From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 |
Office of the United Nations
High Commissioner for Human Rights |
|
 |
| Org type |
Agency |
| Acronyms |
OHCHR |
| Head |
Navanethem Pillay, High Commissioner
for Human Rights |
| Status |
Active |
| Established |
20 December 1993 |
| Website |
http://www.ohchr.org |
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights (OHCHR) is a United Nations agency
that works to promote and protect the human rights that are
guaranteed under international law and stipulated in the Universal Declaration
of Human Rights of 1948. The office was established by the UN General Assembly on
20 December 1993[1] in the
wake of the 1993 World Conference on Human
Rights.
The office is headed by the High Commissioner for Human Rights,
who co-ordinates human rights activities throughout the UN
System and supervises the Human Rights
Council in Geneva, Switzerland. The
current High Commissioner is South African lawyer Navanethem
Pillay, whose four-year term began on 1 September 2008.
As of 2008, the agency had a budget of US$120m and 1,000 employees based
in Geneva.[2]
Functions and
organization
Mandate
The mandate of the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights derives from Articles 1, 13 and 55 of
the Charter
of the United Nations, the Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action and General Assembly
resolution 48/141 of 20 December 1993, by which the Assembly
established the post of United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights. In connection with the programme for reform of the United
Nations (A/51/950, para. 79), the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights and the Centre for Human Rights were
consolidated into a single Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights on 15 September 1997.
Purpose
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights:
- Promotes universal enjoyment of all human rights by giving
practical effect to the will and resolve of the world community as
expressed by the United Nations;
- Plays the leading role on human rights issues and emphasizes
the importance of human rights at the international and national
levels;
- Promotes international cooperation for human rights;
- Stimulates and coordinates action for human rights throughout
the United Nations system;
- Promotes universal ratification and implementation of
international standards;
- Assists in the development of new norms;
- Supports human rights organs and treaty monitoring bodies;
- Responds to serious violations of human rights;
- Undertakes preventive human rights action;
- Promotes the establishment of national human rights
infrastructures;
- Undertakes human rights field activities and operations;
- Provides education, information advisory services and technical
assistance in the field of human rights.
Organization
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights is divided into organizational units, as described below.
The Office is headed by a High Commissioner with the rank of Under-Secretary-General.
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
(Under-Secretary-General)
The United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights is accountable to the Secretary-General.
The High Commissioner is responsible for all the activities of
the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights, as well as for its administration, and carries out the
functions specifically assigned to him or her by the General Assembly in its resolution 48/141
of 20 December 1993 and subsequent resolutions of policy-making
bodies; advises the Secretary-General on the policies of the United
Nations in the area of human rights; ensures that substantive and
administrative support is given to the projects, activities, organs
and bodies of the human rights programme; represents the
Secretary-General at meetings of human rights organs and at other
human rights events; and carries out special assignments as decided
by the Secretary-General.
The current High Commissioner is South African Navanethem
Pillay.
Deputy to the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
(Assistant Secretary-General)
The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, in the
performance of his or her activities, is assisted by a Deputy to
the High Commissioner who acts as Officer-in-Charge during the
absence of the High Commissioner. In addition, the Deputy to the
High Commissioner carries out specific substantive and
administrative assignments as decided by the High Commissioner. The
Deputy is accountable to the High Commissioner.
The current Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights is
Republic of South Korean Ms. Kyung-wha Kang[3].
