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Course Directory > Short Courses > Human Rights Fieldwork - Principles, Strategies and Skills (BIR06)
(International Human Rights Network)
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Course Type: Short Courses
Training Provider: International Human Rights Network (IHRN)
School/Institute/Dept./Centre: International Human Rights Network (IHRN)

Reflecting the multi-disciplinary nature of human rights fieldwork and the training programme, applications are invited from:

  • Human rights specialists who wish to adapt pre-existing knowledge of international human rights framework to the context of human rights fieldwork; and from
  • Experienced field practitioners who wish to reflect on their work and enhance  their skills with a human rights based perspective, including military or civilian police/peacekeepers, development and humanitarian aid practitioners etc.

Typically, participants have worked for, or plan to work for, international field missions of the UN, OSCE, the European Union or the African Union or non-governmental sector. In 2005 for example, the programme included participants from developed and developing countries on all continents as well as from confict contexts such as Sierre Leone, Sudan, DR Congo, Iraq and Aceh. Participants profiles ranged from military, government, NGOs and EU officials to UN staff from OCHA, UNHCR, OHCHR and UNDP.

Participants will generally have a relevant degree/training and a minimum of three years relevant experience. However, diverse skills of applicants will be taken into account so as to ensure an optimum mix of disciplines and profiles.The course will be conducted in English and places are limited to thirty.

This Training Programme will:

  • Explore the principles underpinning effective human rights fieldwork; and
  •  Enhance the skills of participants needed to carry this out safely before, during or after armed conflict.

The emphasis is on ensuring that human rights fieldwork is relevant, effective, sustainable, participatory and accountable. The programme is designed to raise participants' self-awareness in terms of behaviour, attitudes and values in undertaking international human rights fieldwork.
Core principles include the need for genuine partnership with local human rights defenders - both state and non-state. Participants are facilitated in approaching their own development as an on-going process. As a successful applicant you will be part of a multinational, multicultural group with a range of relevant skills and experience.

Programme content and methodology

The Training Programme team will be directed by Karen Kenny, IHRN Director.  She has extensive experience in human rights field work and war crimes  investigation. She has delivered training and policy advice to a range of international organisations, national governments, development agencies, NGOs etc on human rights fieldwork. She is the author of 1996 work commissioned  by the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs, Towards Effective Training for Field Human Rights Work.

The Programme covers fieldwork skills needed at each stage of the human rights monitoring cycle from information gathering to stimulating sustainable progress. This includes interview techniques, situation and gender analysis, developing strategic partnerships with host society and international field partners, human rights based development strategies, reporting skills as well as  advocacy, teamwork and mission preparedness. Underpinning the substantive content, the live-in programme is specifically designed to simulate core field challenges, such as intercultural sensitivities, leadership etc. 

The Programme uses a variety of pedagogical techniques including presentations by guest specialists, plenary discussions, small group work and role-plays, case studies, videos etc. The Programme is highly participatory and includes a  full day Field Exercise in conjunction with the Irish Defence Forces, in which  participants will apply what they have learned throughout.

Logistics

The Programme is full-time, and live-in, on the campus of the National University of Ireland, Maynooth, County Dublin. The Field Exercise will take place at an Irish Defence Force outdoors training facility at the Coolmoney Camp, Glen of Imaal, County Wicklow.

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Course Details

Entry Requirements:
The Training Programme is designed so as to maximise mutual learning across the range of participating disciplines. To ensure a common starting point for discussion participants will need to be familiar with the basics of international human rights law and institutions and will, in any event, be provided with core 'refresher' materials as required preparatory reading. In addition, each participant will be allocated specific case study materials for advance preparation.

Intake/Applications (previous year):
30 maximum

Course Duration:
Saturday 28th October - Sunday 5th November 2006 & Saturday 27th October - Saturday 3rd November 2007

Language(s) of Instruction:
  • English

Mode of Study:
  • residential

Thematic Focus:
  • Human Rights

Country(ies):
  • Ireland

Town(s) or City(ies):
National University of Ireland, Maynooth, Ireland + Field Exercise a the Irish Defence Forces training facility at Coolmoney Camp, Glen of Imaal, County Wicklow.

Course fees:
The 2006 Programme cost, which includes tuition, training materials, accommodation, refreshments and all meals, is 1,875 euro.

