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Published bySheena Rose Modified over 9 years ago
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UNCT Engagement in Human Rights – Results and Lessons in Uzbekistan UNITED NATIONS in Uzbekistan
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Political Economy of HRs Situation Analysis: –“Uzbek model of development” - strong growth (8.5 %), investment into social services, public sector jobs, compliance in HRs reporting –But also omnipotent state presence : lack of tolerance of criticism; top-down decision-making; punitive system; HRs track record –Consequence of 1) nature of governance; 2) primacy of stability; 3) primacy of community vs. individual –HRs is perceived as outside intervention/finger pointing –Linked to image of the country and low ranking in international governance/HRs comparisons Progress in child labour State – citizen relationship as core issue –Recognized by Policy Committee (2013); commitment to promote implementation of HRs obligations, strengthen programming
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1. IMPORTANCE of DIALOGUE Joint Government - UN coordination mechanisms such as UNDAF Steering Committee as a platform to generate mandate for cooperation: o UNDAF Steering Committee meeting of 2013 gave mandate to engage in : i) follow-up to UPR recommendations and ii) preparation of MDG report; Joint policy dialogue initiatives (preparation of 2 nd national MDG report) as means for paving the way towards dialogue on HR issues (from developmental perspective)
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2. UPR as OPPORTUNITY Willingness of Govt to engage had to be generated. So far internal exercises UN role: –“homework” in close collaboration with OHCHR –mobilization of int. community for NAP (3 big roundtables) – substantive inputs (RBM, specific recommendations, monitoring framework, integration with treaty body recommendations) Breakthrough in consultation approach –– NAP as platform for engagement – –Challenging agenda. Reform process behind every recommendation (legal, institutional, etc.) that will not happen unless facilitated. –Approved in Nov 2014 + UN support requested for many recommendations
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3. CONSOLIDATING MANDATE - UNDAF In house exercise – programme staff trained in HRBA/root cause analysis – CCA includes theory of change for priority HRs issues Extensive consultations with Govt. (25) HR content vision = expanding freedoms/HD HR elements under different Outcomes: e.g. domestic violence under social protection Dedicated Outcome 8: Strengthen the Protection of Rights. Indicator: level of implementation of National Action Plan
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4. PROGRAMMING Future Directions: Harmonization (compliance with treaties and law making quality - with MoJ/MFA/CabMin/Parliament/IMCL) Low hanging fruits (engage with areas that are open; e.g. disability as joint programme, agency engagements) Engage with law enforcement block (soft entry points + trust building first; long term engagement. Focus on grievance processes) Strengthen monitoring: make the monitoring mechanism meaningful; engagement with NHR institutions; public participation through data disclosure Complemented by advocacy: Law on Crime Prevention Campaign (VaW) Treaty body reporting
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RESULTS SUMMARY After 2005 space for HRs very limited until 2 nd UPR UPR dialogue first time opening, elevation to high level (approval; int. community engagement) Mandate and entry points for UN and broader int. community created – systemic engagement; catalytic potential UN role as broker and convener enhanced Thematic openings increased (child labour, civil society legislation, transparency, judiciary)
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LESSONS System approach instead of classical HRs promotion interventions Mandate necessary – 1) UPR, 2) UNDAF HRs as a framework of objectives, but “how to get there” largely developmental Monitoring (benchmarking, RBM, etc.) Never take over the job – it is Government responsibility Avoid clashes of belief system (language important) Stay away from finger pointing - link with OHCHR Constructive developmental approach with the HR end in mind Balance principled approach with acknowledgement of progressive realization
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