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How rights were built. Historical analysis. Timeline. What after 1989?. 911 . What to think about now. rights first generation . Political and Civil. RIGHTS SECOND GENERATION . SOCIAL AND ECONOMICS. RIGHTS THIRD GENERATION.
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How rights were built Historical analysis
What after 1989? • 911
rightsfirst generation • Political and Civil
RIGHTSSECOND GENERATION • SOCIAL AND ECONOMICS
RIGHTS THIRD GENERATION THEIR TOPIC REVOLVES AROUND PEACE, ENVIRONMENT AND HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE • SELF DETERMINATION • PEACE • NATIONAL IDENTITY • PACIFIC COEXISTENCE • TECHNOLOGY • ENVIRONMENT THEY WERE BORN IN THE 80’S AS A NECESSITY OF INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION
RIGHTS FOURTH GENERATION NEW WAYS OF BEING AN ACTIVE MEMBER OF SOCIETY GLOBALIZATION
CIBER RIGHTS • RIGHT TO PRIVACY ON LINE • RIGHT TO ANONIMITY • RIGHT TO BE PART OF AN ON LINE COMMUNITY • NO ONE CAN BE SUBJECT OF SURVEILLANCE ON LINE • RIGHT TO INFORMATION ON LINE
HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES • “We are all born free and equal.” —Article 1, United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights • Youth for Human Rights International maintains that children who do not know their rights are vulnerable and easy prey for ill-intended individuals. Statistics of loss of dignity and life through child abuse, gang violence, child labor and child soldiers are staggeringly high.
STATISTICS OF HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE • Child abuse—40 million children below the age of 15 suffer from abuse and neglect. (United Nations Children’s Fund, 2008)
HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE • Gang violence—100 percent of cities with populations greater than or equal to 250,000 reported gang activity. (US Department of Justice)
HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE • Child labor—246 million children, one in every six children aged 5 to 17, are involved in child labor. (International Labour Organization, 2002)
HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE • Child soldiers—UNICEF estimates that more than 300,000 children under 18 are currently being exploited in over thirty armed conflicts worldwide. • While the majority of child soldiers are between the ages of 15 and 18, some are as young as 7 or 8 years of age. (US Department of State, 2005)
HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE • Human trafficking—It is estimated that there are 27 million people in the world today who are enslaved. • Every year 600,000 to 800,000 persons are trafficked across international borders. (US Department of State Trafficking in Persons Report, 2006)
Questions to think about • Why? • Who? • Find examples of HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSE IN ECUADOR