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Human Rights

Op-Ed: Vilina Vlas, the infamous rape hotel’s healing waters

March 27, 2022 by rjs9330 Leave a Comment

By Gigi Manukyan

The “rape hotel” now turned healing spa in Visegrad, Republika Srpska, personifies Bosnia’s animosity towards its female survivors: better left dead than burden society with the echoes of a long-forgotten war.

Photo by Aleksandar Bogicevic, CC BY-SA 3.0, on Wikimedia Commons

Despite the massive strides towards gender equality by feminist movements worldwide, gender-based violence (GBV) —specifically, sexual violence against women—is still a global issue. One out of every three women is expected to experience gender-based violence at least once in their lifetime. In times of conflict, those odds only increase (The Facts, 2014). Nowhere was this more evident than during the Bosnian War, where “rape camps” and sexual slavery marked the war’s silent and enduring legacy.

An estimated 20,000-50,000 women and girls experienced some form of sexual violence throughout (Radovic, 2021). Not only that. In the years after, victims were subject to scrutiny and condemnation by their families and the Bosnian society as a whole. The infamous “rape hotel” now turned healing spa in Visegrad, Republika Srpska, personifies Bosnia’s animosity towards its female survivors.

Walking through Vilina Vas, you can feel the haunting screams of its wartime tenants piercing through the walls where at least 200 Bosniak girls as young as 13 years old were held captive and sexually assaulted by Serbian paramilitary group, the White Eagles (Memisevic, 2020a). Regardless of its rebrand, nothing of the original layout has changed—not even the bed frames that still terrorize the memories of its survivors. This is an incongruous feature of a place claiming to be a therapeutic haven with life-changing healing waters. There is nothing heavenly about swimming in a pool where Bosniak men and boys were tortured and shot dead, nor sleeping in rooms where Bosniak girls flung themselves from the windows to avoid torturous nights of rampant rape. However, neither of these gruesome events stop the influx of tourists from visiting. When I attempted to book a stay, I found that the hotel was booked for the next three months.

In 2020, the Bosnian Tourist Board and the municipality of Visegrad started a promotional campaign that included the Vilina Vlas Hotel’s participation (Memisevic, 2020b). Denying the crimes carried out by Bosnian Serbs perfectly captures the public response to wartime sexual violence survivors: better left dead than burden society with the echoes of a long-forgotten war.

After thirty long years, the survivors of Vilina Vlas are still fighting for justice. When the leader of the White Eagles, Milan Lukic, was sentenced by the International Criminal Court for his role in crimes against humanity committed in Bosnia, the charges failed to include “sexual violence” as a crime (Memisevic, 2020a). In fact, many of the perpetrators of sexual violence never stood trial and continue to walk the streets, while the victims remain crippled by trauma. According to a United Nations’ study on sexual violence throughout the Bosnian War, “62% of survivors were unemployed, 64% had no social support, and more than a half of them lived under the poverty line” (“UN Committee”, 2020). Furthermore, “less than 1 percent of the total estimated number of victims of sexual violence war crimes have seen their cases brought to court since war crime trials began in Bosnia in 2004” (Crosby, 2017).

The injustice with survivors of sexual violence is not uniquely a Bosnian problem, but one that recurs throughout history. During the Armenian Genocide, Armenian girls were brutally raped, forcefully converted to Islam, and kept as wives by Turkish men. During the Nanjing Massacre, or alternately known as the Rape of Nanjing, the Japanese Imperial Army savagely tortured Chinese girls, including shoving inanimate objects into their vaginas (“HyperWar”, 1948). However, in each of these cases, the perpetrators adamantly denied any wrongdoing, thus the victims never received any justice.

Stereotypes against women perpetuate many of these crimes, as well as the general attitude towards victims represented by the “healing spa” in Visegrad. Most of these perpetrators have rigid perceptions of gender roles that view women as subordinate to men, resulting in their objectification and commoditization during times of war. Time and again we observe how sexual violence against women receive impunity, and such crimes continue to transpire. Only when women and men become absolute equals within both the legal framework and societal norms, will rape hotels rebranded as medical spas cease to exist.

