We visited The Foundation for Human Rights Initiative in Kampala, Uganda, on May 27, 2019. During our meeting the NGO expressed their self-stated initiative to, "advocate for peace, stability, democracy, social justice and sustainable development in Uganda." Such a cause immediately engaged our group as they identified a direct connection between their work in human rights and sustainable development in their country. But, how? Within such an initiative the NGO has three focuses: social accountability, equality and democratic governance. While they have such universal goals, they identified that a major challenge faced is that Ugandans have become dormant due to feeling powerless against large bodies, such as various organizations and the government regime. They have lost hope, yet, HRI aspires to re-instill it. Such a challenge encouraged them to pursue an active citizenship campaign, among others such as legal support and human rights educational endeavors, to aggravate their constituents to enable more effective change. They conduct research on their community to develop such advocacy strategies. HRI's support extends beyond protecting the dignity of basic citizens, reaching judicial reform, reaching the accused and sentenced. Because human rights is heavily entwined in many aspects of livelihood, their work affects ubiquitous sections of society. Overall, such work contributes to sustainable development because if people are respected, dignified, and are granted their rights (Universal Human Rights and those stated constitutionally), they have the opportunity to pursue their full potential in society. Such an opportunity enables the best contributions and structure to develop sustainably.
It was said that cultural tiredness played a large role in the education, defense, and implementation of Human Rights. How does one combat the cultural attitude of being tired?
Students from Drake University (USA) and Makerere University Business School (Uganda) share their joint educational experiences in development enabled through joint coursework taken at both universities in the USA and Uganda.
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A way that the people of Uganda can fight culture tiredness is by opening up conversations about human rights in Uganda, educating the masses on human rights, and continuing to fight for the people that need help.
ReplyDeleteGreat post !! Thanks for sharing valuable content.
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