18 episodes

ECCHR’s podcast about activism, art and justice.

To counter injustice with legal interventions – this is the aim of the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR).
For more information: www.ecchr.eu

Framing Human Rights ECCHR

    • Arts

ECCHR’s podcast about activism, art and justice.

To counter injustice with legal interventions – this is the aim of the European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR).
For more information: www.ecchr.eu

    #11 Archival interventions - The untold stories of (colonial) wars

    #11 Archival interventions - The untold stories of (colonial) wars

    In this episode, Ethiopian-American author Maaza Mengiste and Italian artist and photographer Laura Fiorio sit down with ECCHR General Secretary Wolfgang Kaleck.

    The conversation centers on the colonial history of Italy in Ethiopia. Mengiste talks about the often overlooked role of women in Ethiopia's fight against Italian occupation during World War II, and Italian artist Fiorio talks about her work “My fascist Grandpa.”

    Both bring their perspectives to contextualize photography and its manifold meaning and ability to hold and tell truths.

     

    © Vittoria Trovato / Laura Fiorio

    © Nina Subin / Maaza Mengiste

    • 41 min
    Corporate power, the role of law and human rights

    Corporate power, the role of law and human rights

    Human rights in times of crises #2

    Law not only organizes and secures economic profits, it is a crucial factor in creating wealth. Katharina Pistor (author, Columbia Law School) speaks with Guillermo Torres (lawyer, ProDESC), Johan Horst (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin) and Miriam Saage-Maaß (ECCHR program director Business and Human Rights) about how corporate power and law are intertwined.

    Our guests explore how economic and financial law are important factors in creating corporate power, and our legal and political options  to restrict this dynamic of growing corporate wealth and power. Can human rights, especially economic and social rights, play a role in insuring our societies become more equitable?

    Human rights in times of crises is ECCHR’s talk series on resistance and concrete utopias. With our conversations, we want to create the necessary platform for actors from all over the world to discuss and advance global human rights struggles. Human rights are a concrete utopia worth defending. But how to defend them needs to be constantly reinvented. As we find ourselves in a time of profound global transitions, human rights actors need to refer to prevailing inequalities and the underpinning social questions. ECCHR initiated an event series that is now available as a podcast to rethink the struggle for and around human rights. 

    For more information, go to ecchr.eu/human-rights-in-times-of-crises

    Let’s stay in touch! You want to stay up to date on ECCHR’s cases, events and publications? Subscribe to our newsletter.

    • 1 hr 23 min
    The concrete utopia of human rights

    The concrete utopia of human rights

    Human rights in times of crises #1

    Welcome to ECCHR’s talk series on resistance and concrete utopias. With our conversations, we want to create the necessary platform for actors from all over the world to discuss and advance global human rights struggles. Human rights are a concrete utopia worth defending. But how to defend them needs to be constantly reinvented. As we find ourselves in a time of profound global transitions, human rights actors need to refer to prevailing inequalities and the underpinning social questions. ECCHR initiated an event series that is now available as a podcast to rethink the struggle for and around human rights.

    Alejandra Ancheita (lawyer, founder of ProDESC, Mexico), Joshua Castellino (executive director, Minority Rights Group International), and Wolfgang Kaleck (ECCHR General Secretary) kick off our talk series Human rights in times of crises.

    On the basis of Kaleck’s latest book The concrete utopia of human rights: A look back into the future (in German, S. Fischer publishers), our guests discuss how, when faced with a climate crisis, a pandemic, deeply unequal economic models, and authoritarianism, human rights activists can no longer go on with business-as-usual. These unprecedented global transitions are a chance to rethink new strategies and ways forward, and reclaim human rights and their potential for change.

    For more information, go to: ecchr.eu/human-rights-in-times-of-crises

    Let’s stay in touch! You want to stay up to date on ECCHR’s cases, events and publications? Subscribe to our newsletter.

    • 1 hr 22 min
    (Post)colonial injustice: Genocide in Namibia and Black Lives Matter

    (Post)colonial injustice: Genocide in Namibia and Black Lives Matter

    Human rights in times of crises #7

    Colonialism continues to shape our current social, economic, and political world order to a substantial degree. In a discussion with prominent human rights advocates at this last event of our series, we will bridge different aspects of a larger struggle, encompassing reparations claims for German colonial crimes in Namibia, the legacy of slavery, unfinished decolonization, as well as the vibrant Black Lives Matter movement in the United States. How can human rights law be used to resist and counteract (post)colonial injustices? How are these movements broadening and intensifying their connections to human rights work and networks? 