Works Cited:

Crosby, Alan. “Amnesty Chides Bosnia For Denying Justice To Victims Of Sexual Violence.” RadioFreeEurope, RadioLiberty, 12 Sept. 2017,

www.rferl.org/a/amnesty-international-childes-bosnia-denying-justice-victims-sexual-violence-w ar-crimes/28730317.html.

HyperWar: International Military Tribunal for the Far East [Chapter 8],

www.ibiblio.org/hyperwar/PTO/IMTFE/IMTFE-8.html.

Memisevic, Ehlimana. “Promoting a Bosnian War ‘Rape Hotel’ Means Erasing History.” Balkan Insight, 25 Aug. 2020,

balkaninsight.com/2020/08/17/promoting-a-bosnian-war-rape-hotel-means-erasing-history/.

Memisevic, Ehlimana. “Serb Authorities Want Tourists to Stay in a Hotel That Was Once a Rape Camp.” TRT World, TRT World, 11 July 2020,

www.trtworld.com/opinion/serb-authorities-want-tourists-to-stay-in-a-hotel-that-was-once-a-rape -camp-38050.

“The Facts on International Gender-Based Violence.” Futures Without Violence, 26 Aug. 2014, www.futureswithoutviolence.org/the-facts-on-international-gender-based-violence/.

Radovic, Ivana. “Wartime Sexual Violence in Bosnia: The Human Trafficking Connection.” Balkan Insight, 4 Jan. 2021,

balkaninsight.com/2020/12/31/wartime-sexual-violence-in-bosnia-the-human-trafficking-connect ion/.

“UN Committee Calls on Bosnia and Herzegovina to Recognise Sexual Violence Survivors’ Rights after 25 Years of Impunity.” OHCHR, 2020,

www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?LangID=E&NewsID=26171.

Filed Under: International Law and Human Rights, Opinion, Uncategorized Tagged With: bosnia, GBV, gender-based violence, genocide, Human Rights, sexual violence, war

Discriminated in the EU: The Roma Children’s Right to Education

November 12, 2021 by rjs9330 Leave a Comment

By Gigi Manukyan

European countries need to effectively implement more inclusive education policies and strategies to integrate the Roma population into their respective societies as recommended by UNICEF, whose approach has been met with great success. Failure to do so may result in more unsuccessful initiatives such as the Decade for Roma Inclusion.

Photo by Johann Walter on Unsplash.


“For the European Union to become a true Union of Equality we need to ensure that millions of Roma are treated equally, socially included, and able to participate in social and political life without exception.”

                        Helena Dalli, UN Commissioner for Equality (“Commission,” 2020)

 

The Roma, Europe’s largest stateless minority, are arguably one of the world’s most hated groups of people. Having faced generations of prejudice and discrimination, they face high rates of poverty and illiteracy, as well as less access to education and healthcare. While commonplace antiziganism is at the root of their exclusion, eliminating centuries of deep-seated hatred of the Roma is proving a difficult task. (i) Prejudice affects all aspects of Romani life, especially for their children. And although the EU has made strides towards closing the educational and poverty gaps for the Roma, many barriers remain.

The Roma in Europe

The “Roma”, an ethnic group of traditionally itinerant people, arrived in Europe from the Punjab region of Northern India between the 8th and 10th centuries. (“Roma,” 2010) Currently, up to 12 million Roma live across Europe.  An umbrella term for the different subgroups across the continent, including the Ashkali, Dom, and Traveller populations, “Roma” identify as predominantly Christian or Muslim. They typically speak one of several Romani dialects or a mixed language of Romani origin. They are a unique group of people whose mystical past only fueled cruelty by the Europeans.

Since their arrival in Europe, they faced enslavement in Hungary, senseless murder in Germany, expulsion from England, and forced female sterilization in the Czech Republic. During the Holocaust, the Nazis killed between an estimated 250,000 to 500,000 Romani; however, unlike their Jewish counterpart, the Roma’s tribulations have been virtually forgotten in the European collective memory. It was not until late 1979 that the West German Federal Parliament acknowledged the Nazi’s persecution of the Roma as racially motivated, and provided compensation to some.

