Since the dawn of
human civilization, education has been playing a significant role in awakening,
educating and empowering human beings for imparting multiple tasks in society.
Thus, education is widely acknowledged an indicator for human development and
seen as a way to enable people to improve their quality of life, leading to
desired transformation in the social, cultural and economic policies and
practices. The conceptual core of human rights education is human dignity, its
recognition, fulfillment, and universalization. As human rights are most
readily adaptable to the study of positive peace, the social, political, and
economic conditions most likely to provide the environment and process for
social cohesion and nonviolent conflict resolution. Further more, The Vienna
Declaration (2001) affirms that States
should strive to eradicate illiteracy and should direct education towards the
full development of the human personality and to the strengthening of respect
for human rights and fundamental freedoms.
The World Conference on Human Rights
calls on all States and institutions to include human rights, humanitarian law,
democracy and rule of law as subjects in the curricula of all learning
institutions in formal and non-formal settings.
Human Rights Education is an indispensable part of the
right to education and has gained larger recognition as a human right itself.
The knowledge of the rights and freedoms, of oneself as much as of the others,
is considered as a fundamental tool as mentioned in the Constitution of India
to guarantee the respect of all rights for each and every person. The key stone
of human rights education is that the education should not only aim at
producing trained professional workers but also inculcating values of peace and
tolerance for higher purpose. Human rights education aims at providing people
and students with the abilities to accomplish and produce societal changes and
respond social reality for realization of a sense of social justice for poor,
marginalized and weaker section of society( NHRC 2007).
What is Human Rights Education?
Human Rights Education comprises efforts to build a
universal culture of human rights through the imparting of knowledge and skills
and the moulding of attitudes. Human Rights education should be directed
towards:
Strengthening of respect for human rights and fundamental
freedoms;
Full development of human personality and the sense of
its dignity;
Promotion of understanding, tolerance, gender equality
and friendship among all nations, indigenous peoples marginal groups and
racial, national, ethnic, religious, and linguistic communities;
Enabling of all persons to participate effectively in a
free society ; and
The further more of the activities of the UN for maintenance
of peace (Tiwari 2004).
The focus of human rights education on the personality
development of a human being in terms of not only literacy but also a world
where all people would live in dignity with one another, free of humiliation,
exploitation and discrimination. In fact, it is recognized that the measure of
human development has failed to capture the distributional dimensions in human
development. They are averages that conceal wide disparities in the overall
population specifically marginalized groups such as sex, ethnicity, religion,
caste and disability occurs through the process of inequality, exclusion and
discrimination. Hence, the idea is that the people should be participating in
decisions that determine their lives in a creative and productive way of peace
building and harmonize the affairs of multicultural society without hatred and
violence.
Human Rights Education : A Movement
The Human Rights education has become a worldwide
movement, diversified and continually changing field, responding to
developments in world society and, to some extent, to the advancing knowledge
and insights of research & development. As practiced in elementary and
secondary schools and presented in the university programs that prepare
classroom teachers, human rights education goes by various names: conflict
resolution, multicultural education, development education, world order
studies, and, more recently, environmental education and Alternative Dispute
resolution and restorative justice education. Each of these approaches responds
to a particular set of problems that have been perceived as the causes of
social injustice, conflict, and war. Each could also be classified as
"preventive education" as it seeks to prevent the occurrence of the
problems that inspire it. More important, each is conceived aseducation for
searching peace through ensuring human rights of the stakeholders involved in
conflicts and
thus acknowledges that it is intended to be a means to the realization of a set
of social values. Although each relates to building and structuring peace in
the sense of social cohesion and the avoidance of the form of violence to which
it responds, both peace researchers and activists and human rights scholars and
advocates can agree that violence in all its forms is an assault on human
dignity.
Models of Human Rights Education : There
are three different models of human rights education prevalent in different
parts of the world including India.
1.Values and Awareness Model
The Values and Awareness Model focuses on transmitting
“basic knowledge of human rights issues and to foster its integration into
public values” based on its philosophical-historical approach. This model is
what people commonly think of when human rights are concerned with the
beneficiary audience being the general public with topics including global
human rights and more cultural based matters. This model includes environmental
awareness, health and hygiene and also consumer related rights in day to day
transactions with market.
2.Accountability Model
The Accountability Model is associated with the legal and
political approach to-human rights in which the learners which the model
beneficiaries are already involved via professional roles. The model is
incorporated by means of training and networking, covering topics such as court
cases, codes of ethics, and how to deal with the media including areas such as
transparency, accountability, justice and right to information components
included.
3.Transformation Model
This model of human rights education stressed on the
psychological and sociological aspects of human rights. The topics towards
which this model is effective are those including vulnerable populations and
people with personal experiences effected by the topic, such as children,
women, minorities and dalit rights. The model aims to empower the individual,
such as victims of abuse and trauma. The model is geared towards recognizing
the abuse of human rights but is also committed to preventing these abuses and
conflict resolution aspects.
