15 October 2020, 09:00-18:00
GHRP Annual Conference
Olivier Chamard/Geneva Academy
The Conference panels are organised in partnership with:
Building on the 2019 Annual Conference which explored the connectivity of human rights mechanisms within the United Nations (UN) human rights system, the 2020 Annual Conference of the Geneva Human Rights Platform will focus on the connectivity between regional and global human rights mechanisms. It will also discuss relevant links with national systems and the overall effectiveness of these interactions in a number of specific policy areas like climate change, the fight against corruption or the COVID-19 pandemic.
The conference will bring together a large number of human rights actors from Geneva and beyond and will offer a platform for exchange, notably on co-organized panels in the afternoon and via a ‘meeting space’ during the lunch break.
The modern human rights protection system is comprised of an intricate and disparate web of UN and regional treaties and oversight mechanisms. The last half-century has seen the promulgation of a large number of international and regional human rights instruments, including numerous multilateral UN human rights treaties and the various conventions and protocols of the regional human rights systems.
The plurality of instruments, institutions and actors, which constitute the fabric of the modern human rights ‘system’, and the rich development of human rights standards and oversight mechanisms since the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, raise important challenges to the functioning of the system as a cohesive ‘whole’. In fact, while human rights are conceived by definition as universal, the proliferation of human rights norms and mechanisms at the global and regional levels raises not only significant potential for substantive complementarity and overlap, hence reinforcing mutual efforts, but also a danger of incoherence and redundancy of effort, confusion and fatigue. As such, it is important to address a number of key questions:
To explore these issues, the programme will highlight different aspects of connectivity, focusing on the question of how the mechanisms deal with them and in which ways they are and could contribute to ongoing debates.
The conference is organized around three plenary panels and four simultaneous working groups.
Parallel sessions in four working groups will explore how regional and global human rights mechanisms address particular concrete policy areas:
The concluding plenary will focus on lessons learned and outlook on how connectivity between global and regional human rights mechanisms can be strengthened in concrete areas.
Due to restrictions related to the COVID-19 pandemic, the conference will follow a hybrid format.
The morning plenary sessions can be followed in Geneva or online, while the afternoon's working groups and the concluding plenary will be exclusively online.
Those participating online will be able to interact with panelists and ask questions during the discussions.
Registration deadline extended to 11 October 2020, due tu continued demand, via this Google Form to attend the various sessions of the conference – plenaries and working groups – and indicate, for each session, whether you wish to follow it in Geneva or online.
Please note that, due to sanitary measures related to COVID-19 pandemic, places in Geneva are limited and will be allocated on a ‘first come first served’ basis.
Registered participants will be informed ahead of the conference whether they will be able to follow it online or in Geneva.
The Geneva Human Rights Platform (GHRP) provides a neutral and dynamic forum of interaction in Geneva for all stakeholders in the field of human rights to debate topical issues and challenges related to the functioning of the Geneva-based human rights system. Relying on academic research and findings, it works to enable various actors to be better connected, break silos, and, hence, advance human rights.
As a ‘Mechanisms Lab’, the GHRP supports the international community to engineer solutions to ensure the sustainable functioning of the Geneva-based human rights mechanisms and bodies, allowing them to address human rights challenges effectively.
Welcome and introductory remarks at the 2020 Annual Conference of the Geneva Human Rights Platform by Marie-Laure Salles, Director of the Graduate Institute; Jürg Lauber, Ambassador, Permanent Mission of Switzerland to the UN Office and other International Organizations in Geneva; Gloria Gaggioli, Director of the Geneva Academy; Felix Kirchmeier, Executive Director of the Geneva Human Rights Platform.
In plenary panels experts, practitioners, diplomats, civil society representatives, members of global and regional human rights mechanisms, as well as the staff of international organizations – notably discussed the overall effectiveness of these interactions, including in a number of specific policy areas like climate change, the fight against corruption or the COVID-19 pandemic.
Geneva Academy
We organize online information sessions for prospective students interested in our LLM in International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights and Master in Transitional Justice, Human Rights and the Rule of Law.
APF Library
Via its DHRTTDs Directory, the Geneva Human Rights Platform provides a comprehensive list and description of such key tools and databases. But how to navigate them? Which tool should be used for what, and by whom? This interview helps us understand better the specificities of the current highlight of the directory: APF Library
Follow up discussion to the first day of the public hearing of the International Court of Justice to unpack key arguments and draw lesson from the hearings.
UN Photo/Jean-Marc Ferré
This executive course, tailored for Geneva-based diplomats and co-organized with the support of the Swiss FDFA, addresses the negotiation practices at the multilateral level, by taking the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Council as an example of formal and informal negotiation and decision-making processes by an international intergovernmental body.
Olivier Chamard/Geneva Academy
Geneva Academy