Prejudice against this group did not cease with the defeat of the Third Reich. During the Communist era, they were excluded from the majority of society, relocated to ghettos and segregated neighborhoods. Their education was geared towards low-skilled labor, and some of such attitudes persist today. In recent years, housing legislation targeted at forcibly removing the Roma have become commonplace in countries like Romania and Bulgaria, where the majority of Europe’s Roma population reside. Excessive force by police officers against them is also widespread in Europe, which only discourages the Roma from going to the police. Furthermore, since considered outsiders in their countries of residence, they may refrain from registering with the state. Their inability to obtain legal status thus prevents them from accessing benefits that citizens readily enjoy, such as healthcare and pensions. These issues affect not only the quality of their education, but even their willingness to learn. Despite centuries of persistent poverty and prejudice, Europe only became interested in understanding the “Roma problem” towards the end of the 20th century.

Initiatives to better Romani access to education in Europe popularized in the 1990s. Inspired by the 2003 World Bank conference “Roma in an Expanding Europe: Challenges for the Future”, the United Nations kicked off the “Decade for Roma Inclusion” (2005-2015), a pan-European initiative with efforts from governmental, intra-governmental, and non-governmental organizations to improve the living conditions of the Roma in education, health, employment, and housing (Kirova).  Despite some increases in primary school enrollment, the “Decade for Roma Inclusion” did little to close the gap between the Romani and non-Romani, as the Romani still performed worse than Europe’s other minorities (Miskovic, 2016).

Across countries that implemented the initiative, an average of only one in ten Romani completed primary education, while more than one in three still lived in absolute poverty (Jovanic, 2015). The initiative’s failure revealed that a decade of inclusion measures could not undo centuries of discrimination. In response to that, the EU launched in 2009 the “European Platform for Roma Inclusion” with the goal of increasing the “coherence and effectiveness of the parallel policy processes at national, European and international level, with a view to creating synergies” (“Communication,” 2010). Yet, like its predecessor, the updated inclusion efforts failed to meet its goals.

 Why are Roma children still behind?

The Roma’s difficulties begin early on. As healthy early-child development lays the groundwork for the rest of a child’s life, the cycle of poverty inhibits Roma children from realizing their true potential. Discrimination greatly affects Romani children’s access to education, which begins even before they are born. Some mothers lack access to prenatal care and basic healthcare services, while others may lack the means to reach health facilities. For many, unawareness simply inhibits them from obtaining such resources. Due to such issues, Romani children are more likely to be underweight and prone to psychological issues, diminishing their ability to perform. 

Compared to their peers, the educational achievements of Romani children have been lacking throughout Europe. Across Southern Europe, preschool enrollment ranges from 0.2% in Kosovo to 17% in Romania, compared to 94.8% of overall children in the EU. “In most countries, only about 20% of Romani children ever complete primary school,” compared to 90% of their non-Romani counterparts. Meanwhile, “only 18% of Roma children ever enroll in secondary school and less than one per cent attend university” (“The Right,” 2011). For Roma girls, the education retention rate is lower due to the normalization of child marriage and rigid gender roles that de-emphasized education. Even if Romani children continue their education, they experience higher rates of bullying by both their peers and by educational instructors, which can greatly affect their performance.

Another learning barrier is segregated education. Throughout Europe (especially Slovakia and the Czech Republic), Romani children are systematically segregated due to unfounded notions of inferiority (“The Right,” 2011). The quality of the education provided is lower than in regular schools, and resources are lacking. In other EU Member States, Romani children are placed in institutions for children with mental disabilities solely because of their ethnicity.

Where government initiatives fail, UNICEF fills the gap

 International and local NGOs play a key role in meeting the needs of isolated minorities. Joint efforts with the government on the local level can ensure the success of inclusion-building measures, which are critical for the Roma. Since the 1990s, UNICEF has worked to improve Romani children’s access to education, including the incorporation of Roma-inclusive education plans. UNICEF’s work is two-fold: conducting research for policy strategies and funding programs aimed at Romani success.