Need of Human Rights Education in India
In our Indian Society, we have embraced a very
utilitarian model of education. For most Indians, the aim of education is to
get a good job that pays a lucrative salary. As a result, parents put undue
pressure on their wards and teachers to obtain stellar results on examinations.
Schools have also succumbed to this uni-dimensional perspective and advertise
the number of rank holders and professional college placements. In this
process, education has lost its soul in terms of quality and its ability to
maximize the potential of every individual child, build self-esteem and develop
capacities to function fully as citizens and more than that, a good human
being.
Recently, the school education policy was in news.. This
is not the first time that we are debating the issue , understandably, with the
aim to educate children in a most useful manner , without burdening their
childhood. However, every time we ended up only in increasing the books and the
weight of the bags. Still, according to a view, there are no clues why even
some of the so-called highly educated people of these days are unable to match
up the language and mathematical skills of a metric pass of the
post-Independence era, or for that matter , why a child of a vegetable vendor,
sitting next to his father at the shop, is sharp in mathematical calculations
and has a better intelligent quotient than a child studying in a top public
school? The point is what is the use of textual knowledge of so many subjects
for children when it cannot be practically of use in their lives?.The debate on
failing a student or promoting him under the ‘continuous and comprehensive
evaluation policy’ or doing away with that has little relevance as a answer to
such question. The focus should be on the process of the learning and its
practical applicability and not on its outcome in terms of either the marks or
grades, which are also based on , ultimately the marks. The efforts should be
on creating an environment of real life situations and role plays, which will
directly or indirectly require children to refer and understand various streams
of subjects. There are several other important issues of human rights
concerns(NHRC 2015).
An incident related to brutal murder of a school teacher
in the country has been raised a big question on our education system which
lost value in this regard. ..........
“Nothing is more shocking
than the violence of children in school against teacher. A recent incident
related to brutal murder of a schoolteacher by a 15-year-old boy student in a
classroom in Chennai who was angry at being reprimanded for his poor
performance in class has thrown up deeply disquieting questions on parenting,
teaching, and social and cultural mores. By all accounts, the teacher did
nothing beyond the ordinary routine. After the boy fared badly in the subject
she taught, Hindi, she made notes in his school diary to draw the attention of
his parents. Students in similar situations do tend to nurse a grudge against
the teacher but, in this case, the boy went much further, planning the killing
and waiting for an opportune moment to strike. Clearly, the murder was an
extraordinary fallout of an everyday situation. What might otherwise have ended
in a commonplace student prank against the teacher triggered a shocking,
inexplicable act. This is what makes the task of guarding against the
recurrence of such violence almost impossible in country like India in early
days”( The Hindu 2012)
The above mentioned case is the reflection of the
declining moral or ethical values in education system in the country. In this
context, the students need to be equipped with skills and techniques to cope
with life's strains and stresses. If we want a holistic education, we cannot
ignore our interests and emotions as feeling are an integral aspect of being
human. Both in words and deed, we as a society , should learn to be more
emotionally sensitive and responsive to each other. Our education, in turn,
will reflect our humanness and humanity i.e. human rights education for preparing
a good human being in New Millennium( Public Opinion Survey 2012).
Development of Human Rights Education : Legal
Framework
The foundation of human rights education is our Constitution of India. The preamble of the Constitution visioned freedom and rights to achieve social, economic and political justice. Further, the part third of the Constitution guarantees fundamental rights( Articles 14 to 32) and part fourth assigned some duties( Articles -51A) to the citizens. This way both parts are interrelated, interlinked and Interdependent.However Citizens are morally obligated by the Constitution to perform these duties. However, like the Directive Principles, these are non-justifiable, without any legal sanction in case of their violation or non-compliance(Basu 1993).
However, in India some abortive efforts were made only in
the mid eighties to promote human rights education in the country. In this
direction, the University Grants Commission (UGC) had appointed a committee on
Human Rights Education under the Chairmanship of Mr. Justice S.M. Sikri, the
then judge of Supreme Court of India in 1980. The Sikri Committee came up with
a comprehensive report titled 'Blueprint for Promotion of Human
Rights in India at All Levels' in 1985. The Report suggested a blueprint
for teaching human rights in schools, colleges, and universities and in adult
and continuing educational centres. The Sikri Committee Report was sent to
NCERT and to various universities to initiate follow-up action in the matter.
However, the UGC, NCERT, and the universities took no effective follow-up
action till the late 1980s.An attempt to introduce human rights teaching in all
universities was made in 1985 when a national symposium was organized by the
Human Rights Centre of the Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, with support
of the UNESCO and the UGC. The Symposium made a set of recommendations
regarding teaching of human rights from primary level to college/university,
including professional levels. Subsequently, its recommendations were published
and widely circulated to all universities and educational institutions. It
persuaded the University Grants Commission to introduce human rights education
at the university level. As a result, human rights education is now being
imparted in over 35 Universities /Colleges across the country and also in the
National Law Schools(Tiwari 2004).
