You are here:  WCC > Programmes > Public witness: addressing power, affirming peace > Human rights

Human rights to enhance human dignity

The WCC works to defend human dignity by addressing human rights from an ethical and theological perspective. It responds to requests from churches to support their work when human dignity is threatened. This project attempts to accompany churches and strengthen their advocacy work for human rights. This requires an holistic approach where civil and political rights, economic, cultural and social rights are addressed in an integrated way.  

Further development of the inter-religious dimension of rights and dignity; a focus on victims' and minority rights, impunity, and religious freedom; and providing the churches with a space in which they can discuss the relationship between justice, human rights and human dignity are project priorities. The project will work closely with another WCC project, the Global platform on theological reflection and analysis, on a study on justice and rights. 

The WCC participates in the three annual sessions of the new UN Human Rights Council (HRC), presenting written and oral submissions on religious freedom and intolerance, and on socioeconomic and cultural rights relating to migration, racism and xenophobia.

In addition, the WCC enables victims of human rights abuses from the South to gain access to special mechanisms within the office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights (HCHR), and to provide oral testimony as well as to get acquainted with the new HRC. Cooperation with other ecumenical actors, exchanging information and arranging regular meetings during the HRC sessions are part of this effort to build and strengthen the capacity of the churches to ensure respect for the full range of human rights, including economic, social and cultural rights.

 

Related news

10.06.09 16:58

Peru: WCC laments loss of life, condemns attempts to abrogate indigenous peoples' rights

The recent incidents of violence in Bagua, Peru are "but one instance of a series of government actions to abrogate the rights of the Indigenous peoples of the Peruvian Amazon over land and...

[more]
29.04.09 16:27

A pastor testifies he was tortured in the Philippines

Claims made by the Philippines government to a good human rights track record "are utterly false", Rev. Berlin Guerrero told the United Nations Committee against Torture this week. A victim...

[more]
09.04.09 08:50

Sri Lanka, a "humanitarian crisis exceeding all imaginable proportions"

An international ecumenical consultation has appealed to the government of Sri Lanka and the rebel movement Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to halt fighting in order to free tens of thousands...

[more]

All news on this topic


The following report was presented to and received by the Assembly. Its resolutions were proposed by the Public Issues Committee and approved by the Assembly through consensus.

 

Related publications
The struggle for social justice and human rights is the same - to bring freedom from want and fear and to respect human dignity. Genevieve Jacques, out of her commitment and experience, suggests that human rights is the compass to give us the right direction.
Bas de Gaay Fortman, Berma Klein Goldewijk - While the Universal Declaration of Human Rights says "everyone has a right" to food, housing, livelihood and health, advocacy for human rights tends to emphasize people’s civil and political rights rather than their economic and social rights. Poverty, violence and globalization are depriving more and more people of the basic human entitlements of economic and social rights. New approaches will consider poverty and violence not merely as problems to be solved by economic development but as everyday realities for millions of people in the world – realities which oblige their fellow human beings to act.
This publication, edited by Semegnish Asfaw, Guillermo Kerber and Peter Weiderud, contains the papers presented at an April 2005 WCC seminar on the responsibility to protect endangered populations, attended by theologians, scholars, researchers, academics and policy-makers.