In lieu of ineffective government policies, UNICEF’s work serves to make basic services accessible to the Romani. One such UNICEF service is their home-visiting programs to provide parents access to health, early childhood development, education and social protection services (“Roma Children”).  Although UNICEF’s activities for Romani inclusion vary from country to country, they work with local governments and municipalities to ensure that the goals laid out in Romani inclusion policies are fully met. In Bulgaria, for instance, “following on from UNICEF research on child marriages, three family centers are now running programs to prevent such marriages and promote access to secondary education for Romani adolescent girls” (“Roma Children”). Another successful project implemented by UNICEF was in the Maldovan village of Vulcanesti, where they and a local NGO increased the number of Romani children attending school from 7 to 70. (“Improved,” 2018)

Given UNICEF’s success on the ground, the organization’s research is the best option for effective government policies. The following are manageable short-term goals recommended by UNICEF that can have a lasting impact on Romani children in early education:

  1. Free early education. UNICEF recommends at minimum “a commitment to two years of free preschool education for at least 80% of Romani children” (“The Right,” 2011).
  2. Community-building approach. Stressing the importance of community-based projects allows the Romani to be more active stakeholders rather than passive beneficiaries of aid. Early childhood facilities can allow parents to come play with their children or take part in preparing or teaching lesson plans. Incorporating parents can also strengthen their relationship with their child, which is a major problem within Romani communities.
  3. Providing holistic service.  Investing in early childhood education alone cannot alleviate the problems of Romani children. Governments should utilize education centers as healthcare providers, capacity building for parents, and nutrition support. 
  4. Extension of UNICEF’s programs. Poverty for the Roma is generational, so governments must invest in the education of young mothers. As illiteracy rates are higher for Romani girls and women, and mothers are Romani children’s primary caretakers, lack of education prevents them from helping with learning at home. 
  5. Make education more accessible. Due to the poor conditions of Romani settlements, many children do not have access to good education. The schools in Romani neighborhoods are of poor quality, and accessibility to better schools may be out of reach due to distance and lack of mobility opportunities.
  6. De-segregated classrooms. Inclusion of Romani and non-Romani children in the same classrooms can change negative local attitudes towards the Romani in the long term. Segregation only fuels stereotypes, so de-segregating classrooms is an essential start to undoing antiziganism.

The efficacy of the initiative taken in Vulcanești was due to the enactment of a series of measurements: UNICEF provided reliable transportation, free healthy meals, a safe learning environment, and encouraged parents to partake in the classroom. Their success showed that helping the Roma is achievable, unlike as perceived through failed government initiatives. Along with the recommended short-term policies, long-term goals that address education retention are needed as well. Short-term solutions are only successful in the short term, and must be followed up with long-term goals. However, this should not hinder governments from emphasizing the importance of early childhood education as Romani children will have better odds of succeeding later in life.

Challenges hindering inclusion success

            While strides have been made towards greater Romani integration, there are still many challenges that need to be addressed by governments and NGOs alone cannot eradicate. One such problem is the difficulty in data collection due to the nomadic nature of the Romani population coupled with the color blind approach to policy making taken by many European states. (ii) Efforts to accurately address shortcomings that are unique to the Romani experience are deeply undermined. Deep mistrust of the government also prevents them from readily self-identifying. Moreover, they are likely to register their births with local governments, which only limit their childcare options. As these elements shape educational policies, such drawbacks can negatively impact the inclusion of Romani children. Additionally, distrust of the government and governmental institutions can deter them from willingly participating in society at-large. Only trusted gatekeepers can facilitate community inclusion, and those are limited in number even within NGOs. (Condon, 2019)

Education measures will continue to fail unless member states and NGOs work to address Romani social exclusion. Due to prior education barriers, most Romani are not aware of their legal rights, or the commitments their governments have made under international law. One way to address this is to foster an environment for greater Roma civil engagement, which has been historically lacking. Civil society organizations are an important middleman between society and the government as they hold governments accountable and help allocate funds through NGOs. Typically, civil societies are the most knowledgeable of international law and human rights developments; therefore, they can play a crucial role in obtaining greater rights for the Roma. However, as long as a unified Romani civil society is weak, the inherent rights of the Roma will remain hidden to them.

