Forum Material

2023[Plenary Session] CHO Munyoung Full Paper

19 Oct 2023
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Human rights cities responding to poverty and inequalities


CHO Munyoung [Professor, Department of Cultural Anthropology, Yonsei University]


It is quite difficult to give a short answer to a grave question ‘how poverty and social inequalities impact on the human rights of residents at local level’. There is one thing that I would like to suggest here. Poverty and social inequalities tend to make people fail to recognize the rights of the poor or even feel numbed about the rights. Also, they encourage negative responses over the rights among people. When we search the term poverty on searching engines, then, the first images that pop up are naked and bony children living in Africa. 


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The term ‘human rights’ could gain vitality itself only when the government concentrates its administrative sources to public housing, public healthcare, public education, when citizens take those movement for granted, when we stop calling the poor ‘the vulnerable’ whom we have to protect, when coming to terms with an uncomfortable fact that our convenience and desire make poverty sustained.

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WHRCF SECRETARIAT

2F, 5, Jungang-ro 196beon-gil, Dong-gu, Gwangju 61475, South Korea

Tel: +82-62-226-2734 │ Fax: +82-2-226-2731 │ E-mail: whrcf@gic.or.kr

Copyright WHRCF All rights reserved.

WHRCF NEWSLETTER

Sign up for our newsletter and
get the latest news on the WHRCF

FOLLOW US

#WHRCF2026 #Solidarity #HumanRightsCities  #freedomforall
#StandUp4HumanRights #Cities4Rights