Staff Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights
The Staff Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights is headed by a Chief who is accountable to the High
Commissioner. The core functions of the Staff Office are as
follows:
- Assisting the High Commissioner in the overall direction and
supervision of the activities of the human rights programme;
- Assisting the High Commissioner in the formulation,
communication, implementation and evaluation of policies, practices
and activities for the promotion and protection of human
rights;
- Assisting the High Commissioner in maintaining relations with
Governments, other United Nations agencies and entities,
international organizations, regional and national institutions,
non-governmental organizations, the private sector and
academia;
- Assisting the High Commissioner in maintaining liaison on
policy matters with the Executive Office of the Secretary-General
and other relevant offices at Headquarters, as well as with the
spokespersons of the Secretary-General at New York and Geneva and
the media;
- Carrying out fund-raising functions and special projects as
assigned by the High Commissioner;
- Assisting the High Commissioner in developing and maintaining a
framework for the management and planning of the activities of the
human rights programme and facilitating the development of the
overall work programme, and in preparing annual management reports
on activities and achievements;
- Representing the High Commissioner at meetings and making
statements on his or her behalf.
Administrative Section
The Administrative Section is headed by a Chief who is
accountable to the High Commissioner. The core functions of the
Administrative Section, in addition to those set out in section 7
of Secretary-General's bulletin ST/SGB/1997/5, are as follows:
- Advising the High Commissioner on the budgetary, financial and
personnel matters relating to the human rights programme;
- Assisting the High Commissioner and appropriate staff in the
discharge of their financial, personnel and general administrative
responsibilities and administering the associate expert and
internship programmes.
New York
Office
The New York Office is headed by a Director who is accountable
to the High Commissioner. The core functions of the New York Office
are as follows:
- Representing the High Commissioner at Headquarters, at meetings
of policy-making bodies, with permanent missions of Member States,
at interdepartmental and inter-agency meetings, with
non-governmental organizations and professional groups, at academic
conferences and with the media;
- Providing policy advice and recommendations on substantive
matters to the High Commissioner;
- Supplying information and advice on human rights to the
Executive Office of the Secretary-General;
- Providing substantive support on human rights issues to the
General Assembly, the Economic and Social Council and other
policy-making bodies established in New York;
- Providing materials and information to the permanent missions,
United Nations departments, agencies and programmes,
non-governmental organizations, the media and others regarding the
human rights programme;
- Providing support to the High Commissioner and other officials,
and to Special Rapporteurs
and Special Representatives when on mission in New York;
- Undertaking other specific assignments as decided by the
High
Research and Right to
Development Branch
The Research and Right to Development Branch is headed by a
Chief who is accountable to the High Commissioner. The core
functions of the Research and Right to Development Branch are as
follows:
- Promoting and protecting the right to development, in
particular by:
- Supporting intergovernmental groups of experts on the
preparation of the strategy for the right to development;
- Assisting in the analysis of the voluntary reports by States to
the High Commissioner on the progress and steps taken for the
realization of the right to development and on
obstacles encountered;
- Carrying out research projects on the right to
development and preparing substantive outputs for submission to
the General Assembly, the Commission on Human Rights and treaty
bodies;
- Assisting in the substantive preparation of advisory service
projects and educational material on the right to
development;
- Providing substantive analysis and support to the High
Commissioner in his or her mandate to enhance system-wide support
for the right to development;
- Carrying out substantive research projects on the whole range
of human rights issues of interest to United Nations human rights
bodies in accordance with the priorities established by the Vienna
Declaration and Programme of Action and resolutions of
policy-making bodies;
- Providing substantive services to human rights organs engaged
in standard-setting activities;
- Preparing documents, reports or draft reports, summaries and
synthesis and position papers in response to particular requests,
as well as substantive contributions to information materials and
publications;
- Providing policy analysis, advice and guidance on substantive
procedures;
- Managing the information services of the human rights
programme, including the documentation centre and library, enquiry
services and the human rights databases;
- Preparing studies on relevant articles of the Charter of the
United Nations for the Repertory of Practice of United Nations
Organs.
