their families.
We have assisted mainly
women in income generating groups to become cooperatives (being in a
cooperative provides many potential advantages), and to improve the quality of
their product, be it shea butter, rice processing, or dressmaking. Both of our
two cohorts of volunteers have worked very hard to help assist the groups that
we work with, and I am very proud of the achievements that they have made.
However, as I thought about
Human Rights Day, and what that means for Tolon, I realised something. If we
were to ask the income generating groups that we work with what they think has
been achieved together, they would list the research trips that we organised,
the training sessions, the cooperative certificates, but they would never
mention the advancement of their rights. Of course they wouldn’t. I’m pretty
certain that most of the women that we work with don’t even know what ‘human
rights’ means. So, how do human rights impact on the people that we work with,
if they are unaware of their existence?
Rights
Based Approach: what does it mean?
First, it is important to
consider how human rights and development work together. International Service
describes itself (on its website) as an organisation that takes a ‘rights based
approach to development’. According to the UN High Commissioner for Human
Rights,
‘a
human rights based approach is a conceptual framework for the process of human
development that is normatively based on international human rights standards
and operationally directed to promoting and protecting human rights. It seeks
to analyse inequalities which lie at the heart of development problems and
redress discriminatory practices and unjust distributions of power that impede
development progress.’
In other words, an
organisation that takes a rights based approach focuses on whether people have
access to their rights, as defined under international law, such as the right
to an education. It also focuses on how the organisation can ensure that people
acquire these rights and comply with their duties to respect and provide these
rights to others.
Human
rights approach has brought in the donors and opened doors
So, how has a rights based
approach impacted in practice on our NFED Tolon project? One such way is that it
has contributed to International Service being accepted in Ghana, and has
provided funding opportunities.
Whether you agree with human
rights or not, they are universally accepted concepts under international law.
Nearly every country in the world has signed at least one international human
rights treaty. Therefore, it is easier for international NGO’s to offer
assistance to a country when they aim to achieve the same human rights goals
that a country has already subscribed to.
Furthermore, donors are more
likely to donate to organisations that are safe bets, that take an approach
that is universally approved of.
Therefore, it could be
argued that by taking a human rights approach to development, International
Service is better placed to gain funding and gain support from the countries
that they want to work in. If International Service had not taken a human
rights based approach, perhaps they would not have been successful enough to
start up our NFED Tolon project at the beginning of this year.
Human
rights approach is a participatory process
By taking a rights based
approach to development, International Service has also been guided by certain
principles deemed essential to human rights. One such principle is that
development should be participatory, namely, that the people who are meant to
benefit from the efforts of the NGO should participate in the design, planning
and evaluation of a project.
It could therefore be argued
that human rights have had an impact on the women that we work with when we
conducted initial needs assessments to find out what they wanted from us, or
when we have asked them whether they thought an event was successful and what
needed to be improved.
Human
Rights approach focuses on capacity building
Another way in which a human
rights approach impacts on the work we are doing in Tolon is that it focuses on
building the capacity of local people, rather than providing resources.
International Service is very clear that it is a skills based organisation and
not a resource supplying one.
This has a significant
impact on the people that we work with in that we don’t provide them with
school buildings or boreholes for instance, but with skills so that they have
the capacity to go out and organise boreholes for themselves.
IGGs and volunteers at an awareness activity at Katinga market |
Does
it matter that the income generating groups that we work with don’t know what
human rights are?
Regardless of the above ways
in which human rights have impacted on the people that we work with in Tolon
district, this can’t overshadow the fact that the majority in these communities
still have no idea what human rights are.
For instance, when the
project was set up, International Service and NFED Tolon would have designed
the planning documents in line with human rights. But the majority of the women
that we work with can’t read. They wouldn’t have been part of this analysis of human
rights a great deal.
Then, as the project went
along, various groups of volunteers would have turned up and maybe mentioned
they were part of a human rights NGO, but most of the time the women we work
with would have been listening for the part that told them what volunteers were
actually going to do, rather than the rationale behind their work.
When considering the
perspective of our beneficiaries, human rights wouldn’t have seemed
particularly important, if noticed at all. But does this even matter? Who cares
what tools or approaches are used if it brings the results Tolon district
wants?
I decided to get the
opinions of our team on this point. We all agreed that the majority of people
that we work with don’t know what human rights are and we discussed whether we
should be doing more to inform our community about human rights.
Some volunteers were
concerned that by explaining rights to the people we work with, this would not
improve our beneficiaries’ lives any more, and might even cause harm. For
example, if they went back to their families and ‘demanded their rights’, this
could have a destructive impact on family dynamics and not actually achieve
anything.
Some argued that human
rights are intrinsically a Global North ideology that can’t properly be made
sense of in an African context. Therefore, human rights language could actually
confuse and complicate matters rather than improve development. If this were
the case, then it would be extremely important that the people that we are
working with in Tolon district were aware of the actual harm International
Service was causing.
Despite the fact that most
African countries have legally recognised human rights as their own by signing
international human rights treaties, and even the African Charter on Human
Rights, demonstrating a regional consensus that human rights are not, in fact,
harming African nations, this argument raises the point that beneficiaries need
to have a full understanding of the organisation assisting them in order to be
able to protect themselves, and ensure that they are being assisted in a way
that they agree with.
Therefore, perhaps a
compromise needs to be found between encouraging local people to understand and
be aware of their rights, yet introduce this awareness in a strategic and
gradual process, so as not to disrupt communities.
In sum, despite a lack of
awareness surrounding their rights, human rights have a significant impact on
the women that we work with. Therefore, it is important to raise awareness of
our beneficiaries’ rights, albeit in a strategic and gradual manner.
Post by Katie Connan
No comments:
Post a Comment