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Ceremony of the Awarding of Diplomas of the “European Master’s Programme in Human Rights and Democratisation” 2023/2024

In a grand celebration of academic excellence and human rights advocacy, the European Master’s Programme in Human Rights and Democratisation (EMA, Global Campus Europe) marked the end of another successful academic year with its Diploma Awarding Ceremony held on 22 September 2024. The prestigious event took place at the historical Scuola Grande San Giovanni Evangelista in Venice, serving as a testament to the dedication and passion of 82 graduates from 32 countries. The ceremony also marks a significant moment: the inauguration of the 28th cohort for the academic year 2024/2025, welcoming 78 students from 32 countries.   The ceremony was opened by Veronica Gomez, the President of the Global Campus of Human Rights, Manfred Nowak, the Secretary General of the Global Campus, Orla Ní Cheallacháin, EMA Programme Director and Diego Vecchiato from the Scuola Grande San Giovanni Evangelista. They extended a warm welcome to the graduating students, their families, professors, and a global network of supporters, including representatives of the European Union as the main partner and donor, from partner organizations and local guests and the ceremony’s keynote speakers.   The ceremony’s opening speeches were given by Sabrina Ugolini, newly appointed President of the Italian Inter-Ministerial Committee for Human Rights, and Micha Ramakers, Deputy Head of Unit Gender Equality, Human Rights and Democratic Governance, DG INTPA, European Commission.    “The CIDU, placed since 1978 at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, ensures the role of governmental coordination among Italian Administrations in their relations with international bodies on the issue of respect for human rights and has always fostered ongoing dialogue between institutions, civil society and academia,” said Sabrina Ugolini.   “Today, we live in a world where human rights and democracy are increasingly attacked, and narratives are developed or resurface that question the universality, indivisibility and interdependence of human rights. There is a backlash that involves the use of pernicious new strategies and tools, notably in the digital sphere, that we had not seen before. In such a world human rights professionals are more than ever key actors and drivers of renewed positive change. This is why we support the Global Campus”, said Micha Ramakers.   The highlight for students and guests was the keynote address by HE, Albin Kurti, Prime Minister of Kosovo. For 20 years EMA students have travelled to Kosovo at the end of their first semester to see first-hand the realities of human rights field work, and the wide range of actors that are required to rebuild society after war. This experience has always been a key highlight of the EMA year for our students, helping them to develop skills that are now more necessary then ever considering horrific violence taking place in Palestine, Ukraine, Sudan, Myanmar, and elsewhere.   “This academic year we have an even greater reason to celebrate, due to two milestones that have been reached. First, on December 10, 2023, we marked the 75th anniversary of the adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the landmark document that launched the modern human rights movement. And second, this year was also the 20th time that students from the EMA program embarked on a field trip to Kosova — the country I lead — to learn first hand about what it means to promote human rights and democratization in a real-world setting. I have had the pleasure of welcoming them to Kosova every year.” Declared Albin Kurti.   “The EMA graduates, celebrated during the 2024 Graduation Ceremony, remind us of the reason why the EMA programme and the Global Campus were established by our university network and the EU in the 1990s: to educate professionals ready to engage in the essential work demanded by global polycrises and conflict situations our world continues to be the stage of.” – said Manfred Nowak. “This expertise has always been key to assist countries torn apart by wars or taking their first steps into democracy.”    Established in 1997, the EMA programme is the longest-running and largest regional network in the Global Campus. In its decades-long history, the EMA programme has been a pioneer in inter-university cooperation growing from an original group of 10 universities to a network of 43 universities representing all EU member states, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. The EMA programme is possible due to the dedication, energy and commitment of our 43 EMA Directors, who ensure that the programme continues to live up to the vision of its founders, to shape the state of the art in human rights education through mobility exchange and collaboration in teaching and research. The graduation ceremony, and governance meetings that take place before them, are an important moment to recognise and to celebrate the contributions of EMA universities, and the support they give to the graduating students throughout their academic journey in EMA.    Among significant moments of the Ceremony were the EMAlumni Award 2024, introduced by Hélène Bauwens, President of the EMA Alumni Association. This year’s award was given to Andra Matei, founder of Avant-Garde Lawyers, for her tireless work to protect cultural rights defenders and artists at risk and promote the right to freedom of artistic expression in a time where civic and cultural space is ever shrinking. The award is a glass sculpture entitled “Collective Memory” generously donated by artist Koen Vanmechelen and Fondazione Berengo. In addition, the second Joint Annual Engaged Artivist Award on Atrocity Prevention and Human Rights has been presented to the artivist Kai Mata. The year-long artistic residency award is symbolized with a Murano glass sculpture created by Venetian designer Eleonora Vaccari in collaboration with our partners from the Auschwitz Institute for the Prevention of Genocide and Mass Atrocities (AIPG) and Binghamton University (G-IMAP).   Finally, Global Campus Europe has given the second scholarship in memory of our late colleague Nicola Tonon, IT and web marketing specialist, to Abdus Sadiq, EMA student of the 2024/2025 cohort, from Pakistan.   “The EMA graduation ceremony 2024 is the occasion for the Global Campus of Human Rights to bring an old-time partnership into light, that with the Scuola Grande of San Giovanni Evangelista“, said Elisabetta Noli, Administrative Director of the Global Campus. “The Scuola hosted one edition of the graduation in the past. This year, thanks to the Scuola welcoming us again, we have an opportunity to strengthen cooperation and include the EMA Graduation among the different human rights and

