Affirmative action public policies and the effectiveness of education as a right.
By Renato Ferreira
1. Racism and other forms of discrimination have formed as an ideological pillar in the
history of humanity and the effects of the legacy of discrimination unequivocally
corroborate the enormous inequities and social inequalities around the world.
2. On the other hand, the lack of will and the deep lethargy of the rulers, has prevented the
creation of public policies that could have helped to construct democracies, reducing
injustices that have been perpetuated historically.
3. Social evils are not mere abstractions, they are social facts not significantly reduced by
the governments that have led the leadership of modern democracies, in which the
International Treaties of Human Rights are only sterile and ineffective recommendations,
since they do not keep any tune with what is experienced by most marginalized
populations.
4. Due to this, countries have a historical legacy of discrimination one that still holds our
societies ingrained. Their overcoming requires political will to promote effective
measures to eradicate discrimination through public policies that have the promotion of
human rights in their hearts.
5. The lack of public policies aimed at the promotion of historically excluded peoples has
crystallized enormous ethnic disparities, causing the overcoming of racial inequality to be
one of the main challenges of humanity at the beginning of this century.
6. The overcoming of the wounds of the oppression imposed by colonialism and
reinforced by neoliberalism, is closely linked with the imperative need to promote
historical reparation that remains in debt to people traditionally discriminated against.
7. We must overcome discrimination, seeking more economic, political, social and cultural
integration with a view to the formation of an international community of nations
committed to the development of education, not as a commodity but as a right. This
requires joint participation in favour of citizenship and greater political participation,
especially in the poorest nations in the international arena.
8. As reported by the United Nations Development Program, at the beginning of this 21st
century, the lack of education still impedes human development in various countries.
Even with the progress made in the last decade, with regard to public policies and the
incorporation of some of the content of the Durban Declaration into the discourse of the
various government authorities, statistics show that we are far from achieving the
objectives of this conference.