Global Campus Open Knowledge Repository
Our Open Knowledge Repository is a digital service that collects, preserves, and distributes all digital materials resulting from the rich and varied production of the Global Campus of Human Rights. It is an ever growing collection which aims to give visibility to our research outputs, educational content, and multimedia materials; sustain open access for knowledge transfer; and foster communication within and beyond academia.
Communities in DSpace
Select a community to browse its collections.
- The Global Campus Human Rights Journal is a peer-reviewed bi-annual publication that serves as a forum for rigorous scholarly analysis, critical commentaries, and reports on recent developments pertaining to human rights and democratisation globally.
- Publications series about various projects developed by Global Campus of Human Rights.
- A selection of the best master theses of each regional programme (annual award) as well as the full collection of all dissertations.
- This collection includes the Global Campus of Human Rights Annual Report and specific activities reporting.
- The Global Campus of Human Rights Magazine is a quarterly promotional publication on the network activities. It is published both in English and Italian.
Recent Submissions
Preparing for pandemics: Lessons from COVID-19 for human rights-based changes
(Global Campus of Human Rights, 2023-05-06) Kurian, Rachel
COVID-19 exacerbated prevailing structural power inequalities and
worsened fundamental human rights of vulnerable groups. Three sets of
priorities are identified for the future. They concern ‘old normal’ prevention,
lessons sharing, and mobilisation promotion, in order to advance rights-based
changes.
The Culture Vaccine: boosting creative ‘immunity’ in the aftermath of COVID-19
(Global Campus of Human Rights, 2023-03-30) Papaspyropoulou, Penny
Is the post-pandemic era the momentum for mainstreaming a cultural rights
based approach, given the undeniable recovery qualities of culture creation and
enjoyment, along with an increased attention to cultural rights defenders as human rights
defenders?
Religious minorities and the loss of their ‘collective effervescence’ in rituals during the COVID-19 pandemic
(Global Campus of Human Rights, 2023-03-09) Katz Rotnitzky, David
Throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, religious minorities suffered
limitations on their religious rights. Due to such limitations, religious minorities lost
what is called the ‘collective effervescence’ of their rituals and started
transitioning to a new religious digitalization.
Democracy as the expired vaccine for Mexico: the return to a militarist state
(Global Campus of Human Rights, 2023-03-16) Soto Tirado, Jorge
Mexico is increasingly moving away from democracy and proof of this
is the return of militarism through institutionalised populism. Is there a medicine
for such a disease or will the remaining institutions do the work?
Beyond capacity or below obligation? Why Rohingya girls are excluded from education in Bangladesh
(Global Campus of Human Rights, 2026-05-07) Abid, Fahim Abrar
Bangladesh hosts the world's largest Rohingya refugee population yet has no refugee law. Viewing the camp education system through an intersectional CRC lens reveals that Rohingya adolescent girls' exclusion from post-primary education is a governance choice that constitutes structural discrimination.