CELAK is a National Non-governmental Organization working in the following thematic areas:

  Events and Activities  | Strategic Areas of Focus  |  Our Resource Centre  | Publications  |  Fund Our Programmes  |  FAQs  |  Contact Us









 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

   

HUMAN RIGHTS & SOCIAL JUSTICE ADVOCACY.

Human Rights are based on respect for the dignity and worth of all human beings and seek to ensure freedom from fear and want. Rooted in ethical principles (and inscribed in the universal Declaration on Human Rights, the country's constitutional and legal framework), Human Rights are essential to the well-being of every man, woman and child. Premised on fundamental and inviolable standards, they are universal and inalienable. Sustainable human development seeks to expand choices for all people-women, men and children, current and future generations-while protecting the natural systems on which all life depends. Moving away from a narrow, economy-centered approach to development, sustainable human development places people at the core, and views humans as both a means and an end.

Human Rights and sustainable human development are interdependent and mutually reinforcing and an end of development. Thus sustainable human development aims to eliminate poverty, promote human dignity and rights, and provide equitable opportunities for all through good governance, thereby promoting the realization of all Human Rights-economic, social, cultural, civil and political. The promotion of Human Rights is of particular relevance in the context of globalization and its potential for excluding and marginalizing weak members of the international community and people with limited resources. Human Rights afford protection against such exclusion and marginalization.

Human Rights and sustainable human development are interdependent and mutually reinforcing. Development is unsustainable where the rule of law and equity do not exist; where ethnic, religious or sexual discrimination are rampant; where there are restrictions on free speech, free association and the media; or where large numbers of people live in abject and degrading poverty. Similarly, Human Rights are enhanced when gender equity or poverty reduction programmes empower people to become self-reliant.

CELA-Kenya believes that development is a human right. Sustainable human development and Human Rights will be undone in a repressive environment where threat or disease prevails, and both are better able to promote human choices in a peaceful and pluralistic society. However there is need for the Human Rights advocates to create awareness among the oppressed majority, so that they can make decisions from informed positions and demand for the protection and promotion of Human Rights by the State.

As provided in the universal Declaration of Human Rights, it is the responsibility of every individual and every organ of society to promote respect for Human Rights and "to secure their universal recognition and observance." All human beings "should act towards one another in a spirit of brotherhood." Article 29 States: "Everyone has duties to the community in which alone the free and full development of his personality is possible." These concepts from the universal Declaration are important in the context of sustainable human development; social capital is a critical factor for development.

Human Rights and sustainable human development are inextricably linked, complementary and multidimensional. That is perhaps nowhere better summarized than by the UN Working Group on the Right to Development (October 1995), which States that the right to development is: multidimensional, integrated, dynamic and progressive. Its realization involves the full observance of economic, social, cultural, civil and political rights. It further embraces the different concepts of development of all development sectors, namely sustainable development, human development and the concept of indivisibility, interdependence and universality of all Human Rights.  Realization of the right to development is the responsibility of all actors in development, within the international community, within States at both the national and international levels, within the agencies of the united Nations system. A fundamental human freedom is the freedom from want. Poverty is a Human Rights violation, and freedom from poverty is an integral and inalienable human right.