10 December 2020, 9:00-10:15 CET via Zoom, hosted by Centre on Law & Social Transformation, University of Bergen, with a contribution from UNESCO Chair Gerd Oberleitner and Director of the International Centre for the Promotion of Human Rights at the Local and Regional Levels Klaus Starl.
[from the organizers:] “As HCRs become an ever more popular concept this seminar aims to look at what human rights cities are and what they do. Why are cities choosing to become human rights cities and what are they accomplishing by doing so? While it is clear that HCRs are especially concerned with human rights, what differentiates them from other cities? Why do we need cities that specifically work on human rights? Do not all cities, certainly in western democracies, strive towards upholding human rights? What processes have the individual cities been part of, and what actions have been taken after the new title? And what are the consequences for the city and its people once they declare themselves an HCR?
In the seminar we will hear from four European HCRs as they tell us about their experiences. We will hear from representatives from Graz, Austria (the first European HRC); Lund, Sweden (Ulrika Dagård, Strategist Socal Sustainability and Human Rights); Utrecht, Netherlands (Hans Sakkers) and Bergen, Norway (Lubna Boby Jaffry Comissioner for Work, Social Services and Housing). They will talk about their work as human rights cities and join in a conversation moderated by Jostein Kobbeltvedt from the Rafto Foundation on Human Rights.”
UNESCO Chair in Human Rights and Human Security Gerd Oberleitner and Director of the International Centre for the Promotion of Human Rights at the Local and Regional Levels Klaus Starl will provide insights on the Human Rights City of Graz, the first of its kind in Europe, and contributed to the discussion.
All information here
Watch the full webinar here: