Please post your responses here

Please post your responses here

by Mihir Kanade -
Number of replies: 7

Let's start the discussion here.

Do you think that RtD can ever be made operational in real terms, given that it is so all-comprehensive? Or is it only a fantastic rhetoric that is incapable of being translated into practice? Two readings might help you better analyze this question. One is the Endorois case which is an example of judicial operationalization of RtD (Para 269 onwards). The other reading is the right to development criteria and operational sub-criteria prepared by the High Level Task-Force on the implementation of the RtD. This is the policy, monitoring and evaluation based operationalization. Are these attempts at operationalizing RtD only utopia, or is this the right direction? There is no right or wrong answer; this is an 'informed opinion' based question.

In reply to Mihir Kanade

Andrés´

by Andrés Felipe Cárdenas Londoño -

First of all, the nature of the right to development must be highlighted, we are talking about a process. As a process, the right to development does not have a near ending, but this does not mean that it is unrealizable, it implies that it is a right that demands a proggressive attitude: it needs a set of actions that must increase during time. Those actions will translate in an improvement  in the standard of life of the population. As we can see, the right to development requires  continuous actions, serious intentions, as well as constant adjusmtents, this is because there are always new issues to tackle. It  is a right that requires an entire national and international policy in order for it to be fulfilled.

As read in the mandatory readings, the operationalization of the right to development requires many actions, but it is clear who are the right holders and the duty holders. The way in which decisions should be taken is also quite clear. Therefore, I believe that the problem with development is about lack of effort. A process can improve during time, but first you have to be willing to make big changes and to be committed in order to raise standars, but without even legislation, a real treaty and without clear policies, this will be very difficult. All of that shows the abscence of intentions from States and the international community. No one is saying that it will be easy, but surely it can be done. What is imposible, is for us to keep thinking that equity, prosperity and justice, is reserverd for only a few countries. We are talking about human rights, not european or north american rights. Should we talk in terms of developing and developed countries, we could see that the right to development is not an utopia. Furthermore, it really does exist, but nowadays it is a right reserved for only a privileged few.

In reply to Andrés Felipe Cárdenas Londoño

Re: Andrés´

by Jesús Gavilán Hormigo -

Hi, 

As far as we could see in the recomended readings, there are a lot of ways to implement human rights and specifically, the RtD. Both ways underline that it is very important to develop national and international policies about development issues, focused in continuous actions and mesures which make possible to become the RtD in a real chance to exercise and enjoy human rights. 

As Patrick Geddes tell us, we have to "think globaly and act locally...". It is true that we need to develop awareness about the RtD, we have to develop national and international policies to implement the RtD, and we have to make continuous efforts to achieve this task, but I think it is not enough. Each country, city or village have their own context, features and needs, and that is why we have to transform the previous general rules and guidelines into concrete measures and policies according with a concrete case. In order to achieve our goal, we can use tools as the "Logical Framework Approach", which allows us to analyse the context, to design a concrete plan, to execute this plan and to assess the outcome of our actions, transforming these general rules and guidelines into concrete and feasible actions to implement the RtD, which shouldn't be an utopia, it should be the guarantee of a society more equal and fair, where human beings would be able to exercise the rights that belong to us since born, human rights. 

 

Greetings, 

 

Jesús Gavilán Hormigo. 

In reply to Jesús Gavilán Hormigo

Re: Andrés´

by María Elisa Villaluna -
Hello everyone!! Operationalizing a concept as broad as human rights is a hard task but I think it can be done. The problem is that there are always implementation gaps, which I think is inevitable given that states priorities and capacities differ from one another. An example is the Millenium Development Goals (MDG). Goals are defined and operationalized (indicators were set) however, since they are merely political commitments and not legally binding, meeting its targets has been difficult and with only less than a year left until its deadline, the question is, who are accountable for its failures? But inspite of these problems, I still believe that we are still heading to the right direction. MDG is the first step and as it comes to an end, hopefully States will learn from its shortcomings and improve upon it. Perhaps this is the challenge now as we move to Post-2015 goals/Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The movement from MDGs to SDGs, I think is a reflection that development is indeed a process that cannot have an end point and it requires continous reflection towards its improvement. Cheers, Maria Elisa
In reply to María Elisa Villaluna

Re: Andrés´

by María José Barajas de la Vega -

Hello mates!! :)

To begin with, one can argue that RtD can be made operational in real terms, as we have seen for example in the Endorois case. Undoubtedly, that case has demonstrated that duty bearers of the RtD can be made accountable for its failures and violations of the right and thus the RtD is not merely utopia. 

However, opponents can retort that the Endorois case is an isolated one (or at least one of the few cases in the world nowadays) and that actually the states and the international community in general are not moving forward to get a real operationalization of the RtD simply because there is not a real commitment to it. What I really think is that maybe these opponents are not completely wrong, for several reasons:

- There has been an attempt on setting a criteria and operational sub-criteria of the RtD. But aren’t them mere guidelines for states to create development policy plans (if they wish to do so), not guaranteeing however that they are going to be followed? We cannot forget that they are only criteria and that more must be done to say that the RtD is in effect being implemented and made operational. For instance, a step forward will be to advance towards transforming the RtD to a real binding source of law (as seen in the Professor’s slides).

