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.

 

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Global Campus of Human Rights Magazine n 17 (January 2026)
(Global Campus of Human Rights, 2026) Grimheden, Jonas; Anjinho, Teresa; Heerdt, Daniela; Battaglia, Guido; Giorgi, Davide; Bakari Muh'd, Umar; Tassinari, Matilde; Brunetta, Carlotta
Throughout this issue, voices from institutions and oversight bodies resonate with urgency, reflecting on the vital task of breathing life into human rights standards paradigms. Jonas Grimheden eloquently reminds us that these rights must be embedded in operating procedures, made tangible in the rich tapestry of real-world settings, especially in sensitive realms such as migration and border governance. Here, education emerges not as an abstract notion, but as a guiding light, equipping professionals to navigate ethical dilemmas and institutional pressures, all while keeping the sanctity of fundamental rights at the forefront. Deliberately, this edition broadens the canvas on which human rights are explored and advanced. Sport unfolds as a vital arena; as Daniela Heerdt poignantly expresses, human rights apply to every aspect of life, meaning that they also apply in the world of sport… athletes are human beings first and athletes second. Viewed through this lens, sport becomes both a stage of risk and a realm of potential, reflecting societal inequalities while simultaneously breaking barriers, fostering dignity, equality, and inclusion. All in line with everyday essentials UN campaigns for human rights promotion not only human rights day but beyond. The arts, culture, and visual expression further expand this horizon. Within the Global Campus experience, creative practices are increasingly embraced as essential threads in the fabric of human rights education and advocacy. Guido Battaglia beautifully captures this idea, noting that sport and by extension, cultural expression holds a unique ability to rise above geopolitical tensions, serving as a platform for peace, dialogue, and mutual understanding. In a divided world, shared experiences in sport, film, and art can illuminate paths for connection where politics often falters. A proof of this is the important milestone of our CHRA Summer School that celebrates its 20 years anniversary.
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Social Responsibility Report 2025
(Global Campus of Human Rights, 2026) Global Campus of Human Rights
The year 2025 marked renewed momentum for the Global Campus of Human Rights ETS, both as an international academic network and as a Third Sector Association in Italy. Building on over twenty-five years of university cooperation, the Global Campus continued to advance its mission of promoting human rights, democracy, and sustainable development through education, research and civic engagement.  As an ETS, the Global Campus acts in the public interest by disseminating a culture of human rights and strengthening democratic participation. From its headquarters at the Monastery of San Nicolò in Venice, it coordinates the global network and implements a wide range of educational and community-oriented initiatives that benefit students, professionals, civil society and citizens in Italy and abroad.  In 2025, GC-HQ delivered key programmes including the European Master’s in Human Rights and Democratisation (EMA), alongside short courses, summer schools, e-learning offers and professional trainings. The expansion of open-access online learning reaffirmed our commitment to accessible human rights education. Capacity Development initiatives further strengthened cooperation with partner universities in developing countries, emerging democracies and contexts under pressure, helping to create new learning opportunities and locally relevant curricula. The Global Campus also consolidated its role as a centre for research and policy dialogue through publications, conferences and projects on digital rights, climate justice, migration and the protection of human rights defenders. The annual Venice School for Human Rights Defenders once again connected academia with frontline activism.  Collaboration with Italian and European institutions—including the European Union, Right Livelihood, the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation (MAECI) and regional partners—continued to expand, enabling new training activities, cultural events and outreach initiatives in Venice and beyond. Internally, the organisation strengthened its policies and practices on inclusion, equality and staff well-being, building on the first institutional Gender Equality Plan.  This Social Responsibility Report 2025, prepared “with reference to the GRI Standards (2021)”, reaffirms our commitment to transparency, accountability and continuous improvement. We remain grateful to our staff, students, alumni, university members, donors and partners whose dedication sustains our shared mission: advancing human rights through knowledge, collaboration and action.
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Children’s rights in Kazakhstan: discrepancies of child protection from violence in paper and in practice
(Global Campus of Human Rights, 2026-01-22) Mussabalinova, Aigerim
Children, as rights holders, require effective protection from violence, abuse, and neglect. Kazakhstan illustrates a situation where this right is well established in law but lacks effective practical mechanisms for implementation.
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Disability rights: giving Palestinian women a voice
(Global Campus of Human Rights, 2026-01-15) Eideh, Areen
Palestinian women and girls with disabilities face double discrimination based on their gender and physical conditions which disadvantages them in education, work and daily life. Here, they tell their stories of struggle and resilience.
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Environmental injustice and commuting struggles: rethinking urban mobility in Bishkek
(Global Campus of Human Rights, 2026-01-08) Tenizbaeva, Akylai
Bishkek’s growing traffic and pollution, alongside shrinking green spaces reveal deep urban inequality. It is worth calling for a shift toward a sustainable 15-minute city model, where clean air, short commutes, and public services are accessible to all