Crippling poverty and community isolation continue to persist as well, which the pandemic has only exacerbated. Lack of transport to school, overcrowding, distance of schools or facilities, and other financial burdens are just some of the issues in Romani settlements. Member states must improve conditions across settlements as such inconveniences impede children’s access to quality education.

Romani culture itself can serve as a challenge for greater inclusion since their communities are generally close-knit and emphasize traditional values that do not typically align with Western viewpoints. This isolation of the Romani people has resulted from centuries of marginalization by countries that have cast them off as outsiders. Forced child marriages, which result in Romani girls leaving school between the ages of 12 and 16, diminish their chances of upward mobility. UNICEF’s work in Bulgaria was tantamount to getting more young girls educated, but efforts need to be made on the legislative level as well. 

 Conclusion

            Romani access to education requires their successful integration into the greater society. Thus, group efforts must be made by the collective EU governments, international and local NGOs, and the Romani themselves. NGOs cannot force participation, and state measures can only be successful if they are embraced by the Romani.

To encourage integration, EU governments must work in conjunction with other member states, intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations to gain trust. EU member states should work with UNICEF and other organizations in implementing their recommended measures. Throughout the next decade, member states must fully comply with the new “2020 EU Framework for National Roma Integration Strategies,” unlike previous unsuccessful initiatives. Although NGOs have laid the groundwork for greater inclusion, the burden ultimately falls on the state to ensure that the needs of the Romani children are met.

Endnotes:

(i) Antiziganism is the racism and hatred of the Roma people, which serves as the basis for discriminatory anti-Roma policies and measures.

(ii) A color blind approach to policy making refers to states who do not use ethnic categories in policy making, which hinders efforts to address and instill anti-discriminatory policies.

Works Cited:

Briefing Human Rights On The Margins Roma In Europe. Amnesty International , 2011, www.amnesty.org.uk/files/roma_in_europe_briefing.pdf.

Ciobanu, Claudia. “Roma Fear There Is No Place for Them as Romania’s Cities Modernize.” Reuters, Thomson Reuters, 22 Mar. 2017, www.reuters.com/article/us-romania-roma-property-feature/roma-fear-there-is-no-place-for-them-as-romanias-cities-modernize-idUSKBN16T043.

“Commission Launches New 10-Year Plan to Support Roma in the EU.” European Commission, European Commission, 7 Oct. 2020, ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/IP_20_1813.

“Communication From The Commission To The Council, The European Parliament, The European Economic And Social Committee And The Committee Of The Regions.” Eur-Lex , 7 Apr. 2010, eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/?qid=1444909812175&uri=CELEX:52010DC0133.

Condon, Louise, et al. “Engaging Gypsy, Roma, and Traveller Communities in Research: Maximizing Opportunities and Overcoming Challenges.” Qualitative Health Research, vol. 29, no. 9, 2019, pp. 1324–1333., doi:10.1177/1049732318813558.

“Early Childhood and Primary Education Statistics.” Early Childhood and Primary Education Statistics – Statistics Explained, ec.europa.eu/eurostat/statistics-explained/index.php/Early_childhood_and_primary_education_statistics.

 “Genocide of European Roma (Gypsies) 1939-1945” United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/genocide-of-european-roma-gypsies-1939-1945.

“Improved Access to Education for Roma Children.” UNICEF, 21 July 2018, www.unicef.org/moldova/en/press-releases/improved-access-education-roma-children.

Jovanovic, Zeljko. “Why Europe’s ‘Roma Decade’ Didn’t Lead to Inclusion.” Open Society Foundations, 21 Sept. 2015, www.opensocietyfoundations.org/voices/why-europe-s-roma-decade-didn-t-lead-inclusion.

Kirova, Iskra. “The Decade of Roma Inclusion: Addressing Racial Discrimination Through Development.” United Nations, United Nations, www.un.org/en/chronicle/article/decade-roma-inclusion-addressing-racial-discrimination-through-development.