Scholarships & Awards:
description of funding opportunities

Course's Webpage:
http://www.ihrnetwork.org/hr-fieldwork.htm

School/Institute/Dept./Centre
International Human Rights Network (IHRN)
Training Provider: International Human Rights Network (IHRN)
Courses: 1

Towards Effective Training for Human Rights Fieldwork

Since 1995, the Network has worked to promote organisational learning from field experience by those (inter-governmental organisations or states) mandating, funding or deploying such missions. This has included promoting sustainable partnership with, and accountability to, the host society.

It contributes through:

  • Research
  • Facilitating co-operation among inter-governmental bodies such as the UN, OSCE, Council of Europe and EU
  • Advising on, or conducting IHRN training for, inter-governmental organisations (OSCE in Croatia; EU expanded role in Civilian Crisis Management); as well as
  • Advising on, or conducting, evaluations of international human rights field missions such as those in Rwanda and Colombia.

The challenge remains to assess whether, and to what extent, such interventions are achieving their objectives and contributing to sustainable change. IHRN promotes  independent, participatory evaluations of such fieldwork applying human rights based criteria of relevance, efficiency, effectiveness, impact and sustainability. The challenge remains to systematically apply the lessons identified.

1. Research - Towards Effective Training

The study, Towards Effective Training For Field Human Rights Work, is a review of the training provided in major human rights operations in the 1990s (Haiti, Cambodia, Rwanda, El Salvador, former Yugoslavia, etc). It makes concrete recommendations regarding who should be trained - including management and local staff - in what, when, and by whom. It also highlights the need for distillation of better field practice, systematically fed into organisational learning and ultimately future training. Almost ten years on, the findings and recommendations remain all too relevant today. In particular, the absence of  systematic organisational learning remains a major weakness at the heart of international human rights fieldwork. This publication was launched by Mary Robinson, then President of Ireland, in 1996. Towards Effective Training for Human Rights Fieldwork, by Karen Kenny. Available in English full text 

In addition, the article What is Effective Training, by Karen Kenny presents practical checklists and tips for planning and organising a process of NGO training for human rights work – and identifies the role which workshops can play. It explains the key principles of effective adult education (especially the need for training to be practice-oriented and participatory), and provides guidance for applying these principles. The aim is to stimulate participants to actively identify their own training needs and empower them to ensure their training is designed, delivered and followed-up with their effective participation.

2. Facilitating co-operation among UN, OSCE, Council of Europe and EU

In 1999, as part of this process, IHRN policy advocacy contributed to key actors coming together to discuss and seek to address these issues: the European Commission, the Council of Europe, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe. For the first time, these actors discussed common fieldwork challenges and held a pilot generic training course together, held in Venice.

3. Evaluations of field missions

Rwanda
IHRN was commissioned to advise the European Commission regarding design of its evaluation of the HRFOR field mission (1996, team provided).

Colombia
IHRN was commissioned to independently evaluate the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights office in Colombia at the request of six donor states (2002, team provided). For background, see evaluation.

4. Advising on, or conducting IHRN training for, inter-governmental organisations

IHRN has contributed to the design of policy and delivery of operational training by OHCHR, the OSCE, international military personnel in Sweden, Switzerland and the UK as well as by international field missions.

Croatia
As part of the advocacy of the findings of Towards Effective Training, IHRN was commissioned to advise the Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe on the training needs of the hundreds of officials who would join the expanded OSCE mission to Croatia in 1997. The team was led by Karen Kenny and included Paul LaRose Edwards and Brian McKeown.

EU planning for expanded role in 'Civilian Crisis Management'
The EU's first international human rights operation was a contribution of personnel to the UN Human Rights Operation in Rwanda up to 1997. In 2003, the EU Police Mission in Bosnia and Herzegovina succeeded the International Police Task Force.

Since 2003, in preparation for future EU-fielded international civilian missions, the EU has funded pre-mission generic training in thirteen member states and planned rosters of stand-by EU civilian experts. IHRN has made a number of recommendations regarding this approach as part of its on-going advocacy of effective field training - and the related imperative that such training be based on organisational learning and accountability for impact.

The European Commission and member states funded fourteen pilot courses in a range of related topics (including rule of law, democratisation).  In 2004 IHRN was also commissioned to design, and lead the delivery of, a pilot pre-mission human rights training course.It focussed on substantive human rights field skills including participatory approaches to human rights monitoring, structural diagnosis of root causes, human rights education and promotion, capacity-building as well as influencing development policies and programmes for change. The course was commissioned by Peaceworkers UK on behalf of UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office and the European Commission.


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