Promoting
human rights through cultural liberty
A.H. Monjurul Kabir
Universal
human rights do not impose one cultural standard, rather one legal standard
of minimum protection necessary for human dignity. As a legal standard
adopted through the United Nations, universal human rights represent
the hard-won consensus of the international community, not the cultural
imperialism of any particular region or set of traditions. Like most
areas of international law, universal human rights are a contemporary
achievement, new to all cultures. Very interestingly, this year's Human
Development Report (HDR 2004), the flagship human development publication
of United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), is on Cultural Liberty
in Today's Diverse World. In a pioneering examination of identity
politics around the world, the report argues that cultural freedoms
should be embraced as basic human rights and as necessities for the
development of the increasingly diverse societies of the 21st century,
Liberty
in cultural diversity
In our diverse world more than two-thirds of countries have minority
groups that make up more than 10% of their population and nearly a billion
people belong to groups subject to some form of exclusion. The HDR 2004
Cultural Liberty in Today's Diverse World argues that states
must actively devise multicultural policies to prevent discrimination
on cultural grounds religious, ethnic and linguistic. The expansion
of cultural freedoms, not suppression, is the only sustainable option
to promote stability, democracy and human development within and across
societies.
Such
policies are not always simple, but many countries are making headway.
The Report debunks the myths that have been used to deny expansions
of cultural freedoms, showing that diversity is not a threat to state
unity, not the source of inevitable "clashes", not an obstacle
to development. Instead, it is at the core of human developmentthe ability
of people to choose who they are. The Report presents a path-breaking
framework to examine issues that leap from the headlines to the forefront
of the international policy agenda: migration, predatory extremism,
customary law and cultural diversity.
Human
Development Report 2004 features an analysis of the vital links between
human development and cultural liberty; identifies living mode exclusions
as well as political, economic and social exclusions (participation
exclusion) faced by culturally identified groups; presents cutting-edge
multicultural approaches covering power-sharing, religious and secular
states, language policy, legal pluralism and affirmative action; analyzes
the rise of coercive movements for cultural domination and their challenges
to democracies; examines key areas of policy for cultural diversity
and globalization, including traditional knowledge, trade in cultural
goods and migration. In its 15th year, the annual Human Development
Report continues to frame debates on the most pressing challengesnew
and oldfor enabling people to live full and creative lives.
The
report was overseen by UNDP Human Development Report Director Sakiko
Fukuda-Parr, the lead author, and opens with an agenda-setting introductory
chapter by Amartya Sen, the winner of the 1998 Nobel Prize in Economics
and one of the originators of UNDP's Human Development Reports.
"Rather
than glorify unreasoned endorsement of inherited traditions, or warn
the world about the alleged inevitability of the clash of civilizations,
the human development perspective demands that attention go to the importance
of freedom in cultural spheres and to ways of defending and expanding
the cultural freedoms that people can enjoy," Sen writes.
Cultural
rights, precursor to cultural liberty
Every human being has the right to culture, including the right to enjoy
and develop cultural life and identity. Cultural rights, however, are
not unlimited. The right to culture is limited at the point at which
it infringes on another human right. No right can be used at the expense
or destruction of another, in accordance with international law. This
means that cultural rights cannot be invoked or interpreted in such
a way as to justify any act leading to the denial or violation of other
human rights and fundamental freedoms. As such, claiming cultural relativism
as an excuse to violate or deny human rights is an abuse of the right
to culture.
There
are legitimate, substantive limitations on cultural practices, even
on well-entrenched traditions. For example, no culture today can legitimately
claim a right to practise slavery. Despite its practice in many cultures
throughout history, slavery today cannot be considered legitimate, legal,
or part of a cultural legacy entitled to protection in any way. To the
contrary, all forms of slavery, including contemporary slavery-like
practices, are a gross violation of human rights under international
law.
Similarly,
cultural rights do not justify torture, murder, genocide, discrimination
on grounds of sex, race, language or religion, or violation of any of
the other universal human rights and fundamental freedoms established
in international law. Any attempts to justify such violations on the
basis of culture have no validity under international law. Rather cultural
freedom is a very strong weapon to fight poverty and ensure human development
"If the world is to reach the Millennium Development Goals and
ultimately eradicate poverty, it must first successfully confront the
challenge of how to build inclusive, culturally diverse societies,"
Mark Malloch Brown, Administrator of UNDP writes in his foreword to
the HDR.
Religious
freedom and public policy
States also have a responsibility to protect rights and secure freedoms
for all their members and not discriminate on grounds of religion. Non-discriminatory
states should protect religious freedom and individual choice:
Everyone
should have the right to criticize, revise or challenge the dominance
of a particular interpretation of core beliefs. Clergy or other religious
hierarchies should have the same status as other citizens. People of
one religion must be allowed to be responsibly critical of the practices
and beliefs of other religions. Individuals must be free not only to
criticize the religion into which they are born, but also to reject
it for another or to remain without one.
Protecting
cultural diversity through human rights
Human rights are neither representative of, nor oriented towards, one
culture to the exclusion of others. Universal human rights reflect the
dynamic, coordinated efforts of the international community to achieve
and advance a common standard and international system of law to protect
human dignity.
The
flexibility of human rights to be relevant to diverse cultures is facilitated
by the establishment of minimum standards and the incorporation of cultural
rights. The instruments establish minimum standards for economic, social,
cultural, civil and political rights. Within this framework, states
have maximum room for cultural variation without diluting or compromising
the minimum standards of human rights established by law. These minimum
standards are in fact quite high, requiring from the State a very high
level of performance in the field of human rights.
The
Vienna Declaration on Human Rights provides explicit consideration for
culture in human rights promotion and protection, stating that "the
significance of national and regional particularities and various historical,
cultural and religious backgrounds must be borne in mind". This
is deliberately acknowledged in the context of the duty of States to
promote and protect human rights regardless of their cultural systems.
While its importance is recognized, cultural consideration in no way
diminishes States' human rights obligations.
Most
directly, human rights facilitate respect for and protection of cultural
diversity and integrity, through the establishment of cultural rights
embodied in instruments of human rights law. These include: the International
Bill of Rights; the Convention on the Rights of the Child; the International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination;
the Declaration on Race and Racial Prejudice; the Declaration on the
Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and of Discrimination Based
on Religion or Belief; the Declaration on the Principles of International
Cultural Cooperation; the Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging
to National or Ethnic, Religious and Linguistic Minorities; the Declaration
on the Right to Development; the International Convention on the Protection
of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families;
and the ILO Convention No. 169 on the Rights of Indigenous and Tribal
Peoples.
Human
rights which relate to cultural diversity and integrity encompass a
wide range of protections, including: the right to cultural participation;
the right to enjoy the arts; conservation, development and diffusion
of culture; protection of cultural heritage; freedom for creative activity;
protection of persons belonging to ethnic, religious or linguistic minorities;
freedom of assembly and association; the right to education; freedom
of thought, conscience or religion; freedom of opinion and expression;
and the principle of non-discrimination. All these issues are particularly
pertinent for Bangladesh. In fact, the very spirit of the war of liberation
of 1971 was to establish a multi-cultural democracy free from exploitations
of all forms. The Human Development Report is a strong reminder of that
commitment.
A.H.
Monjurul Kabir, a human rights advocate and governance analyst.