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Venice Statement: Reconceptualising Exile for Human Rights Defenders at Risk

We, the Global Campus of Human Rights and Right Livelihood, convened members of the global human rights community in Venice on 24 and 25 May 2024 for the fourth annual Conference on the Global State of Human Rights. Among them was a group of Human Rights Defenders (HRDs) courageously continuing their important work despite being forced outside of their countries of origin by repressive governments and an increasingly perilous environment. These HRDs joined us not only as important voices during our conference discussions but as a group participated in further workshops and discussions which are the basis of this following Statement. Our shared aim was to reflect and deepen our collective understanding of the lived experiences of at-risk HRDs in the promotion of a rights-based and peaceful world order. This aim was our priority for 2024, while we reaffirm and recommit to the findings set out in the Venice Statement: Towards a New Era of Human Rights issued at the third Global State of Human Rights Conference held in 2023.[1]   Today, we are faced with the urgency of responding to a polycrisis, where various current crises interact, creating complex and devastating consequences that are difficult to effectively address. In 2024, most prominently is the rise of authoritarianism worldwide and shrinking civic spaces, the intersection of the increasing number of armed conflicts causing untold horrors and suffering to communities in various parts of the world, and human-induced climate change, biodiversity loss, and environmental pollution causing irreversible destruction to our planet home. Cumulatively, these lead to systemic, grave, and widespread human rights violations today that will carry on having a serious impact on future generations.   We acknowledge the continuing contributions and positive impact of HRDs to protect human rights, uphold the rule of law, and call for accountability. These individuals and groups of HRDs include but are not limited to indigenous groups, women, girls, children, LGBTIQ, and Environmental HRDs.  Professionals, including artists, who actively engage in defending human rights also play an essential role in shedding light on injustices, challenging oppressive systems, and inspiring others to stand up for their rights. Despite the achievements made in the past 25 years since the adoption of the UN Declaration on Human Rights Defenders, the environment in which HRDs conduct their work has increasingly deteriorated over the last years in all parts of the world, including increased frequency of killings, threats to life, being deprived of physical and mental safety and wellbeing, attacks on property, and similar threats to their families, friends, and colleagues. At the same time, we note the increased impunity with which certain state and non-state actors continue to violate international human rights law, humanitarian law, environmental law, and other established principles of international law. This leads to further distrust in institutions to effectively protect our international legal order, which has severe and partly irreversible consequences across generations.   We highlight three aspects related to the work of HRDs which stand out to us in relevance and gravity today: the experience of at-risk HRDs forced into exile, the work of HRDs in conflict contexts, and the work of Environmental HRDs.       Reconceptualising Exile for Human Rights Defenders at Risk   While some mechanisms are in place for the protection and support of at-risk HRDs and those who are close to them, including relocation programmes, there is still much to learn from their lived experiences. We commit to adopting a meaningful human rights-based process of learning and research, following the principles of ‘do no harm’, conflict sensitivity and gender equality, and special consideration for the mental and physical health and wellbeing of HRDs. Despite certain general and shared experiences and conditions, each HRD faces unique circumstances which need attention.   