4 September 2025, 18:00-19:30
Register start 25 August 2025
Register end 4 September 2025
Human Rights Conversations
Wikimedia
In a complex and rapidly evolving global landscape, the work of UN Special Procedures mandates increasingly overlaps thematically and operationally. Strengthening collaboration between mandate holders is essential to address cross-cutting human rights challenges more effectively. Additionally, the support the mandates receive via OHCHR is limited and in times of budgetary and political crisis at the UN in general and the human rights pillar in particular, it is even threatened to shrink.
At the same time, academic institutions and researchers offer critical tools—such as legal analysis, policy briefs, and thematic research—that can directly inform and support the mandates' work. This Human Rights Conversation, co-hosted by the Geneva Human Rights Platform and the Raoul Wallenberg Institute, seeks to explore how cross-mandate cooperation can be enhanced, and how academia can play a more strategic and aligned role in supporting mandate holders through evidence-based, policy-relevant contributions, albeit respecting the specific roles of Special Procedures and the rules set by the UN on their functioning.
The event will be followed by a light cocktail.
Geneva Academy
The Geneva Human Rights Platform has taken its work on strengthening the international human rights system to the heart of European policymaking.
Adobe
Our research brief 'Neurotechnology - Integrating Human Rights in Regulation' examines the human rights challenges posed by the rapid development of neurotechnology.
LATSIS Symposium
This interactive, two-part workshop will explore how modern data-science tools – including machine learning and AI – can be leveraged to support the United Nations in promoting and protecting human rights.
LATSIS Symposium
This Human Rights Conversation will explore how AI is being used by human rights institutions to enhance the efficiency, scope, and impact of monitoring and implementation frameworks.
Adobe
This training course, specifically designed for staff of city and regional governments, will explore the means and mechanisms through which local and regional governments can interact with and integrate the recommendations of international human rights bodies in their concrete work at the local level.
ICRC
Participants in this training course will gain practical insights into UN human rights mechanisms and their role in environmental protection and learn about how to address the interplay between international human rights and environmental law, and explore environmental litigation paths.
Geneva Academy
Geneva Academy