Miskovic, Maja, and Svjetlana Curcic. “Beyond Inclusion: Reconsidering Policies, Curriculum, and Pedagogy for Roma Students.” International Journal of Multicultural Education, vol. 18, no. 2, 2016, p. 1., doi:10.18251/ijme.v18i2.1051.

Pecak, Marko. “Path to Higher Education: Combating Antigypsyism by Building Roma Students’ Aspirations and Resilience .” Dimensions of Antigypsyism in Europe, by Simona Torotcoi, European Network Against Racism Aisbl and Central Council of German Sinti and Roma, 2019, pp. 301–321.

“Roma Children.” UNICEF Europe and Central Asia, www.unicef.org/eca/what-we-do/ending-child-poverty/roma-children.

“Roma Equality, Inclusion and Participation in the EU.” European Commission – European Commission, 26 Mar. 2021, ec.europa.eu/info/policies/justice-and-fundamental-rights/combatting-discrimination/roma-eu/roma-equality-inclusion-and-participation-eu_en.

“Roma in Europe: Persecuted and Misunderstood.” CNN, Cable News Network, 19 Aug. 2010, www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/europe/08/19/france.roma.background/index.html.

Rutigliano, Alexandre. “Inclusion of Roma Students in Europe.” OECD Education Working Papers, no. 228, 30 Sept. 2020, doi:10.1787/8ce7d6eb-en.

“The Right of Roma Children To Education .” UNICEF Regional Office for CEECIS , UNICEF, 2011, www.unicef.org/eca/media/1566/file/Roma%20education%20postition%20paper.pdf.

Filed Under: International Law and Human Rights, Uncategorized Tagged With: Education, Europe, Human Rights, roma children

Making Over the Moudawana: Legal Reform and Women’s Rights in Morocco

November 25, 2020 by bb53 Leave a Comment

Author: Alonna Despain, November 2020.

“Looking at Morocco as a case study helps illuminate a clear example of Islam as a progressive and adaptive line of thought, which is more than capable of egalitarian interpretations. Furthermore, this case has the possibility of being a model for other countries and situations moving forward on making more inclusive reforms and progression towards gender equality.”

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Filed Under: 2020, Archives, Global Affairs Review - Archives, International Law and Human Rights Tagged With: Gender Equality, Human Rights, Morocco

Water, Women and El Salvador: The Struggle and How to Help

May 4, 2020 by bb53 Leave a Comment

Author: Jessica Lobo, May 2020.

“Salvadorans have created a General Water Law that would include a legal provision of the Human Right to Water in their constitution. This law explicitly acknowledges the gendered aspect of water and calls for open participation (Legislative Assembly of the Republic of El Salvador). Nonetheless, there is still a long way to go for women, water, and water management in El Salvador. The law has yet to be ratified by the Salvadoran government, and therefore, issues between women and water persist despite an awareness of the issue (Gies).”

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Filed Under: 2020, Archives, Articles, Global Affairs Review - Archives, Global Gender Studies, International Law and Human Rights Tagged With: El Salvador, Featured, Gender, Gender Equality, Global Gender Studies, Human Rights, water

#CGAat15 Faculty Interview Series: Jennifer Trahan

March 10, 2020 by bb53 Leave a Comment

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This year, The Center for Global Affairs (CGA) celebrates its 15th Anniversary. To mark this occasion, the Global Affairs Review (GAR) sat down with Professor Trahan, to discuss her CGA journey and experience. Professor Trahan is a Clinical Professor teaching International Law; Human Rights in Theory & Practice; International Justice; Transnational Justice; and U.S. Use of Force and the “Global War on Terror.” Professor Trahan also leads a global field intensive to The Hague, Bosnia, and Serbia, and one to Rwanda. She serves on numerous professional associations, including the Executive Board of the American Branch of the International Law Association and as its Co-Director of Studies, the Use of Force Committee of the International Law Association, and the Council of Advisers on the Application of the Rome Statute to Cyberwarfare. She has authored numerous publications, including “Genocide, War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity: A Digest of the Case Law of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda” (HRW 2010), and “Genocide, War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity: A Topical Digest of the Case Law of the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia” (HRW 2006). Her latest book “Legal Limits to the Veto Power in the Face of Atrocity Crimes,” will be released in 2020 by Cambridge University Press.