    In this episode, Sima Luipert (Deputy Chairperson of the Nama Traditional Leaders of Namibia), Vince Warren (Executive Director of the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights), and Meena Jagannath (Director of Global Programs at Movement Law Lab based in Florida), take part in a conversation moderated by Wolfgang Kaleck (ECCHR General Secretary). 

    Human rights in times of crises is ECCHR’s talk series on resistance and concrete utopias. With our conversations, we want to create the necessary platform for actors from all over the world to discuss and advance global human rights struggles. Human rights are a concrete utopia worth defending. But how to defend them needs to be constantly reinvented. As we find ourselves in a time of profound global transitions, human rights actors need to refer to prevailing inequalities and the underpinning social questions. ECCHR initiated an event series that is now available as a podcast to rethink the struggle for and around human rights.

    For more information, go to: ecchr.eu/human-rights-in-times-of-crises

    Let’s stay in touch! You want to stay up to date on ECCHR’s cases, events and publications? Subscribe to our newsletter.

    • 1 hr 11 min
    Feminist movements challenging political transformation

    Feminist movements challenging political transformation

    Human rights in times of crises #6

    Contemporary feminist movements have developed significantly worldwide in ways that speak to their revolutionary potential – including within authoritarian contexts. How can their theories, political content, and organizational forms – from grassroots collective activism to organized strikes – effectively bring about the political transformation and social change needed in our patriarchal societies? What are their demands and visions for the future? What are the difficulties in realizing these visions? What will sustain – and not limit – the movements’ more radical visions? What is the importance of acknowledging how discrimination is forged at the intersection of gender, race, class, sexual orientation, religion, and more? 

    In this episode, we are happy to host two highly recommended guests: Marta Dillon is a journalist, writer, lesbian feminist activist, and one of the founders of the #NiUnaMenos grassroots movement in Argentina which campaigns against gender-based of violence. Magdalena Baran-Szoltys is a scholar, co-editor of the book About demands. How feminist activism succeeds, and active in the All-Poland Women’s Strike Movement as well as the protests against the Polish abortion law. The conversation is moderated by Wolfgang Kaleck (ECCHR General Secretary).

    Human rights in times of crises is ECCHR’s talk series on resistance and concrete utopias. With our conversations, we want to create the necessary platform for actors from all over the world to discuss and advance global human rights struggles. Human rights are a concrete utopia worth defending. But how to defend them needs to be constantly reinvented. As we find ourselves in a time of profound global transitions, human rights actors need to refer to prevailing inequalities and the underpinning social questions. ECCHR initiated an event series that is now available as a podcast to rethink the struggle for and around human rights.

    For more information, go to: ecchr.eu/human-rights-in-times-of-crises

    Let’s stay in touch! You want to stay up to date on ECCHR’s cases, events and publications? Subscribe to our newsletter.

    • 1 hr
    Rethinking (shrinking) spaces in times of crises

    Rethinking (shrinking) spaces in times of crises

    Human rights in times of crises #5

    From widespread surveillance, torture and disappearances to the increased criminalization of protest and restrictive rules on associations, we are unquestionably witnessing a global pushback against civic spaces. The repressive tactics that seek to strip legitimacy and rights from activists and other civic actors is not just to be deplored in authoritarian countries, but also a very real threat in liberal democracies as well. While the phenomenon of shrinking spaces is certainly not new, the intersectional crises we face – from socio-economic inequality to climate change, the global pandemic, the rise of far-right populism, new technologies and the further concentration of wealth and power into fewer hands – demand that we rethink our approaches and strategies.

    In this episode, our guests Ben Hayes, co-author of Rethinking civic space in an age of intersectional crises: A briefing for funders (2020), Isha Khandelwal, a human rights lawyer who can speak to the situation in India and Wolfgang Kaleck (ECCHR General Secretary) discuss concrete visions for organized forms of resistance. 

    Human rights in times of crises is ECCHR’s talk series on resistance and concrete utopias. With our conversations, we want to create the necessary platform for actors from all over the world to discuss and advance global human rights struggles. Human rights are a concrete utopia worth defending. But how to defend them needs to be constantly reinvented. As we find ourselves in a time of profound global transitions, human rights actors need to refer to prevailing inequalities and the underpinning social questions. ECCHR initiated an event series that is now available as a podcast to rethink the struggle for and around human rights.

    For more information, go to: ecchr.eu/human-rights-in-times-of-crises

    Let’s stay in touch! You want to stay up to date on ECCHR’s cases, events and publications? Subscribe to our newsletter.

    • 1 hr 7 min

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