A/HRC/24/52
(k)
Ensure curricula adequately reflect the diversity and plurality of
societies. Education should be culturally relevant for children and young people of
African descent, including in their own language where necessary;
(l)
Take measures to reduce the school dropout rate and improve the
underachievement of children of African descent with greater support and attention
given to families;
(m) Adopt measures to increase the number of teachers of African descent
working in educational institutions;
(n)
Promote access to new technologies that would offer people of African
descent, particularly women, children and young people, adequate resources for
education, technological development and long-distance learning in local
communities;
(o)
Guarantee a smooth transition from early childhood to primary and
secondary educational facilities without discriminatory competitive placement systems
(e.g., common entrance examinations);
(p)
Provide sufficient budgetary resources and adopt measures, including
affirmative action policies, at all levels of education for people of African descent, as a
means for Governments to recognize the existence of structural discrimination and to
combat it;
(q)
Improve quality standards of educational in public education systems;
(r)
Develop truly inclusive classroom pedagogy for all with culturally
relevant curricula that celebrates the history and contribution of people of African
descent;
(s)
Institute national systematic monitoring and evaluation of the negative
effects of racism and discrimination on the educational progress of children of African
descent, including an analysis of the intersectional effects of social class, gender,
religion and geography.
69.
Civil society and people of African descent groups should continue with the
development of a collective vision and strategy for improving the access to quality
education for people of African descent by empowering them through the right to
education.
70.
OHCHR should include in its anti-racial discrimination database information
on existing legislation, policies and programmes for the promotion of equal access to
education by people of African descent.
C.
1.
Cultural rights
Conclusions
71.
Cultural rights are inalienable human rights.
72.
Recalling paragraph 99 of the Durban Declaration, in which States concerned
are called upon “to honour the memory of the victims of past tragedies and affirm
that, wherever and whenever these occurred, they must be condemned and their
recurrence prevented”, States should adopt measures to preserve, protect and restore
the intangible patrimony and spiritual memory of sites and places of the slave trade
and slave resistance, giving increased visibility to this history and culture through
museums, monuments, visual arts and other means, such as the permanent memorial
at the United Nations headquarters to honour the memory of the victims of slavery
and the transatlantic slave trade.
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