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Filed Under: 2020, Archives, Global Affairs Review - Archives, Interviews Tagged With: CGA, Featured, Human Rights, International Law

In Conversation with Belinda Cooper: Commemorating the 30th Anniversary of the Fall of the Berlin Wall

November 29, 2019 by bb53 Leave a Comment

Cooper Header.png

Belinda Cooper is an Adjunct Assistant Professor who teaches human rights and women’s rights at NYU’s Center for Global Affairs and co-teaches the global field intensive on war crimes prosecutions in The Hague and former Yugoslavia. She is also an Adjunct Professor at Columbia University’s Institute for the Study of Human Rights.

Professor Cooper’s experience has included working with East German dissidents in Berlin, Germany before the fall of communism. To commemorate the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall this month, the Global Affairs Review sat down with Professor Cooper to hear about her experiences during that historically pivotal time.

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Filed Under: 2020, Archives, Global Affairs Review - Archives, Interviews Tagged With: Berlin, Communism, East Germany, Germany, Human Rights

Attacks on Education: Approaches to improving safe access to education and the psychosocial well-being of children in Syria

October 25, 2019 by bb53 Leave a Comment

Author: Julie Meier, October 2019.

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“While schools are meant to be safe learning spaces, the right to education is often compromised during times of conflict (“What Schools Can Do” 3). In Syria, attacks on education not only prevent children from receiving the education to which they are entitled, but such attacks also severely affect their psychosocial well-being.”

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Filed Under: 2019, Archives, Articles, Global Affairs Review - Archives, International Development & Humanitarian Assistance, International Law and Human Rights, International Relations/Global Futures Tagged With: Education, Human Rights, International Development, Syria

No Paradise for Refugees in the Caribbean: The Challenges Faced by Venezuelan Refugees in Trinidad and Tobago

May 16, 2019 by bb53 Leave a Comment

Author: Milene Carvalho, 2019.

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“Trinidad and Tobago, located by just 6.8 miles (11km) from the Venezuelan coast, has received the highest number of refugees in the region, with approximately 60,000 Venezuelans reaching the country of 1.3 million people (Otis). Despite the high number of arrivals, Trinidad and Tobago has been failing to provide legal protection to Venezuelans, leaving them in a legal limbo and vulnerable to exploitation and abuse…”
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Filed Under: 2019, Archives, Global Affairs Review - Archives, International Development & Humanitarian Assistance, International Law and Human Rights, Transnational Security Tagged With: 2019, Human Rights, Milene Carvalho, Refugees, Trinidad and Tobago, Venezuela

How Local Responses to Humanitarian Emergencies Can Save Lives: Local CSOs and NGOs Step in to Fill Critical Humanitarian Response Gaps Left by the Greek Government

May 2, 2019 by bb53 Leave a Comment

Author: Julie Meier, 2019.

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“When the rapid influx of over 800,000 refugees to Greece occurred in 2015 (“UNHCR Greece Portal”), the Greek government was unable to respond appropriately to the unfolding humanitarian crisis that is still prevalent today. A governmental, or comprehensive formal international humanitarian response was completely absent at the beginning and height of the refugee emergency…”
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Filed Under: 2019, Archives, Global Affairs Review - Archives, International Development & Humanitarian Assistance Tagged With: 2019, Development, Emergencies, EU, Greece, Human Rights, Humanitarian Response, Julie Meier, NGOs, Refugees

Sex Education as a Human Right and How United States Law Is Denying its Citizens

April 15, 2019 by bb53 Leave a Comment

Author: Caro Confort, 2019.

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“Currently in the United States, legislation concerning sex education in schools is created at the state level, rather than federal. This means that there are no laws creating a nation-wide standard with which all sex education curricula must be held. As a result, sex education in the US is incredibly problematic and must be critically evaluated.”
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Filed Under: 2019, Archives, Global Affairs Review - Archives, Global Gender Studies, International Law and Human Rights Tagged With: 2019, Caro Confort, Gender, Human Rights, International Law, Sex Education, United States

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