Treaties and Commission
Branch
The Treaties and Commission Branch (formerly Support Services
Branch) is headed by a Chief who is accountable to the High
Commissioner. The core functions of the Treaties and Commission
Branch are as follows:
- Planning, preparing and servicing sessions/meetings of the
Human Rights Council, the Subcommission on Prevention of
Discrimination and Protection of Minorities and related working groups and
of the committees established by human rights treaty bodies and
their working groups;
- Ensuring that substantive support is provided in a timely
manner to the human rights treaty body concerned, drawing on the
appropriate resources of the human rights programme;
- Preparing state party reports for review by the treaty body
concerned and following up on decisions and recommendations;
- Preparing or coordinating the preparation and submission of all
substantive and other documents and the support from other
management units to the activities of treaty bodies serviced, and
following up on decisions taken at meetings of those bodies;
- Planning, preparing and servicing sessions of board of trustees
of the United Nations Voluntary Fund for Victims of Torture, and
implementing relevant decisions;
- Processing communications submitted to treaty bodies under
optional procedures and communications under the procedures
established by the Economic and Social Council in its resolution
1503 (XLVIII) of 27 May 1970 and ensuring follow-up.
Capacity Building Branch
The Capacity Building Branch (formerly Activities and Programmes
Branch) is headed by a Chief who is accountable to the High
Commissioner. The core functions of the Capacity Building Branch
are as follows:
- Developing, implementing, monitoring and evaluating advisory
services and technical assistance projects at the request of
Governments;
- Managing the Voluntary Fund for Technical Cooperation in the
Field of Human Rights;
- Implementing the Plan of Action of the United Nations Decade
for Human Rights Education, including the development of
information and educational materials;
- Providing substantive and administrative support to human
rights fact-finding and investigatory mechanisms, such as special
rapporteurs, representatives and experts and working groups
mandated by the Commission on Human Rights and/or the Economic and
Social Council to deal with specific country situations or
phenomena of human rights violations worldwide, as well as the
General Assembly's Special Committee to Investigate Israeli
Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Palestinian People and
Other Arabs of the Occupied Territories;
- Planning, supporting and evaluating human rights field
presences and missions, including the formulation and development
of best practice, procedural methodology and models for all human
rights activities in the field;
- Managing voluntary funds for human rights field presences;
- Managing the United Nations Voluntary Fund on Contemporary
Forms of Slavery, United Nations Voluntary Fund for Indigenous
Populations and United Nations Voluntary Fund for the International
Decade of the World's Indigenous People.
(Source: ST/SGB/1997/10, 15 September 1997,
SECRETARY-GENERAL'S BULLETIN, ORGANIZATION OF THE OFFICE OF THE
UNITED NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS)
High Commissioners for
Human Rights
On 24 July 2008, UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon nominated Navanethem
Pillay to succeed Louise Arbour as High
Commissioner for Human Rights.[5]
The United
States reportedly resisted her appointment at first, because of
her views on abortion and
other issues, but eventually dropped its opposition. Campaign group
avaaz.org had also run a high profile campaign calling for greater
transparency in the appointment, including a blog site and a spoof
job advertisement in the Economist. [6]
At a special meeting on 28 July 2008, the UN General Assembly
confirmed the nomination by consensus.[7]
Her four-year term began on 1 September 2008.[7]
Pillay says the High Commissioner is "the voice of the victim
everywhere".[2]
See also
References
Bibliography
- Bertrand G. Ramcharan, The United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights - The Challenges of International Protection (Kluwer
Publishers, INTERNATIONAL STUDIES IN HUMAN RIGHTS Volume 71,
2004)
- A.J. Hobbins, “Humphrey and the High Commissioner: the Genesis
of the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights.”
Journal of the History of International Law. III (2001), pp.
38-74.
- Alfred de Zayas, "Human Rights, United Nations High
Commissioner for" in Helmut Volger, Concise Encyclopedia of the
United Nations, Kluwer 2002, pp. 217-223.
- Alfred de Zayas, "United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights" in Rudolf Bernhardt (ed.) Encyclopaedia of Public
International Law, Elsevier, Amsterdam 2000, Vol. IV pp.
1129-1132.
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