We start from the understanding that exile has, within its colloquial meaning, negative connotations, carrying notions of stigma, marginalisation, and discrimination. Improving our understanding of this concept, however, may pave the way for a deeper appreciation of the challenges and suffering at-risk HRDs often face when moving into exile, and how to remedy and overcome them as adequately as possible. There are numerous practical challenges at least at three stages: 1) when evaluating the option to leave, 2) during the passage to a new country or location, and 3) integrating successfully in the new country or location. These include but are not limited to lack of access to comprehensive risk assessment, health insurance and access to medical services, access to travel authorisations, visas, and possibly emergency travel documentation, as well as clarification on educational and skills certification to find meaningful employment opportunities once relocated. Developing an understanding of how to design and improve mechanisms to effectively support at-risk HRDs at all stages of the process is a powerful tool to fight against the pain and stigma of exile and build a transnational support structure.       Defending Human Rights during Times of War and Conflict   We deeply regret to note that despite the gains made by humanity, especially over the past 125 years since the first Hague Peace Conference of 1899, which articulated the Means and Methods of Warfare and established the Principles of Humanity, the 21st century continues armed conflict as a tool for dispute resolution. This ‘tool’ is already bringing untold suffering and sorrow to millions of lives and irreversible destruction to our planet and carries the potential of complete destruction through the possible use of weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear weapons.   It is the duty of the global human rights movement to continue its fight towards ending the use of weapons and violence as a means to resolve conflict, and, instead, resort to peaceful means including through a strengthened international judicial architecture. This route also allows us to honour the collective memory of those who lived through the pain and suffering which armed conflict carries without exception.   We urgently call upon all states and non-state actors engaged in armed conflict to cease fire, enter negotiations, and pursue peaceful means of resolving their disputes respecting international law, human rights law and humanitarian law. This action includes respecting the decisions and integrity of

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Global Campus of Human Rights at Venezia81

The 81st Venice International Film Festival, organised by La Biennale di Venezia, will be held on the Lido di Venezia from 28 August to 7 September 2024. The aim of the Festival is to raise awareness and promote international cinema in all its forms as art. (Clic here to read the line up) “It is as though the movie universe has exploded under the thrust of an unstoppable, expansive force that, having brought to an end a stability that was mistakenly considered immutable, is giving life to a new, oscillating configuration in which different and opposite realities coexist in precarious equilibrium“, said Alberto Barbera, Director of Venezia 81. “The program of the 81st Venice Film Festival proposes significant examples of this dual, expansive movement by hosting numerous movies that, to varying degrees, exceed two hours, and by screening four auteur series (by Alfonso Cuarón, Rodrigo Sorogoyen, Thomas Vinterberg, and Joe Wright), which, above and beyond their macroscopic differences in production and content, share a few significant characteristics.“ Beetlejuice Beetlejuice, directed by singular creative visionary Tim Burton and starring Michael Keaton, Winona Ryder, Catherine O’Hara, Justin Theroux, Monica Bellucci, with Jenna Ortega, and Willem Dafoe, is the Opening Film, Out of Competition, of the 81st Venice International Film Festival. The Venice Biennale is honored and proud to host the world premiere of a work that features a surprising swing of creative imagination and driving hallucinatory rhythm. Within the framework of the Summer School on Cinema, Human Rights and Advocacy (CHRA), jointly developed with Picture People, the participants are going to debate on movies that they will watch at the Film Festival, as  “September 5”, “Why War”,  “Separated”, “Manas”, “To Kill a Mongolian Horse”, followed by Q&A with Directors, and they will meet Marjane Satrapi, author of “Persepolis”. Follow our Social Media to discover their interviews and impressions… #CHRASchool #MediaActivism #GCHumanRightsPress #Venezia80 For press inquiries and further information, please contact: pressoffice@gchumanrights.org

