Welcome to all tuning in to our virtual Convening on UN Counter-Terrorism + Human Rights eventbrite.com/e/high-level-v…
This brings together UN offices, member states, + civil society to assess the impact of UNCT on human rights, humanitarianism, peacebuilding + development #reformUNCT
The event has three parts: an opening plenary (2-3pm UK time), breakout sessions (3-4 pm UK time) on peacebuilding and humanitarianism, victims, and securitising COVID19, and a closing plenary (4-5 pm UK time) #reformUNCT
I’ll be tweeting from the opening plenary. Follow @jordan_street07 for tweets from the closing plenary. Use #reformUNCT to add your thoughts as we build our platform for a more inclusive, people-centred approach to security.
Vivian Newman Pont (VNP) welcoming our 1,000+ delegates to the opening plenary. Civil society wants to be a meaningful and permanent part of CT development at the UN, seeking a more inclusive + human-centred approach. #reformUNCT
VNP: notes UN has not ensured meaningful participation of civil society in its CT work to date. True for creation and enforcement of UNCT, with implications for civil society participation as states implement UNCT. Securitisation of COVID19 exacerbates this. #reformUNCT
VNP asks Hina Jilani (HJ) about CT, civil society, human rights defenders & civic space in Pakistan. HJ: these trends are not unique to Pakistan--reflect global trends. CT law have reduced legal safeguards, enabled a shift to militarised response, and bypassed regular processes.
HJ: Military operations lack transparency about rules of engagement, and even about category (law enforcement? war? CT?). Independent scrutiny is lacking. Both terrorism + CT cause civilian deaths + harm to human security.
VNP asks Navi Pillay (@Navi_Pillay)(NP) about human rights centred CT. NP: militarisation of CT very alarming. As UNHCHR she told the @UNCTC that both terrorism + CT have serious consequences for human rights. States must response approach that protects rights in CT #reformUNCT
NP: states must comply with international law incl. IHRL when countering terrorism, but in spite of this states routinely violate rights while countering terrorism even though HR + Rule of Law are the fundamental basis of countering terrorism. #reformUNCT
NP: counter-terrorism priority should be the protection of people. Thus it is incumbent on states to act in dialogue with civil society, and not to apply CT in ways that undermine civil society #reformUNCT
VNP asks HE Kais Kabtani (@PmTunisia)(KK) about Tunisia's engagement with civil society in countering terrorism. KK: Tunisia's approach is to establish a more transparent, democratic process with civil society participation as a "constant, key element" #reformUNCT
KK: Civil society contributes to effectiveness of CT & CVE, e.g. civil society participation in countering terrorist financing --> establishment of more accurate mechanism of preventing + countering terrorism financing. #reformUNCT Hopes to highlight this as chair of @UNCTC
VNP asks HE Agustin Santos Maraver (@SpainUN)(ASM) about Spain's role as co-facilitator of the review of the UN Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy + how civil society can engage in these review processes now and in the future #reformUNCT
ASM: radicalisation, technologies, narrative consequences of many years of CT, and funding of UNCT are all key issues for the review. Two seminars so far have been held with civil society presence. #reformUNCT
ASM: Civil society is vital b/c no counter-terrorism strategy can be built without a "strong democratic consensus" with two pillars: parliamentary, and civil society organisations. #reformUNCT
VNP asks KK about role of HR and civil society in reacting to COVID19. KK: Tunisia has initiated a draft resolution to the UNSC to provide a multilateral response. However, we can't lose sight of other priorities esp. CT and HR. #reformUNCT
Tunisia is committed to human rights and civil society remaining an active part of the discussion on rights and CT. Terrorist groups use COVID19 as an opportunity. UNSC and @UNCTC must remain "united and responsive" against terrorism at this time #reformUNCT
As NGOs' resources are depleted in the pandemic this may reduce their capacity to engage on counter-terrorism and HR at UN level. Tunisia is working towards "open and transparent" engagement w civil society incl. by participating in UNCTC sessions #reformUNCT
VNP now asks HJ about civil society as 'implementers' of CT. HJ: civil society is not just implementers. Civil society is "indispensable to...a clear, focused and strong" CT policy. Must be part of constructing not just implementing strategy #reformUNCT
HJ: civil society is part of the international community. The human rights community has always has an uphill task in getting rights integrated in UN counter-terrorism. "Mere lip service to human rights in the strategy text is not good enough" #reformUNCT
HJ: No strategy will be credible without a commitment to protecting human rights defenders and protecting civil society space. CT is used to surveil and harass civil society. This needs to be recognised and addressed. We must "reset narratives" #reformUNCT
HJ: a human security narrative must be developed that obliges states to redress the negative effects of CT on communities and civil society. Tensions b/w HR and security are false; security will be best served when there is full compliance w IHL and IHRL #reformUNCT
VNP says @Navi_Pillay about risks of using emergency frameworks to address COVID19. NP: IHRL makes clear that states can only take health actions that are proportionate, necessary, and lifted as soon as no longer required #reformUNCT
NP: reactions to COVID19 understandably give rise to anxiety because some states have brought in the army, treating people as the enemy instead of protecting people against the virus. The last thing we need is for security mechanisms to address health challenges #reformUNCT
NP: It is civil society that is truly informed on the local drivers and factors on the ground and how best to protect communities. Securitising COVID has given rise to bizarre results in some countries, violence, and unnecessary, arbitrary regulations to counter C19 #reformUNCT
VNP asks ASM what lessons Spain has learned on the real b/w victims' rights and those of the rest of society as co-chair of the Group of Friends on Victims of Terrrorism. ASM: terrorism seeks to break the democratic consensus, destroying the basis of citizenship. #reformUNCT
ASM: Restoring the conditions of citizenship to victims of terrorism + all to all of society is "the first objective" in any strategy against terrorism. We delegitimise terrorism by reconstructing the democratic space it seeks to destroy. #reformUNCT