- Regarding cooperation between developed and developing countries, it is true that efforts have been made towards reaching development in the second ones. Nonetheless, experienced has showed that RtD has not always been guaranteed. That is why it is time for both donor countries and recipient ones to joint efforts as a partnership, renewing the operationalization of the RtD.  

- Finally, with regards to the Millenium Development Goals (MDG), I think it was a good initiative of the international community to start thinking in real terms about development and how to operationalize it. Unfortunately, we have seen that they were not as successful as they meant to be and that’s why I agree with Elisa that maybe this is the challenge now as we move to Post-2015 goals/Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). These new Goals must be, in my opinion, definitely more concrete and specific than the MDG and the international community must really commit towards their realization in way or another, monitoring their progress from time to time (which was their mistake when approving the MDG), perhaps establishing a kind of “global monitor agency” or something similar.

 

 

 

 

In reply to María José Barajas de la Vega

Re: Andrés´

by Randa Sayeh -

Hello everbody,

It is an interesting reflexion as we used to hear about cooperation but nobody try to think about it. It is important to participate and to help the undeveloped countries but the common use is to help and not to teach, what I mean is that the most important thing is helpping people by education and networks to know how to handle their countries.Many developed countries have the effort to help people to work agaisnt the poverty but what they do is that they pay and make a great projects without teaching how to handle it.

The policy to make an infasis on the health and education it is not enough as it is a matter of economic stability.

I had an experience in Nicaragua where we started a project with the local people and we open schools where the kids go to school and their mothers cook for all and they learn to read and write at the same time now they have a library where they learn how to use computers and how to organize it.

What I mean here is that the way we managed the goals we can reach something and at the same time there are a lot of oportunities for them.

The criteria and sub-criteria are a guide as Maria José said so to start with but the global world is changing day by day and we have to change and adapt to all these circumstances to change the world to a better one by implementing the human rights and to work against the poverty.

In reply to Randa Sayeh

Re: Andrés´

by Isra Taha -
To begin with, the right to development cannot be fully realized as development in itself is a never-ending progressive procedure. I am sceptical towards the The R2D approach. Even though it emphasizes human rights and development it is immensely vague and imprecise as it fails to provide a concrete framework through which R2D can be translated into practice. Fortunately, I do not believe it is impossible. There are certain projects that could make significant contribution. Although there isn’t a specific model for realizing right to development as each country’s development depends on it resources, people culture and participation and so on. In my opinion, there are two factors are the fundamental drivers for realizing right to development at a national level. And these are good governance and economic growth. These two are inalienable and go hand in hand. The R2D intentionally tends to NOT emphasize on the role of economic growth as the primary indicator of overall wellbeing of the country. However, it is apparent that developing countries weakness in improving the living standards of its people is directly related to lack of economic growth and lack of resource as prospective for increasing improvement in human development. Thus, we can conclude that without economic growth, the level of human development cannot be achieved, even with the implementation of the best policies. Good governance and the spirit of democracy are the best means through which right to development can be achieved. Hence, Implementation of strategies that ensures respect to human rights, accountability and equal access to opportunities and transparent legal system. On the international level, I believe the burden of realizing right to development falls on the responsibility of international organizations and non-governmental organizations. The state must establish collaboration with NGOs on different social, economic projects. This is due to the fact these institutions aim primarily to promote and implement development and human rights, and can provide transparent assessment of the country’s improvement and the state’s liability. The role of international organizations is also to cooperate with developing countries. As we have seen in the MDGs. To sum up, I do think that the right to development are just a utopia, as long as there aren’t serious measures to be taken against state’s that fail to provide its right- holders, holding the duty bearer accountable is satisfying but not sufficient. a comprehensive framework should be provided on how can R2D be achieved in the different countries. As a person from one of the least developed countries, I could tell you, many people could care less about r2d until it provides us with serious assistance on how it can be translated in real life, and more visible actions towards those duty-bearers that fail to work properly on providing us with room for development.
In reply to Mihir Kanade

Re: Please post your responses here

by Mihir Kanade -

Excellent points everyone. I think your responses reflect a significant amount of pragmatism with respect to RtD. Andres, Jesus, Maria Elisa, Maria Jose, Randa and Israa all highlight the fact that RtD, while being an excellent idea, suffers from some serious limitations in practice. But despite these limitations, the six of you were still optimistic that if these limitations are surmounted, there are ways to make the RtD operational in real terms.