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Call for the first #Sport4HumanRights campaign for the Venice Marathon 2024

The Global Campus of Human Rights, the most extensive human rights education network in the world consisting of about 100 leading universities, is committed to increase awareness of human rights by connecting with the culture of sports initiatives at local and international levels. The Sports Culture through their diverse disciplines with engaged activists are closely related to human rights and to education.     Sports can only flourish in an atmosphere of peace and security. With its universal reach, Sports culture is a joyful medium to promote the universal values of human rights. This is the focus of the cooperation with many other institutions through a series of sportive events and awards which have been developed and also planned for the near future.    The Venice Marathon proves to be an important event and solidarity has always been an integral part of the project. Proof of this is the numbers of their Charity Programme which in 9 years has raised over 1 million euros, but above all it is the enthusiasm with which the non-profit organizations participate in the initiative every year and are committed to creating teams of fundraisers, ambassadors of a good cause.    In that sense, we would like to invite our community of students, alumni, professors, experts and staff to present their interest and apply for our #Sport4HumanRights Awards consisting in awarding the payment of the registrations fees to be one of our few selected runners to participate in the Venice Marathon 2024 and more specifically in the VM10K non professional that is more accessible to everyone. All other expenses are not being covered. The period to apply is from now until 15 September 2024.    Then you will receive the answer with the result of the application and the award consisting in a specific promo code to use and our #GCHumanRights branded materials (T-shirt, bag, pin and water bottle) for running on Sunday 27 October 2024.  If you were not selected for our awards this time, you could always donate in our crowdfunding related campaign to support our cause or even running with our group but paying your fees personally. The important aspect is to keep building our community and to promote our vision and values related to human rights education and their link to the sports.    For more info, please contact communications@gchumanrights.org  To apply for the awards please complete this form: https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSfWFzWlqqpeIG_hGfbZJuG70qjwRoWf7IPimkMjixn0x0eXgw/viewform?usp=sf_link  To only donate, find us at the Global Campus Human Rights @VCE Marathon | Rete del Dono  To give us visibility, please follow us and share our social media posts with the hashtags #GCHumanRights #Sport4HumanRights #VeniceMarathon    Join our community of supporters to keep campaigning for #Sport4HumanRights at the next Venice Marathon 2024, see you all at our stand there: https://www.venicemarathon.it/index.php  And last but not least stay tuned for our next campaigns related to the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics 2025-2026 with the support of the Region of Veneto – The European Region for sports 2024.   

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Rising voices, green choices: Europe’s equality drive against climate change

Climate change is closely linked to the imperative for social justice. As addressed at the Fundamental Rights Forum 2024, it is crucial to tackle inequalities, elevate marginalised groups and establish comprehensive policies that account for a sustainable future.

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AI’s chilling impact on child sexual abuse material: A wake-up call for the international community

Child Sexual Abuse Material (CSAM) remains a pressing concern, and accessible AI tools generating hyper-realistic content exacerbate this digital crisis, endangering children, obstructing investigations, and undermining legal certainty and effectiveness of laws. It is time for global awareness of AI CSAM’s alarming implications.

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