Human rights protection
Universality
Equality
Participation
Rule of law
What are human rights?
Human rights are the basic rights and freedoms every person has simply for being human no matter their nationality, gender, race, beliefs, or status. They set the minimum standards for how people must be treated so they can live with dignity, freedom, and equality.
Libya urged to shut migrant detention centres at U.N. meeting
Universality is being violated because of torture, killings, and abusive detention deny basic rights owed to every person regardless of status. Equality is violated because Migrants/refugees are singled out for mistreatment and denied equal protection of the law. Participation detainees lack real access to fair asylum procedures, legal aid, and independent oversight states at the UN explicitly urged Libya to close the centers and build a fair system. Interdependence is being violated because abusive detention triggers cascading violations (life, freedom from torture, health, due process), showing how rights rise/fall together. Rule of law is violated because arbitrary detention, mass graves, and impunity contradict due process and accountability requirements under national and international law.
Convención Internacional sobre la protección de los derechos de todos los trabajadores migratorios y de sus familiares (artículos 28, 43 (e) y 45 (c))
Universality: these abuses violate arts. 28, 43(e), 45(c) because basic health rights and emergency care are denied just because people are migrants/detained, even though the Convention says those protections apply to all migrant workers and their families, regardless of status. Equality / non-discrimination: migrants and refugees are singled out for torture, abusive detention and exclusion from health and social services, contradicting the Convention’s requirement of equal treatment with nationals in access to those services. Participation and due process: detainees do not have real access to legal aid, fair procedures or independent oversight, so they cannot effectively claim the rights recognised in the Convention. Interdependence of rights: abusive detention leads to a chain of violations, life, freedom from torture, health, due process, showing how the rights protected by these articles fall together when detention is violent and arbitrary. Rule of law: arbitrary detention, mass graves and impunity contradict the Convention’s logic that states must organise their laws and institutions so that migrant workers can actually access health and social services and be protected against abuse.
Rule of law
Clear laws, fair procedures, and real accountability turn ethical commitments into enforceable protections (investigations, remedies, courts). Without this, universality and equality stay as slogans.
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Universality
Everyone has the same basic rights, everywhere, no exceptions. This principle blocks “selective” protection and pushes states to extend rights protections to all groups, including migrants, minorities, and dissidents.
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Participation
People must be able to shape the decisions that affect their lives (vote, organize, speak, access information). Building participation into laws and policies helps surface harms early and prevents abuses.
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Equality
With equity to get there
.Rights protection has to be non-discriminatory. Because some groups faced historical barriers, equity measures (like targeted access or resources) are ethically justified to level the playing field so equality becomes real, not just on paper.
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Human rights protection
Isabella Juarez Navarro
Created on October 27, 2025
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Transcript
Human rights protection
Universality
Equality
Participation
Rule of law
What are human rights?
Human rights are the basic rights and freedoms every person has simply for being human no matter their nationality, gender, race, beliefs, or status. They set the minimum standards for how people must be treated so they can live with dignity, freedom, and equality.
Libya urged to shut migrant detention centres at U.N. meeting
Universality is being violated because of torture, killings, and abusive detention deny basic rights owed to every person regardless of status. Equality is violated because Migrants/refugees are singled out for mistreatment and denied equal protection of the law. Participation detainees lack real access to fair asylum procedures, legal aid, and independent oversight states at the UN explicitly urged Libya to close the centers and build a fair system. Interdependence is being violated because abusive detention triggers cascading violations (life, freedom from torture, health, due process), showing how rights rise/fall together. Rule of law is violated because arbitrary detention, mass graves, and impunity contradict due process and accountability requirements under national and international law.
Convención Internacional sobre la protección de los derechos de todos los trabajadores migratorios y de sus familiares (artículos 28, 43 (e) y 45 (c))
Universality: these abuses violate arts. 28, 43(e), 45(c) because basic health rights and emergency care are denied just because people are migrants/detained, even though the Convention says those protections apply to all migrant workers and their families, regardless of status. Equality / non-discrimination: migrants and refugees are singled out for torture, abusive detention and exclusion from health and social services, contradicting the Convention’s requirement of equal treatment with nationals in access to those services. Participation and due process: detainees do not have real access to legal aid, fair procedures or independent oversight, so they cannot effectively claim the rights recognised in the Convention. Interdependence of rights: abusive detention leads to a chain of violations, life, freedom from torture, health, due process, showing how the rights protected by these articles fall together when detention is violent and arbitrary. Rule of law: arbitrary detention, mass graves and impunity contradict the Convention’s logic that states must organise their laws and institutions so that migrant workers can actually access health and social services and be protected against abuse.
Rule of law
Clear laws, fair procedures, and real accountability turn ethical commitments into enforceable protections (investigations, remedies, courts). Without this, universality and equality stay as slogans.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit
Universality
Everyone has the same basic rights, everywhere, no exceptions. This principle blocks “selective” protection and pushes states to extend rights protections to all groups, including migrants, minorities, and dissidents.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit
Participation
People must be able to shape the decisions that affect their lives (vote, organize, speak, access information). Building participation into laws and policies helps surface harms early and prevents abuses.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit
Equality
With equity to get there
.Rights protection has to be non-discriminatory. Because some groups faced historical barriers, equity measures (like targeted access or resources) are ethically justified to level the playing field so equality becomes real, not just on paper.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit