ODD 4 et le droit de l’enfant à l’éducation
L'Agenda 2030 est explicitement fondé sur la Déclaration universelle des droits de l’homme et les traités internationaux relatifs aux droits humains.
L'Agenda 2030 est explicitement fondé sur la Déclaration universelle des droits de l’homme et les traités internationaux relatifs aux droits humains.
Cette boîte à outils a été produite par la Campagne mondiale pour l’éducation (CME) en collaboration avec ActionAid International (AAI) et l’Internationale de l’Éducation (IE), et avec le financement du Partenariat mondial pour l’éducation (GPE). Elle vise à aider les organisations de la société civile et les défenseurs de l’éducation dans les pays à revenu faible et intermédiaire à plaider et faire campagne sur les questions liées au financement de l’éducation, un domaine d’intérêt stratégique du mouvement de la CME.
Amin, 18 ans, est devenu un réfugié lorsque sa famille a fui la Syrie pour le Liban il y a cinq ans. Il n’a pas été à l’école depuis. Avec un père ne réussissant pas à obtenir un statut légal ou un emploi, Amin a dû maintenir la famille de sept.
Who Will Be Accountable? Human Rights and the Post-2015 Development Agenda explains that embedding accountability into the very DNA of the post-2015 sustainable development architecture will be critical to ensure the new plan ensures political commitments made at the international level actually result in policy changes on the ground. The publication examines accountability gaps that have impeded realisation of global and national development goals thus far.
The aim of this briefing is to propose a human rights-centered policy agenda to tackle economic inequality and the social inequalities it reinforces. It sets out to illustrate how human rights can provide both a normative framework and a set of accountability mechanisms to accelerate success in meeting this most cross-cutting of sustainable development goals.
The publication is a compilation of practical examples of measures taken by Member States in implementing the provisions of the UNESCO Convention and Recommendation against Discrimination in Education - considered a cornerstone of Education 2030.
The examples are taken from national reports submitted to UNESCO for the Eighth Consultation of Member States on the implementation of these two international instruments.
The new Global Education Monitoring (GEM) Report by UNESCO, shows the potential for education to propel progress towards all global goals outlined in the new 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development (SDGs). It also shows that education needs a major transformation to fulfill that potential and meet the current challenges facing humanity and the planet. There is an urgent need for greater headway in education. On current trends, the world will achieve universal primary education in 2042, universal lower secondary education in 2059 and universal upper secondary education in 2084.
In this policy brief, the Global Campaign for Education, outlines ten clear recommendations for the Education Financing Commission, which will launch its report on 18th Spetember, 2016. The recommendations are:
With the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), countries have promised to achieve universal completion of primary and secondary education by 2030. This paper, jointly released by the UNESCO Institute for Statistics (UIS) and the Global Education Monitoring (GEM) Report, illustrates the magnitude of this challenge. Globally, 263 million children, adolescents and youth between the ages of 6 and 17 are currently out of school, according to a new set of UIS indicators.
In this report, the Special Rapporteur argues that treating economic and social rights as human rights is essential both for efforts to eliminate extreme poverty and to ensure a balanced and credible approach in the field of human rights as a whole. He argues that economic and social rights currently remain marginal in most contexts, thus undermining the principle of the indivisibility of the two sets of rights.