Schedule and zoom registration

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Using global human rights to strengthen anti-racism organizing and resist ongoing retrenchment of democracy and human rights National Human Rights Cities/ Human Rights on the Hill July 19-21, 2022 Co-Sponsor & Host: Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center, Howard University School of Law, Washington DC

For remote/online participation, register here.

SCHEDULE (Preliminary)

Tuesday, July 19, 2022 Opening reception 5:00 PM - 8:00 PM
Enjoy Article 24 Event: Join the US Human Rights Cities Movement at The Mission Dupont Circle: 1606 20th Street NW, Washington, DC, 20009 Location: Brick Room/ light snacks will be provided

Wednesday July 20
Location: Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center, Howard University School of Law, 2900 Van Ness Street, N.W. Room 107, Notre Dame Hall, Washington, D.C. 20009

9:30 AM Welcome Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center Workshop overview: Human Rights Cities & the UN: Opportunities for Changemakers

10:00 AM Cities as Human Rights Catalysts for Local & Global Change

  • Kamelia Kemileva, Co-Director, Programmes & Administration -Geneva Cities Hub

TBD

1:00 PM Environmental Racism & CERD

  • Daniel E. Gogal, Senior Environmental Protection Specialist, Tribal and Indigenous Peoples Program Manager
  • International Human Rights Agreements - EPA Staff Lead
  • Interagency Interfaith Collaboration for Vulnerable Communities Coordinator,
  • Office of Environmental Justice, USEPA Community Support and Engagement Staff

2:30 p.m. Mobilizing International Human Rights Instruments: The UN CERD Review of the United States: Making Global Human Rights Local

  • Leon W. Russell, Chairman, NAACP National Board of Directors

3:30 PM Break followed by wrap-up/discussion

Thursday July 21

9:00 AM Welcome/ Opening recap and overview of what’s next 10:00 AM Reparation & Human Rights

  • Dreisen Heath, Racial Justice Researcher & Advocate – US Program | Human Rights Watch

11:00 AM How can the review of the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD) be Mobilized by Civil Society to Shape Public Policy?

  • Marie Joseph, Human Rights Officer and Secretary of the Human Rights Committee Civil, Political, Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Section Human Rights Treaties Branch, Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
  • Cities for CERD team

12:30 PM Lunch break

AFTERNOON SCHEDULE TBD


Human Rights City Strategy Sessions (times TBD)

  • Bringing the CERD Review Home: Strategies for local follow-up and movement-building --Participants will learn more about the politics of CERD and related treaty reviews and how we can best use these to advance human rights in local communities. Activists who were involved in preparing reviews as part of the 2022 CERD review of the U.S. will share lessons from their work, including models for other communities and ideas for engaging local communities in follow-up work to strengthen the compliance with CERD across all levels of government.
Breakout/Strategy Session on the Permanent Forum of People of African Descent: How can this new UN body help support and advance the work of CERD? How can our movements help strengthen this Forum and vice-versa?
  • Human Rights Cities: Connecting racial, reproductive, and environmental justice advocacy with global human rights opportunities (SDGs, UPR, CERD, CEDAW, etc.) --Human rights advocates from different communities will share lessons and models for using global institutions and processes to advance human rights in communities around the U.S. How can international institutions provide leverage that can help us overcome the vast challenges in the U.S. legal system—particularly following recent decisions from the U.S. Supreme Court?

Additional speakers/ Times TBD

  • District of Columbia Office of Human Rights
  • UN CERD Secretariat