A/HRC/37/55
led the national theatre to adopt guiding principles for gender equality and the Irish Film
Board to adopt a 50/50 gender equality plan.54
4.
Developing clear objectives and adapted assessment schemes
81.
Insufficient infrastructure focused on the multiform restorative and transformative
potential of actions in the field of arts and culture results in the absence of recognized
protocols for assessment and evaluation that are adapted to the particular objectives and
adequate to measure the accomplishments. These include the long-term relationship
building required to address violations of human rights, embrace cultural diversity and
equality, foster trust and contribute to reconciliation. Many of the existing assessment
strategies involve time-consuming work to produce measures required by donors and
contributors but that are not aligned with the nuances of the work. Focused attention on
these problems related to improving modes of funding, assessment and evaluation is
needed.
82.
Scholars, practitioners and policymakers need opportunities to collaborate. Centres
of innovation and knowledge generation based in universities, large cultural organizations,
foundations and other stable organizations could help cultivate multidisciplinary teams —
including artists and workers in the fields of development, urban design, trauma recovery,
social work, human rights and transitional justice 55 — and operate as regional nodes linked
with each other and with local, national and regional initiatives in their region. They would
be positioned to facilitate exchanges, apprenticeships and mentoring opportunities within
and between regions.56
83.
Agencies, NGOs and public institutions sponsoring and supporting such initiatives
can educate their staffs about human rights and cultural rights standards relevant to artistbased and participatory applied works, in particular standards regarding the right to take
part in cultural life and the development of one’s society and freedom of artistic expression
for all. They can also encourage collaborations between artists, activists and all other
relevant stakeholders seeking to reach similar goals.
IV. Conclusions and recommendations
A.
Conclusions
84.
Because of the nature of aesthetic engagement, initiatives in the field of culture
can make robust and distinctive contributions to creating, developing and maintaining
more rights-respecting societies, especially in the aftermath of violence and in deeply
divided societies. They provide crucial opportunities to build capacity for critical
thinking and respect for cultural diversity, equality and the universality of human
rights. Cultural processes and art-making based on the exercise of cultural rights,
participatory and inclusive work with local populations that aims at building bridges
across social divisions, and public rituals and ceremonies that increase recognition of
human dignity can often be essential to reaching a wide range of human rights goals.
It is critical for all relevant actors to consider the benefits of adopting a cultural rights
approach — which centres universal human rights and cultural diversity as well as
non-discrimination and equality and the critical components of participation and
54
55
56
See the resulting study, Gender Counts: An Analysis of Gender in Irish Theatre 2006–2015, June
2017.
For instance, see J. White and C. Cohen, “Strengthening work at the nexus of arts, culture and
peacebuilding”, report for Search for Common Ground, Brandeis University Program in
Peacebuilding and the Arts, February 2012; and M. LeBaron and C. Cohen, Breathing Life Into the
Ashes: Resilience, Arts and Social Transformation, final report of the Peter Wall Institute for
Advanced Studies international round table, University of British Columbia Peter A. Allard School of
Law, October 2013.
In accordance with art. 15.4 of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights.
17