Audience Q for HJ: how do we better communicate value of rights in CT to the general public? HJ: organisations are already working to make rights realities of CT visible. Conversations + interactions w. HR networks and UN bodies will be to the benefit of this. #reformUNCT
HJ: people who are experiencing CT and suffering the consequences of reducing human security know what the realities are. #reformUNCT
Audience Q for ASM: what concrete steps can be taken to make sure civil society involved in 2021 GCTS review? ASM: regional seminars, making networks of organisations (notes UNOCT already working on this), and connection of networks w the 'normal' review work #reformUNCT
ASM: we know very well that CT strategies are sometimes used to squeeze civil society space. This is why it is so important to bring a civil society narrative to this, which we do at state level and from the UN. #reformUNCT
Audience Q for NP: what would true reform to put HR at the centre of UNCT look like? NP: governments would be more accountable for their obn to ensure CT measures comply w/ IHRL. If they complied w/ their obligations "the UN would then be a totally different place" #reformUNCT
Audience Q for KK: how can civil society + general public participation in CT be increased? KK: you cannot adopt an inclusive and comprehensive approach if you do not involve all key social and civil society actors. Stresses importance of women's participation. #reformUNCT
Audience Q for KK: what are the concrete steps Tunisia will take as chair of the CTC to ensure HR are adequately integrated in the work of the UN Security Council? KK: Tunisia eager to protect HR in its work as chair of CTC #reformUNCT
KK: The fight against terrorism should not be at the expensive of human rights, and should not be expanded to other contexts such as COVID. Any approach to CT that does not respect rights will be counter-productive + inefficient. #reformUNCT
That is the end of the opening plenary. Breakout sessions begin presently. Attendees will see the links to breakout sessions in the chat function of the plenary zoom. Follow @jordan_street07 for tweets on the closing plenary, beginning at 4pm UK time.
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I've been off for a few weeks and barely looking at the papers, but of course caught the news re A Level results yest (btw young people: ignore the begrudgers). Given the (comparatively v. weird) way uni offers work in the UK, there are going to be BIG first year cohorts. 1/?
As a result, lots of places are going to be hiring many people v quickly. Some of these jobs will be permanent but many (most?) will likely be fixed-term teaching-focused jobs with little or no research time built in, esp. if unis plan not to maintain this intake size. 2/?
This puts ECRs, including people just coming out of PhDs, into a difficult position. People need jobs: they have bills and lives and they have worked extremely hard on slender or no scholarships for a long time. Of course they will apply for and get these jobs. 3/?
This is awful and I just can't understad how we have come to this, but I have some thoughts... theguardian.com/education/2020…
First the obvious bit: the university sector has for decades been marketised & commercialised by government policy, made responsible for its own financial viability. As a result, it has built a (very profitable) infrastructure around a mode of delivery and 'student experience'.
That infrastructure includes accommodation (often tens of thousands of places), meal plans, sports facility memberships etc. In the absence of meaningful government support for the HE sector during the pandemic, these remain essential sources of income for unis.
A near-lockdown is starting to feel rather inevitable. I am so pleased that we were able to relocate to South Devon this week and work, walk, eat, relax here for a change of scenery. It's been a tonic, and we are sharply aware of how lucky we are to have been able to do it.
What surprised me was the deep melancholy I got this week. The scenery and walking are wonderful in their own way, but they are not the kind of holiday activities that fill me up and restore me. I need museums, galleries, busy streets, energy, exploring cities, deciphering menus.
On top of it all it became pretty clear to me that the return to the office that I have been *aching* for, and which I anticipated happening on Monday, might not happen at all or for long. I miss my room, my colleagues, the campus so much. It's another place that gives me energy.
"These were in many respects the bad old days, unworthy of anyone’s nostalgia. There was too little transparency, permitting countless small abuses...favouritism and prejudice...laissez-faire concealed unequal workloads and, in some cases, sheer indolence" lrb.co.uk/the-paper/v42/…
"...half of UK universities’ £40 billion annual income comes from fees...Academic heads of department...are set aspirational admissions targets which often prove unachievable due to the vicissitudes of an unstable market. The usual outcome... is misery over happiness"
"Even if it’s a good thing for fee-paying students to have a say in what their money buys, a transactional mentality has led to paradoxical demands for more contact hours and the right not to use them...Unlike other...services...students get out of a degree what they put in"
"demanding a Christmas suspension of pandemic hostilities...attempt[s] to maintain the illusion that we’re in charge...I don’t want Christmas to be cancelled either, but...it’s not about Christmas, really. It’s about not wanting darkness to swallow us up" theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
On the idea of Christmas being 'cancelled': I increasingly feel like maybe Christmas, which will be different, might be more meaningful. No crazy shopping, scaled down meals, no big parties, no painful 'office parties'. Instead: quiet days, long walks, time together, TV movies.
I don't have children so I know that my Christmas is different. But maybe a scaled back Christmas would be nice for children too, including (whisper it) Santy having a budget (like before!). Could we revert to a big present, a small present, & a surprise?
Oh. Oh dear. If we were writing formative feedback we might start with the killer phrase ‘I can see you have given this paper some thought, and there are some interesting ideas here, however....’
‘It would have been helpful had you paid closer attention to the differences between international legal obligations, and constitutionally permitted legislative action as a matter of domestic law’ etc
Very seriously: there will be public and international law tutorials devoted solely to using this ‘opinion’ as a teaching tool in a. the relationship between national and international law, and b. the importance of critically assessing the accuracy and weight of sources...