UPR Cities Project

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About the UPR Cities Project

Local governments have jurisdiction over a range of human rights issues, including those related to housing, education, employment, and criminal justice. Mayors, local governments, and organized communities are particularly well-situated to advance human rights and build a culture of human rights based on dignity, freedom from discrimination, and opportunity. The international community provides resources for local communities through regular monitoring of human rights treaties and related international standards.

The Universal Periodic Review process involves quadrennial reviews of every United Nations member government's human rights performance. It was established by the UN Human Rights Council in 2006 in order to strengthen governments' compliance with international human rights obligations and to help identify models of best practices. Another aim of the process, and a requirement for improved human rights performance, is to develop greater connections between people in local communities and international human rights processes. Work at local levels is critical to building a global constituency of human rights defenders who can help defend rights locally while enhancing our global capacities for protecting and promoting human rights, dignity, and justice for everyone. The human rights cities movement is an effort to help further this work, and we're encouraging local activists to take part in this 2019 UPR review of the United States.

Key steps to participating in the UPR Cities Project:

  1. Convene community conversations about the state of human rights in your locale: Identify groups and activists in your city or community to participate or provide input about local conditions, or organize one or more events where diverse groups of residents can share experiences and consider the content of your local report. Public meetings, surveys, or other kinds of activities can generate local input and raise awareness about the UPR process.
  2. Prepare a report of local human rights conditions, achievements, and recommendations for change: Compile lessons from your consultations into a 5 page summary report. What are some key problems/challenges faced by people in your region? Are there some areas where your community does well? (We want to identify both positive advances as well as places where work is needed). The longer report should be aimed at local officials and activists. Drawing from this document, develop a short 1-2 page summary that can inform the overall US civil society report and our lobbying strategy at the United Nations Human Rights Council UPR meeting in April 2020. All documentation must be received by September 15, 2019 to be included in the national compilation report to the United Nations Human Rights Commission.
  3. Share results of the UPR process with local officials and residents: In April of 2020, the United Nations will release its official recommendations to the United States government, based on the UPR process. It is essential that local human rights defenders work to raise consciousness about this document and to press local governments to take action in response to official recommendations. It is not enough to secure international treaties. We also need vigilant communities ready to stand up and demand that human rights are recognized and protected for everyone. Be sure your community is informed about the offical UPR report, and convene community residents and groups to discuss the results and how to hold local officials accountable for the recommendations.

Tools, Examples, and Templates

  • Birmingham Mayor's Office Human Rights Dialogue
    • This document distills the conversations that took place at the Birmingham Human Rights Dialogue in March 2015, as part of the most recent US review under the UPR. The report describes how human rights can strengthen local policy-making and offers concrete ways that mayors throughout the United States can incorporate human rights standards and strategies into their daily work to build upon human rights initiatives emerging across the United States. (This report was prepared by Columbia Law School’s Human Rights Institute in collaboration with the Office of Birmingham Mayor William Bell.) See Appendix A for outline of Birmingham’s Human Rights Dialogue program. Panels included the following themes: Social Justice, Education, Immigration, Marriage Equality, Homelessness & Poverty. Organizers might use this as a model for local consultations, which can be organized in conjunction with local authorities or convened by community organizations independently of local government. The goal of such conversations, however, is to help inform local leaders and remind them of their obligations to ensure that local policies conform to international human rights laws and standards.




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