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Human Rights Budgeting & Corruption in Local Level Governance

Curriculum

  • 4 Sections
  • 28 Lessons
  • Lifetime
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  • Module 1. Human Rights Budgeting Overview: What is it and Why do it?
    8
    • 1.1
      Welcome to Module 1
    • 1.2
      Definitions
    • 1.3
      What is a Human Rights-Based Economy?
    • 1.4
      What are local governments’ human rights obligations, and how do local economic policy and budget allocations affect human rights?
    • 1.5
      What does a Human Rights-based economy mean for Public Budgeting?
    • 1.6
      Why Adopt a Local Human Rights budget?
    • 1.7
      Case study: Human Rights Budgeting Dilemmas, eThekwini, South Africa
    • 1.8
      Module reflection and facilitation
  • Module 2. Implications of Human Rights Budgeting for Local Level Governance
    8
    • 2.1
      Welcome to Module 2
    • 2.2
      How do Human Rights Budgeting Principles apply in Local Settings?
    • 2.3
      Case Study: The Human Right to Food in Scotland
    • 2.4
      Case Study: Participatory Budgeting in Recife, Brazil
    • 2.5
      Case Study: Gender-Responsive Budgeting, Mexico
    • 2.6
      The Role of Local Taxation
    • 2.7
      Using Local Procurement to Promote Human Rights: Influencing the Private Sector
    • 2.8
      Module reflection and facilitation
  • Module 3. Influence of corruption on human rights and how to combat it
    11
    • 3.1
      Welcome to Module 3
    • 3.2
      What is the relationship between corruption and human rights?
    • 3.3
      Definitions and why they matter?
    • 3.4
      How can we approach and address corruption and human rights?
    • 3.5
      The Synergy between corruption and human rights
    • 3.6
      Case study: Building Political Will to Combat Corruption, Ukraine
    • 3.7
      Case study: Using Social Norms to fight Corruption in Local Governments, Vietnam
    • 3.8
      U4’s Lessons learned from anti-corruption efforts at municipal and city level
    • 3.9
      Some examples of anti-corruption initiatives in local governments around the world
    • 3.10
      Module reflection and facilitation
    • 3.11
      Final quiz
      9 Questions
  • Final Assignment: Create your own human rights budget
    2
    • 4.1
      Human Rights Budget Poster
    • 4.2
      Well done!

Module 1. Human Rights Budgeting Overview: What is it and Why do it?

What are local governments’ human rights obligations, and how do local economic policy and budget allocations affect human rights?

Local governments share the human rights obligations of their national governments, ranging across civil, political, economic, social, and cultural rights.  In fact, the UN Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights suggests that the usual classification of rights as “civil and political” or “economic, social, and cultural” is not useful in the context of budgeting.  Rather, what is important in budgeting is whether government resources are essential to ensure the realization of that right.  For example, if a national government has signed and ratified the International Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights (the “ICESCR”) and the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR), then local governments within that nation must also comply with the provisions of those treaties, allocating funds if necessary to help meet the nation’s treaty commitments.

These obligations extend to both substantive human rights obligations (such as the rights to housing and education) and procedural human rights obligations (such as the rights to information and to participation).  By way of example, rights protected by the ICESCR include the right to:

  • adequate food (Art. 11),
  • adequate housing (Art. 11),
  • education (Art. 13),
  • health (Art. 12),
  • social security (Art. 9),
  • take part in cultural life (Art. 15),
  • water and sanitation (Arts. 11 and 12), and
  • work (Art. 6).

Important procedural rights relating to the budgeting process include several rights found in the ICCPR, including:

  • the right of people to participate in the conduct of public affairs (ICCPR Art. 25); and
  • the right of access to information (ICCPR Art. 19).

Realization of these rights, regardless of whether they are economic, social, and cultural rights, civil and political rights, procedural rights, or substantive rights, may require allocation of government resources, and therefore implicate decisionmaking in the government budget process.

Please watch this video presentation by Olivier de Schutter, the UN Special Rapporteur on Extreme Poverty and Human Rights, addressing local governments’ involvement in ensuring human rights.  Before you begin, take out a piece of paper and something to write with.  Now, as you listen to the video, jot down the  human rights-based initiatives that de Schutter outlines that have budget implications, including not only delivery of life-sustaining goods and services but also creation of mechanisms for community participation and government accountability.

Note that some of the programs mentioned by the Special Rapporteur were undertaken in partnership between a local government and civil society.  That is certainly a welcome approach, but under human rights law, even with a vibrant civil society response, the legal obligation to respect, protect, and fulfil these rights remains with the government. 

What is a Human Rights-Based Economy?
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What does a Human Rights-based economy mean for Public Budgeting?
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