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Education rights
Duncan Wilson
Realization of the right to education can have a multiplier effect on the ability to
realize other human rights.1 Where education rights are respected, protected and
fulfilled, the possibilities for self-realization of, for example, the rights to health,2
work3 and freedom of expression4 will be significantly increased. Yet education is
not intrinsically good. In multicultural societies, education can be either divisive or
cohesive 5 as was recently shown during the 1990s by the central role education
played in the instigation of genocide in Rwanda,6 and in the conflict in the former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.7
Which of these ends education serves, depends on the extent of respect for
minority and indigenous rights within education. As explained in this chapter, the
scope of education rights extends beyond equal access to include the contents and
means of delivery of education. The levels of governmental obligation being
explained in human rights terms as availability, accessibility, acceptability and
adaptability – ‘the 4-A scheme’.8
Since the inclusion of the right to education in the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights (UDHR) in 1948 (Art. 26), it has been incorporated in binding
international treaties including the ICERD (Art. 5(e)(v); ICESCR (Arts. 13 and
14); the ICEDAW (Art. 10); the CRC (28 and 29); and regional treaties in Africa,9
the Americas10 and Europe.11 Education rights are also an important element of
international law protecting minority and indigenous peoples’ rights and are found
in a range of specific instruments.12
The right to education is to be fully realized progressively (moving as expeditiously as possible)13 according to the maximum of the available resources.14 Such
available resources include those from the international community, which is
obliged to offer assistance where able.15 There is a presumption that any steps a
government takes which have the effect of moving further away from full realization
of the right to education are incompatible with its obligations,16 and this would
include fulfilling the right to education for minorities and indigenous peoples.
Standards
Minimum core obligations
The right to education, like other ESC rights, includes minimum core governmental obligations. These obligations include: