EDUCATION RIGHTS
The UN Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Indigenous Peoples, Rudolfo
Stavenhagen, points to some progress, as well as noting problems where bilingual
and intercultural programmes have had inadequate resources and have not been
complemented by sufficient or well-trained teachers. Success has been most
profound where there is monitoring by civil society organizations.62
Enforcement mechanisms
A key means of promoting minority rights in education is at the national level.
This may include the national human rights institution.63 Such institutions may
consider individual complaints on the basis of the constitution, undertake investigation of apparent human rights abuses, and take class actions to judicially review
government policies.
Where there is a need to seek international redress, there is the possibility to
bring individual complaints under certain human rights treaties. At the regional
level these include: the African Commission (and soon Court) on Human and
Peoples’ Rights; the Inter-American Commission and Court on Human Rights,
(it is worth noting that the right to education is one of only two rights which
permit individual communications under the San Salvador Protocol); the
European Court on Human Rights; and the European Committee on Social
Rights (which receives only collective complaints).
Today, one of the key international debates surrounding ESC rights is the
extent to which they are ‘justiciable,’ that is whether they can be claimed,
enforced and guaranteed in a similar way to civil and political rights. The justiciability of the right to education should be in no doubt. This extends to all
elements of governmental obligations. Indeed constitutional and other courts have
considered the acceptability of educational content in many states, including
India, Japan, the Russian Federation and Venezuela, on grounds related to
religious intolerance, historical misrepresentation and the promotion of
militarism, and potential violence against the marginalized or vulnerable.64
Getting involved in the work being done by many NGOs to establish a
complaints mechanism under the ICESCR could be an important way to work
towards strengthening the implementation of the right to education. UN treaty
bodies which already receive individual complaints on aspects of the right to
education are the Human Rights Committee (HRC) and the Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD).65
There is also the possibility to submit alternative or shadow reports, and
engage in the review process under all relevant UN treaties, ICESCR, ICERD,
and the CRC being of particular importance when it comes to the right to
education.
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