Stephen Corson earned his PhD from Old Dominion University and now works for an elected official in New York City.
Kelley Ferguson, editor of HeadCount’s Issue Pages, currently serves as the Eugene, Ore., Team Leader.
Featured Organization: Start a student chapter of the U.S. Campaign for Burma. Visit our Volunteer page to find more organizations like this.
Featured Appeal: Urge Congress to make Human Rights a central focus of U.S. foreign policy. Visit the legislative action page to email them this or any other message.
Be Aware of Burma
International outrage is brewing regarding the plight of the Burmese people and their treatment at the hands of an oppressive military regime.
View a video by HeadCount artist Brett Dennen by clicking to the left or visit the U.S. Campaign for Burma to learn more.
Darfur. Burma. Sri Lanka. You hear about them on the news. They represent just a few of the trouble spots that underscore the scope of human suffering around the world.
Every year, $42.5 billion changes hands in the human trafficking industry; 11.4 million refugees and internally displaced persons are spread across the globe; 16,000 children die every day from hunger-related causes; genocide continues to ravage Darfur and Eastern Chad with no end in sight.
For those who want to get involved – locally, nationally or globally – this primer is designed to give you a feel for what’s out there and what can be done to help.
Human Rights is a broad term that covers a wide range of different issues. The Universal Declaration on Human Rights (UDHR) is considered by many to be the definitive framework for global human rights (the Guinness Book of World Records claims that the UDHR is the modern world's most translated document) and is a good place to start if you want to learn more. Closely related to human rights is the notion of “human security." The 1994 Human Development Report first introduced the concept of human security and is a good place to start for those that want to gather more information on this dimension of human rights.
A number of non-governmental organizations (NGOs) have been established over the years with a specific focus on human rights issues. These and other human rights NGOs play the role of global community organizers by spreading research and information about human rights and advocating through the public. They also advocate through governments and multilateral organizations, such as the United Nations to campaign for various human rights agendas.
A short list of human rights issues that these organizations focus on might include:
· The use of banned munitions such as cluster bombs.
· Post conflict abuses such as the alleged torture and detention of enemy combatants.
· Genocide, particularly recent incidents that have plagued sub-Saharan Africa in recent years, most notably in Rwanda and Darfur.
· The systematic neglect of large populations, such as the current situations in Zimbabwe, Burma and North Korea.
· Military conflicts taking a large toll on civilian populations, as has happened in Sri Lanka.
· The Refugee issues in various locations worldwide.
· The international slave trade and Human Trafficking.
Here are some additional links where you can learn more about human rights:
February 8
Poor You: Samuel Bowles an economist in New Mexico has some bad news about job growth
Samuel Bowles, a New Mexico economist has some sobering news. In New Mexiso jobs are being lost more than a hundred times faster than they are being created. Also, social mobility is increasingly difficult. View Blog
February 5
Obama Budget Escalates War on some Drugs Slightly
Obama's proposed 2010 budget is slated to increase funding to prevent drug use 3.5% over the course of the year View Blog