The Protection of Human Rights Act, 1993: A Turning
Point
The Parliament of India has passed the protection of
Human Rights Act, 1993 and through the provisions of the Act, new Institutions
were set up as National human Rights Commission(NHRC), State Human Rights
Commission(SHRC) and Human Rights Court. Under Section 12(g) of the Act, the
Statute of the Commission requires to undertake and promote research and to
create awareness and literacy in the field of human rights in collaboration
with universities, institutions and non-governmental organizations and media.
The National Human Rights Commission in collaboration
with the NCERT had brought out a Source Book on Human Rights in 1996. The
source book is prepared for the promotion of Human Rights Education in the
country at School level and Dossiers on Human Rights Education for Beginners
(2005) for college and University level. Further,NHRC Recommended Module on Human
Rights Education for Teaching Professionals for Primary, Secondary and Higher
Secondary levels (2007) and National Curriculum Framework for University
Students on Human Rights Education(NHRC 2007).
Beyond Institution : Creating a Culture of Human
Rights
India
has become one of the
fastest growing
major economies in
the world and
is recognized as a newly industrialized countries (NIC)which falls between
developed and developing nations. Despite over six decades of Indian
development experience, poverty, illiteracy, ill-health, unemployment,
environment pollution and combating terrorism, communal and caste based violence,
domestic violence, corruption and poor governance are many more issues
pertaining to human rights violation. The National Human Rights
Commission(NHRC), since its set up has recorded numerous complaints which are
growing every year.. However, growing violations is considered as growing
awareness of human rights in the county.For instance, the National Human Rights
Commission has observed :
“The organized violence directed against members of identified
groups/communities has been a distinct
feature of the Indian society for quite sometime. Though violence does take
place in the process of change in many societies, and particularly so when
radical alterations take place in the existing social and power relations, it
usually does not-choose its victims on the basis of birth in a given social
entity. In India, however, this is precisely what has defined the character of
violence in relation to certain groups. The country has witnessed increase in
both caste and communal violence since independence which the processes of
modernization have not abated. Rather, in some respects, it has been
intensified by them. While communal violence is a relatively recent phenomenon
rooted in the events leading to partition, caste violence has a much longer
history and a firmer anchorage. It also has the distinctiveness of being
embedded in the social structure of the dominant community itself which lays
down the norms of conduct between its more privileged groups and the
subordinated segment of society(NHRC,2004).
In the above mentioned context, there has been a growing
realization that human rights cannot be taught only by formal way of teaching.
Hence, the need felt to involve civil society groups for create awareness to
educate public by way of non-formal education methodology through audio-video,
film and documentary, painting and poster drawing as well as involving
participants in role playing and maping locality and community prone to
victimisation or re-victimisatin due to their caste, class, gender, poverty,
identity, religion and region etc
While recognizing United
Nations Declaration (1998) the right and the responsibility of individuals,
groups and associations to promote respect for and foster knowledge of human
rights and fundamental freedoms at the national and international levels. That
could be translated into the local level towards
resolving conflicts, ensuring social justice and promoting peace.
At village level, with the help of Aganwardi workers,
community health workers ASHA and social workers could generate awareness among
the villagers about their health and education rights. It can include women
rights’, reproductive health and children malnutrition rights. At Taluka
(Block) and District Legal Service Authority can play a pivotal role in
creating legal awareness and also handle local conflicts through technique of
ADR. The Human rights education that sees itself devoted specifically to “
transforming conflicts” has been primarily problem-centered, focusing on the
reduction, avoidance, and elimination of conflict As such, it has been devoted
more to a study directed toward eliminating the causes of conflict and also
understanding of consequences as well as remedial or preventive measures
towards establishing peace process though enrollment of various stakeholders.
Therefore, people in the society or community need human rights and human
duties. The people need to update about their rights and responsibility, law
and practice of social action which helped in reducing conflict and amicable
peace process.
The local civil society organizations including NGOs and
media persons should take up responsibility to creating a culture of human
rights in society. The non-government organizations and local media should
focus on youth community and prepare them as citizen journalists and human
rights volunteers. Individuals have to play a constructive role in taking up
issue of human rights fact finding, documentation and media advocacy.Overall
the mass movement for cause of human rights and concern for each and every one
is the responsibility of Individuals, youths, media and voluntary organizations
towards public education and awareness which works as part and parcel of human
rights itself. Eventually, in the age of Information, Social media might make a
difference through various use of computer, Internet, mobile phones etc and can
prevent many abuses and heal victims and survivors.
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