Canada and the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights
This blog was originally posted on the website of
the Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences (Canada), December 9,
2014
http://www.ideas-idees.ca/blog/canada-and-universal-declaration-human-rights
December 10, 2014 is the 66th
anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR).
In
his Why Canada Cares (McGill-Queen`s
University Press, 2012, pp. 4-5), Andrew Lui shows that Canada`s initial response
to the formulation of the UDHR was extremely negative. Canada was worried the UDHR would give rights
to Communists, Jehovah`s Witnesses, Japanese Canadians and Aboriginal
Canadians. Canada also opposed economic and social rights. Indeed, Canada
actually abstained on December 7, 1948 in a preliminary vote for the UDHR,
along with the Soviet Bloc. It only voted for the actual Declaration on
December 10 because its earlier abstention was so embarrassing.
Since 1948, Canada has shown a steadily
increasing commitment to the principles enunciated in the UDHR, starting with
the 1960 Bill of Rights and followed by the 1982 Charter of Rights and
Freedoms. In legal terms, women have
been fully equal to men for 30 years. The racialized criteria of our
immigration program were removed in the 1960s
With regard to economic human rights,
such as the rights to food, housing, health care and security enumerated in
Article 25 of the UDHR, though, the situation is not as good. Although Canada
is a welfare state with many poverty-alleviation programs, it does not rank as
one of the most generous, especially compared with the Nordic states.
Our biggest shame remains Aboriginal
rights, where our founding as a settler colonial state still resonates. Aboriginal Canadians have more rights than
they did before 1948: for example, they can vote and organize themselves, But
they endure extremely high rates of incarceration. Their employment rate is
concomitantly low. They have far higher rates of malnutrition than other
Canadians. Aboriginal women and girls are far more likely to go missing—or be
murdered—than other women and girls.
Troop movements during the surrender of the Chenier Cell during the 1970 FLQ crisis in Montreal , wiki commons |
In its foreign policies, Canada has shown
a reasonably strong commitment to international human rights during the last 30
years. In Article 2, the UDHR prohibits discrimination on the grounds of race. In
the 1980s, Conservative Prime Minister Brian Mulroney helped lead international
condemnation of apartheid, though not at the cost of Canada’s trade with South
Africa.
Under the Liberal government of Jean
Chrétien, Canada was active in introducing the land mines treaty, in promoting
the International Criminal Court, and in devising the doctrine of the
Responsibility to Protect, among other measures.
Our current government under Conservative
Prime Minister Stephen Harper promotes LGBT rights worldwide. LGBT rights are a
fairly recent addition to the human rights canon, unheard of when the UDHR was
proclaimed in 1948.
a homeless woman in Toronto, wiki commons |
Harper also promotes a maternal and
child health initiative; maternal and child health is an important economic
human right, first mentioned in the UDHR’s Article 25, 2, requiring “special
care and assistance” in motherhood and childhood. However, Harper’s initiative
excludes access to abortion, guaranteed by Canadian law but not guaranteed by
any international human rights law.
Canada’s human rights record is far from
perfect, both internally and internationally. Canadians must be eternally vigilant
in protecting their rights. And they
must hold their governors to account to make sure our foreign policy always
includes human rights.
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