The UN regime Flashcards

1
Q

Who is eligible for membership in the Human Rights Council?

A

All UN member states, does not require it to be a state with a good track record for upholding human rights.

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2
Q

What are the UN treaty bodies? An how can they be elected?

A
  • an independant group of experts governing the implementation of human rights treaties and monitoring compliance
  • they have to be a national of a state party to the treaty in question, elected by the state parties (they don’t represent them, they are independant/serve in personal capacity), be of a high moral standing and recognized to have competence in the relevant human rights field and be available to regularyl attend sessions in the Committee in question
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3
Q

What are the tasks of the Treaty Bodies?

A
  • State reporting
    • initial report - common core (same for all treaty bodies) + treaty specific
    • the treaty body gives a ‘list of issues’ and the state gets to respond to this
    • then the treaty body takes up other information, UN + shadow reports (NGOs)
    • the committee publishes ‘concluding observations’ with issues of concern and recommendations to state parties
    • implementation and periodic reports
  • General comments
  • Inquiries: investigative, if there are claims on systematic violations of human rights
  • Complaint procedures (needs accept from state party)
    • interstate
    • individual
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4
Q

What are the main UN bodies that deal with human rights?

A
  • charter based bodies
    • principal institutions of the UN established by the UN charter
    • bodies (commissions or groups) established by these institutions with special tasks (art. 68 of the UN charter)
    • usually representing states, not independent experts (political bodies)
    • initiatives and drafting of new instruments
    • reaction to serious human rights violations
  • treaty based bodies
    • committees established by each conventions to monitor its implementation in member states, through reporting system, communications, general comments, inquiries and complaint procedures
    • independent experts of high moral character and recognized competence in the field of human rights
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5
Q

What is the human rights council? And how are the members elected?

A
  • the main intergovernmental body within the UN responsible to for promoting and protecting human rights (subsidiary to the GA)
  • all UN member states are eligible for membership, not only those with a good human rights record of high ratification rate on human rights instruments
  • elected in e secret ballot, simple majority vote of the members of the GA: pledges and committment to promote and protect human rights are taken into account
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6
Q

Are there any requirements to the council members ones they are elected?

A
  • have to uphold the highest standards in the promotion and protection of human rights
  • no formal mechanism to hold them accountable, but a member that has committed gross and systematic violations of human rights may be suspended by the GA by a 2//3 vote of the members present and voting (very rare that it happens, only really happened once)
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7
Q

What does the human rights council do?

A
  • universal periodic review (UPR): a periodic assessment of all the UN member states human rights obligations - puts forward a national report, a UN compilation that gathers recommendations, obsevations, and comments, and lastly a summary of stakeholders’ information
  • promote universal respect for protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms for all
  • responses to urgent human rights situations/emergencies
  • addressing and making recommendations on situations of violations of human rights
  • promoting effective coordination of and mainstreaming of human rights in the UN system
  • recommendations to the GA on developing new human rights standards
  • special procedures
  • complaint procedure
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8
Q

How is the UPR different from the state reporting to the UN treaty bodies?

A
  • the UPR is a peer review (more politically) of the UN members actions to fulfil their human rights obligations while as the state reporting is only the state itself being reviewed by a group of independent experts
  • the UPR looks at all the human rights obligations, but the state reporting only looks at the specific treaty that the treaty body is governing
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9
Q

How often and for how long does the human rights council meet for?

A
  • 3 sessions a year, for at least 10 weeks each time
  • can have special sessions lasting 1 or 2 days at a time by request of a council member that has gotten at least 1/3 of the council’s support (to respond to serious human rights violations)
  • often meet in intersessional activities such as panels, briefings, seminars and informal conversations with the UN high commissioner for human rights to strengthen its work
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10
Q

Why did the human rights council replace the commission on human rights?

A
  • an attempt to regain credibility to the UN human rights body
  • the commission was critizised for politicization of its work
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11
Q

What is the purpose of the special sessions of the human rights council and what is the outcome?

A
  • the purpose is to respond to serious human rights situations
  • the outcome may be a creation of fact-finding missions or other special procedure
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12
Q

What are special procedures under the human rights council? And what do they do?

A
  • experts acting in personal capacity: working group, special rapporteur, independent expert
  • they conduct country visits, which must be agreed to by the state concerned (rely on cooperation)
  • most mandates examine complaints from individuals, human rights defenders, or other interested persons regarding alleged human rights violations that fall within their mandate
    • several special procedures have adopted reasoned opinions in response to complaints
  • some mandate holders develop authoritative opinions and standards, thus contributing to the progressive development of int. law
  • mandate golders raise awareness of human rights concerns by giving press statements or engaging in the media
  • they interact with other UN bodies
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13
Q

What is the complaint procedure under the human rights council?

A
  • different from judicial proceedings
  • a confidential procedure
  • concerned with patterns of gross violations of human rights, and on reliable knowledge on the alleged violations
  • complaint can be submitted by a person or group claiming to be a victim of human rights violations, domestic remedies should be exhausted, and it cannot be dealt with in a special procedure or other UN or regional human rights mechanism
  • unlike the old procedure, the author is now informed on key developments
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14
Q

What are differences between the human rights council and the UN treaty bodies?

A
  • the council is a political body, with members representing their state, while as the treaty bodies are independent experts
  • the council promote and protect human rights, while as the treaty bodies monitor their specific human rights treaty
  • the council has a broader mandate then the treaty bodies because they only focus on one human rights treaty
  • they have different tasks
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