Human Rights Project a project of Urban Justice Center

About HRP

The Human Rights Project (HRP) is a domestic human rights organization, one of only a handful of organizations in the United States working to apply globally accepted human rights standards to domestic social policy.

We are one of eight projects of the Urban Justice Center, an anti-poverty non profit organization that serves New York City's most vulnerable residents through a combination of direct legal service, systemic advocacy, community education and political organizing.

 

Mission

One out of five NYC’s residents live below the federal poverty line.
- CSS NY

The Human Rights Project (HRP) is dedicated to strengthening the U.S. human rights movement and creating effective strategies for using human rights domestically. HRP works across issue areas and methods to create change through education, organizing, and advocacy. HRP uses a human rights framework to promote a higher standard of government accountability in regards to economic, social and cultural rights.

HRP has been at the forefront of the U.S. human rights “movement” for the past several years, demonstrating new models of applying human rights in the U.S., and in particular in New York City, to effectively advocate for the City’s most vulnerable across a range of issues. The U.S. constitution falls short in guaranteeing the right to health, housing, education, standard of living and other rights necessary to live in dignity.  In combination with a legacy of structural discrimination, particularly through race and gender, and limits on rights that are protected, those most vulnerable in society have little recourse. The human rights framework and tools bring new possibilities in the face of limited remedies, and hope where there is despair.

 

History

The Human Rights Project was founded in 1996 as the Organizing Project, with the specific goal of organizing welfare recipients and advocates to dismantle the Work Experience Program, a welfare reform policy of the Giuliani administration. Despite success with the campaign, there was growing frustration among advocates with the lack of language and tools with which to hold the government accountable to human rights violations. Inspired by the opportunities for advancing rights found in the human rights framework, the project evolved into the Human Rights Project (HRP) several years later, .

The campaign to document human rights violations in the welfare system was successful in bringing together a number of anti-poverty organizations and welfare recipients. The end product was the report Hunger is No Accident, one of the first human rights reports to look at economic human rights, particularly the right to food, within a U.S. context.

HRP focuses on economic, social and cultural rights with a particular emphasis on discrimination because we are resolved to bring attention to economic human rights in the U.S., as well as reframe the discrimination debate to reach beyond single identities. While U.S. laws are strong on civil and political rights, they generally do not recognize the right to education, health, housing, an adequate standard of living and many other economic and social rights. Consequently fulfillment of economic, social and cultural rights is determined by the political will of people in power, leaving many in need. In the human rights framework, civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights are all inter-dependent, and there is an affirmative obligation on the government to respect, protect, and fulfill these human rights.

HRP advances human rights in the U.S. through organizing, documentation, and education. HRP serves as a link between organizations and activists using human rights as the common thread. HRP is a unique model of human rights organizing, working in collaboration with local organizations to effectuate proactive change in securing human rights for New York’s most vulnerable.

 

Staff

Tatiana Bejar, Program Coordinator

Jeffrey Chang, Intern

Ejim Dike, Director

Katie Firestone, Intern

Yalidy Matos, Intern

Jonathan Moscowitz, Intern

Julia Yang, Intern

 

Advisory Board

Dana-Ain Davis, Purchase College

Angela Dews

Craig Gurian, Anti-Discrimination Center of Metro New York, Inc.

Debra J. Liebowitz, Drew University

Alvin Starks, Arcus Foundation

 

Supporters

The Human Rights Project would like to thank the following funders for their past and continued support:

The Mertz Gilmore Foundation

New York Foundation

The Overbrook Foundation

The Tides Foundation

The US Human Rights Fund

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The ADCO Foundation

The Ford Foundation

Funding Exchange

New York Women’s Foundation

The Open Society Institute

Presbyterian Hunger Fund

Shaler Adams