Two major obstacles in operationalizing the right to development in real terms were highlighted by you, and those are 'lack of political will' and 'corruption'. Both of these are many times the cause and effect of each other, as we will see in the next session on development aid (which I really like discussing). In a lot of ways, lack of political will of the developed countries can be attributed as a major obstacle to RtD. On the other hand, corruption in developing countries (and in some developed countries) is also one major obstacle. But the important thing is that lack of political will of developed countries and corruption in developing countries feed on each other! But more of that in the next session. 

Having said that, as I mentioned in my presentation, RtD started off in the 1980s, and was essentially on the backburner until the economists (like Sen) started challenging the concept of development as economic growth only. Once that was done in 1998, the human rights field took note of it and practically revived the concept of 'right to development' as well. And it was only after that, that the first special rapporteur, Arjun Sengupta, was appointed to make sense of RtD. From 1999 to about 2006, Sengupta's job was to expand the contents and scope of the RtD and produce literature on it, which was lacking. And only in the last six or seven years have we seen the operationalization of RtD begin to take shape. 

The Endorois case is a good example of this fact. Despite being on the statute book (the African Charter), RtD was never invoked or pronounced upon by the African Commission until 2009. And that was because no one knew what its contents were! And no one knew how to decide whether a violation of RtD has taken place or not (the vector model was not existing). But now, after Sengupta's work, the African Commission used it to find against the Kenyan Government a violation of RtD. 

Similarly, on the policy, monitoring and evaluation side of things, new criteria and sub-criteria are being developed to measure RtD. There is a whole unit now at the OHCHR dealing with operationalizing the RtD. Maria Elisa and Maria Jose also talked about the current MDGs and the post-2015 SDGs in this context. We will be discussing a lot more about this in the last week of the course when we deconstruct all the lacunae in the current MDGs. But, you all are correct when you say that the current development goals, targets and indicators are not only non-binding (they are only political committments), but are also fundamentally flawed. In the last week, I will actually make a case that the MDGs run contrary to the very idea of right to development. But let's wait for that till the last week. 

Israa made a reference to the vagueness of the RtD as a concept which makes her skeptical about it. I think the skepticism stems from the lived reality of a lot of us from the third world. The fact that the concept has been on paper for a long time now, and that very ad hoc steps have been taken in isolated instances so far, fuel this skepticism. At the same time, however, it is these ad hoc instances such as the Endorois case and the criteria from the OHCHR that give scope for optimism as well. They show us that, given the right political will, the right efforts from human rights actors including courts, and the right advocacy, the right is capable of being translated into operation and implementation.

There is one very important point that I would like to highlight here. Israa mentioned the realities faced by people in the third world about lack of economic growth as being perceived as the main reasons for lack of development. And she pointed out lack of good governance as one of the reasons.  In this context, she also pointed out that RtD focuses on other issues in addition to economic growth, but the contexts of third world countries might need a priority focus on economic growth.

The first thing to highlight here is that Israa's point is related to her personal experiences which reflect the lived reality of people in the third world. This is what the school of international law titled as the 'Third World Approaches to International Law' tries to bring forth. I personally identify myself as an academic leaning towards this school of thought as well, and our analysis tends to expose the limitations of international law from the perspective of the lived realities of the third world.

Having said that, it is important to bear in mind that the concept of RtD emerged from the third world countries themselves as a response to the neo-colonialist policies of the West. It is an argument put forth by the third world countries that development is a comprehensive process of enhancing the well-being of all populations, and is a matter of right, not a privilege. The concept's most important argument is that development must not stop at focusing on economic growth only, but must go beyond it and focus on whether that economic growth brings about enhancement of well-being of people or not. 

Now, the argument that economic growth is a pre-condition for fulfillment of human rights has re-emerged in the last few years in academic and policy circles, and one strong proponent of this argument is economist Dambisa Moyo from Zambia. We will read about her work next week, but before that, I would highly urge you all to watch her fascinating TED talk here. She argues that in Africa, a lot of people worry more about economic growth and whether they are able to have money to survive another day, rather than some other human rights such as the right to vote. Thus, using the Chinese model of growth, she argues that a trade-off between different human rights might be essential.

The RtD framework, however, focuses on the Vector Approach. This is an entirely different approach than Moyo's ideas. The RtD approach says that there can be no trade-off between different human right. We can certainly prioritize economic rights or social rights in terms of governmental policies for fulfilling them, but such prioritizing of one set of human rights cannot come at the cost of deteriorating other human rights. In conceptual terms, that, to my mind, has been one of the biggest contributions of the RtD approach.

From my experience, I know that different participants have deeply divergent opinions after hearing Moyo's views, so i will urge you all to listen to her as we go ahead with week three. 

In sum, for this week, we all agree that operationalization of RtD is not impossible - there are positive developments in the last few years to be optimistic about - but it will require overcoming some deep structural issues simultaneously. Having said that, the value of the right in advocacy terms should not be underestimated at all. It is a very strong advocacy claim, and Courts will help more and more gradually. Hopefully, as we will discuss in the last week, the new post-2015 SDGs will also transform our cautious optimism into action.

Cheers,

Mihir