A/RES/55/94
Organization entitled “Towards a culture of peace”, and the Dakar Framework for
Action adopted at the World Education Forum, which, inter alia, reconfirmed the
mandated role of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization of coordinating Education For All partners and maintaining their
collective momentum within the process of securing quality basic education,8
Believing that the World Public Information Campaign is a valuable
complement to the activities of the United Nations aimed at the further promotion
and protection of human rights, and recalling the importance attached by the World
Conference on Human Rights to human rights education and information,
Believing also that human rights education constitutes an important vehicle for
the elimination of gender-based discrimination and for ensuring equal opportunities
through the promotion and protection of the human rights of women,
Convinced that every woman, man and child, in order to realize their full
human potential, must be made aware of all their human rights and fundamental
freedoms,
Convinced also that human rights education should involve more than the
provision of information and should constitute a comprehensive, lifelong process by
which people at all levels of development and in all societies learn respect for the
dignity of others and the means and methods of ensuring that respect in all societies,
Recognizing that human rights education and information are essential to the
realization of human rights and fundamental freedoms and that carefully designed
training, dissemination and information programmes can have a catalytic effect on
national, regional and international initiatives to promote and protect human rights
and prevent human rights violations,
Convinced that human rights education and information contribute to a holistic
concept of development consistent with the dignity of women and men of all ages,
which takes into account particularly vulnerable segments of society such as
children, young persons, older persons, indigenous people, minorities, the rural and
urban poor, migrant workers, refugees, persons with the human immunodeficiency
virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and disabled persons,
Taking into account the efforts to promote human rights education made by
educators and non-governmental organizations in all parts of the world, as well as
by intergovernmental organizations, including the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization, the International Labour Organization, the United Nations
Children’s Fund and the United Nations Development Programme,
Recognizing the invaluable and creative role that non-governmental and
community-based organizations can play in disseminating public information and
engaging in human rights education, especially at the grass-roots level and in remote
and rural communities,
Aware of the potential supportive role of the private sector in implementing at
all levels of society the Plan of Action for the United Nations Decade for Human
Rights Education, 1995–2004, 9 and the World Public Information Campaign,
8
See Final Report of the World Education Forum, Dakar, Senegal, 26–28 April 2000, United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, Paris, 2000.
9
A/51/506/Add.1, appendix.
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