Haklar Description
The project "Empowering University Youth to Advance the Human Rights of Young People from Vulnerable Groups", whose short name is the "Rights Project", aims to empower university students in the context of discrimination and human rights within the scope of the European Union's European Instrument for Democracy and Human Rights (DIHAA) program.
The project, carried out by the Youth Services Center Association (GSM), Mardin Joint Women's Cooperation Association (MOKİD) and Uğur Mumcu Investigative Journalism Foundation (um:ag), will continue for 36 months on the basis of equality and zero discrimination through online and face-to-face activities. It aims to establish bonds among university students of the age group.
The Council of Europe sees the empowerment of young people on human rights as a safeguard against the rise of violence, racism, extremism, xenophobia, discrimination and intolerance. The Rights Project, which was created within this scope, works with young people in order to develop and spread the culture of human rights in society, creating democratic spaces for them to make their voices heard. The Rights Project, whose face-to-face events will be held in Ankara, Diyarbakir, Hatay, Istanbul, Izmir, Mardin and Mersin, has two separate target groups: non-governmental organizations working with young people and university students in the 18-25 age group.
Rights Project:
It creates spaces for young people to experience democracy and participation.
It emphasizes the importance of human dignity.
It ensures the empowerment of young people for the development and dissemination of human rights culture in society.
It supports young people to get rid of their prejudices and stereotypes against the other.
It creates environments that enable young people to develop tendencies-behaviors that will respect the rights of others.
Develops training programs and implementation activities for young people to understand and internalize human rights.
It encourages young people to be agents of change.
It tries to ensure that vulnerable groups become more visible in the social and political arena and increase their participation.
It strives to ensure that young people have a holistic approach to human rights.
It identifies the current situation of vulnerable groups regarding human rights and develops policy recommendations in this context.
The project, carried out by the Youth Services Center Association (GSM), Mardin Joint Women's Cooperation Association (MOKİD) and Uğur Mumcu Investigative Journalism Foundation (um:ag), will continue for 36 months on the basis of equality and zero discrimination through online and face-to-face activities. It aims to establish bonds among university students of the age group.
The Council of Europe sees the empowerment of young people on human rights as a safeguard against the rise of violence, racism, extremism, xenophobia, discrimination and intolerance. The Rights Project, which was created within this scope, works with young people in order to develop and spread the culture of human rights in society, creating democratic spaces for them to make their voices heard. The Rights Project, whose face-to-face events will be held in Ankara, Diyarbakir, Hatay, Istanbul, Izmir, Mardin and Mersin, has two separate target groups: non-governmental organizations working with young people and university students in the 18-25 age group.
Rights Project:
It creates spaces for young people to experience democracy and participation.
It emphasizes the importance of human dignity.
It ensures the empowerment of young people for the development and dissemination of human rights culture in society.
It supports young people to get rid of their prejudices and stereotypes against the other.
It creates environments that enable young people to develop tendencies-behaviors that will respect the rights of others.
Develops training programs and implementation activities for young people to understand and internalize human rights.
It encourages young people to be agents of change.
It tries to ensure that vulnerable groups become more visible in the social and political arena and increase their participation.
It strives to ensure that young people have a holistic approach to human rights.
It identifies the current situation of vulnerable groups regarding human rights and develops policy recommendations in this context.
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