02. GC - RL Projects related Outputs
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Reports and research outputs related to the long term cooperation between Global Campus and the Right Livelihood (RL) with the main purpose of enhancing children’s rights worldwide.
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ItemRight Livelihood Laureates - GC Alumni Skills Exchange Series( 2024)In 2024, the Global Campus Alumni network invited four Right Livelihood Laureates and four alumni to lead roundtable discussions on human rights-related skills. The exchange aimed to share tools, skills, and strategies used by Laureates and Alumni from various continents to achieve goals, overcome challenges, and bring about change. The March-June 2024 conversations between Alumni and Laureates offer valuable insights for any human rights defender, expert, or passionate individual. Topics covered include grassroots advocacy for environmental protection, LGBTQ+ community campaigns, community empowerment through solidarity and self management, and gender and anti-gender movements. This publication intends to provide guidance for those working in human rights, social justice, and climate justice. We believe the ideas shared by Right Livelihood Laureates and the Global Campus Alumni community Alumni can inspire worldwide initiatives for human rights and social justice, inspiring new approaches and collaboration across settings.
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ItemAdvancing Child Rights-Consistent Strategic Litigation Practice(Advancing Child Rights Strategic Litigation (ACRiSL), 2022)By clarifying what child rights-consistent Child Rights Strategic Litigation (CRSL) practice looks like and identifying examples of good practice and areas for development, the report aims to support litigators and others involved in CRSL in putting children’s rights at the heart of their practice. The report draws on in-depth interviews with CRSL practitioners and people with lived experience of CRSL as children across a wide range of global regions. It is also informed by the work of the project’s Child and Youth Advisory Group.
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ItemKey Principles for Child Rights-Consistent Child Rights Strategic Litigation Practice(Advancing Child Rights Strategic Litigation (ACRiSL), 2022)Key principles that should be borne in mind by Child Rights Strategic Litigation (CRSL) actors when carrying out work around the scoping, planning and design of CRSL, operationalising CRSL, working on follow-up to CRSL, including implementation, and working on extra-legal advocacy (political advocacy and other campaigning, media work and communications).
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ItemChild Rights Strategic Litigation: Key Principles for Climate Justice Litigation(Advancing Child Rights Strategic Litigation (ACRiSL), 2023)Child rights strategic litigation (CRSL) is litigation that seeks to bring about positive legal and/ or social change in terms of children’s enjoyment of their rights. Recent years have seen a huge increase in CRSL related to climate justice being brought at the national, regional and international levels. These Key Principles for climate justice litigators working on CRSL emerge from the Advancing Child Rights Strategic Litigation (ACRiSL) Project. This is a three-year global research collaboration bringing together partners from advocacy and academia to work on child rights strategic litigation. The Key Principles draw on interviews and engagements with climate justice litigators across four continents, as well as a number of public ACRiSL Network events at which children and young people with lived experience of CRSL, litigators, and other CRSL actors working in the climate justice sphere shared their experiences. The Key Principles seek to show how child rights are being, and can be, integrated into climate justice strategic litigation practice. The Key Principles focus on four key stages of child right strategic litigation decision-making: the scoping, planning and design of litigation; the operationalisation of litigation, follow-up to litigation, including implementation and dissemination, and extra-legal advocacy (political advocacy and other campaigning, media work and communications).
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ItemReinforcing the rights of children in Secure Care Centres in South Africa: A baseline study to inform a model for the independent oversight mechanism of Secure Care Centres(South African National Preventive Mechanism, 2022)This report is one of the outputs of a project to develop a model for an independent oversight mechanism to reinforce the rights of children in secure care in South Africa. It focuses on the first three project objectives: undertake a base-line study of the current facilities, through visits to the Secure Care Centres and conduct interviews with children and with staff, to inform the model for an independent oversight mechanism.