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The Implementation of the Santiago Declaration through 2023
A year ago (from 29 November to 2 December 2022), the Conference ‘Our Future is Public’ (OFiP22) occurred. GI-ESCR was part of the leading group of organisations that coordinated this unprecedented gathering of movements and NGOs working for public services and against privatisation. The conference was attended by nearly one thousand delegates, in person and virtually, from 113 countries, representing 567 organisations from various sectors.
The conference was rooted in years of a growing global mobilisation of grassroots, national, local, cross-border, rural and urban organisations, and movements. Key previous milestones of the broader public services movement included the first global ‘Future is Public’ conference in Amsterdam in 2019; the Enough is Enough webinars in 2020 and 2021, at which international and regional human rights representatives considered the critical role that public services play in building more sustainable, inclusive, socially just, and resilient economies and societies; and the Global Manifesto on Public Services. Led by GI-ESCR and adopted in October 2021, the Global Manifesto has been signed by more than 225 organisations.
The result of OFiP22 was the adoption of the Santiago Declaration, which calls for universal access to quality, gender-transformative and equitable public services as the foundation of a fair and just society. During 2023, following the commitments from the Declaration, GI-ESCR has worked transversally and in solidarity with other CSOs and movements to build collective analysis, develop joint activities, strengthen the frameworks on the important role of public services for the realisation of economic, social, and cultural rights, and its financing through progressive taxation policies.
Following OFIP22, GI-ESCR actively worked towards advancing the agenda. Below, we present examples of the continuous collaborative impact of the Santiago Declaration.
Public services in Africa
GI-ESCR participated in "The Africa We Want: Reclaiming Public Services in Africa" conference organised by the Initiative for Social and Economic Rights (ISER) in partnership with the African Coalition for Corporate Accountability (ACCA) from 29th to 30th August 2023. The event was an opportunity to shed light on General Comment No. 7 of the African Commission on Human and Peoples Rights (ACHPR), which acknowledges African states' primary obligation to provide public services for their people and provides a framework to regulate private actors and hold them accountable.
OFiP-Kenya
As a follow-up of OFiP22, national and international non-governmental organisations, including GI-ESCR, came together to follow up on the right to quality public services in Kenya and to advocate against privatisation trends in the country.
Arts Competition in Kenya
GI-ESCR with the Centre for Human Rights & Peace of Nairobi University, agreed to organise an Arts Competition to motivate students to express their views, experiences, and perceptions on public services as a right and particularly on how they think public services contribute to building a just, inclusive, and equal society.
In this context, we organised an in-person community discussion with the participation of university panellists and partners like ActionAid International and OXFAM International to pursue the conversation around the theme of public services for building a just, inclusive, and equal society. Students actively participated by sharing their perspectives on the historical and contemporary significance of public services in addressing socio-economic inequalities within Kenya. They also seized the opportunity to propose recommendations on how public services can be harnessed to construct a more equitable, inclusive, and just Kenya, aligning with the overarching theme of the Arts Competition.
The winning artwork showcased how the State can mitigate health risks by providing clean and accessible water to the community, prioritising environmental care, and ensuring medical accessibility in informal settlements by illustrating an ambulance's access to an informal settlement, facilitating the transportation of a pregnant woman to the hospital.
Regional Education Learning Initiative Kenya
GI-ESCR participated in the 6th Annual Convening of the Regional Education Learning Initiative Kenya (RELI-Kenya), with the participation of members from Uganda and Tanzania, held from 30th August to 1st September, that brought together approximately 20 member organisations, focusing on key themes such as Equity and Inclusion, Values and Life Skills, and Learner-Centred Teaching to ensure the right to quality education for all children in Kenya. The RELI network comprises more than 70 organisations that work to ensure inclusive learning for all children in East Africa.
Participatory Action Research on Health on Ivory Coast
Participatory methods are fundamental in empowering local communities while investigating human rights problems. They play an essential role in amplifying the voices and perspectives of individuals whose rights are affected. As part of this project, GI-ESCR joined forces with the Mouvement Ivorien des Droits Humain (MIDH) to conduct a participatory-action-research on access to healthcare services in Gagnoa, Ivory Coast.
This experience aims to empower local communities to share their understanding of the challenges they face in accessing healthcare services from a human rights perspective. At the same time, the community enriches the research by incorporating their invaluable experience of accessing healthcare services. The final action-oriented goal is to establish a grassroots, community-led committee responsible for monitoring and reporting right-to-health violations related to access to healthcare services, especially for marginalised populations, like women, disabled people and the chronically ill.
Economic Justice and the right to education
Within the Privatisation of Education and Human Rights Consortium (PEHRC), a task force on tax justice and education was set up, bringing together ActionAid, Tax Justice Network, TaxEd Alliance, Right to Education Initiative, Results UK, Education For All Sierra Leone and the University of Maryland. The task force aims to use tax justice to address the privatisation of education and includes the human rights lens to add value to the existing work on the topic. PEHRC is an informal network of organisations and individuals who collaborate to analyse and respond to the challenges posed by the rapid growth of private educational actors from a human rights perspective and propose alternatives.
Economic Justice and Public Services
GI-ESCR, with the support of The Geneva Human Rights Platform, brought together on 3-4 October 2023 human rights experts from 17 countries from Africa, Latin America, and Europe to discuss how to strengthen a human rights approach to social services and progressive taxation.
The meeting aimed to hold a South-South learning and sharing of experiences to ensure human rights monitoring bodies, in particular from the African and Inter-American Systems, continue to clarify States’ human rights obligations to provide quality public services financed by progressive taxation.
With this meeting, GI-ESCR achieved holding a dialogue amongst human rights experts on how States can increase their domestic resources through progressive and fair fiscal policies– for the sustainable financing of social (public) services so that they become a reality. It also established the ground for possible common understandings and alliances between experts from the different regional systems and civil society.
Public Services Financed by Progressive Taxation
GI-ESCR has actively advocated for a more sustainable, democratic, and inclusive global taxation. Together with the Initiative of Human Rights Principles in Fiscal Policy, we participated in a public hearing on human rights and fiscal policies before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) on 6 March 2023, during its 186th Sessions held in Los Angeles, California. In the hearing, we highlighted the need for a human rights-based approach to fiscal policies based on regional cooperation and progressivity standards to guarantee economic, social, cultural, and environmental rights in the Americas.
We have also organised and participated in a series of events in Paris (15 March), Bogota (2-5 May) and Santiago (15-17 May), which laid down the ground for the first Summit on Progressive Taxation in Latin America and the Caribbean that took place during July in Cartagena de Indias, Colombia.
Additionally, we continued to strengthen and consolidate the Initiative of Principles of Human Rights in Fiscal Policy, for example, by actively joining the organisation of the Third Week for Tax Justice and Human Rights (3-7 July), a space for dialogue on tax cooperation in Latin America and the Caribbean, the feminist tax agenda and sovereign debt.
Finally, on 27 and 28 July 2023, we participated and engaged with the Summit on Progressive Taxation in Latin America and the Caribbean, which represents a significant event on public services and tax justice that has rallied a cross-sectoral movement of people and organisations throughout Latin America to influence governments’ fiscal decisions and to make the voice of civil society heard. This was also the ground for collective statements and advocacy campaigns towards broader international tax cooperation that brought attention to the link between tax justice, human rights, and climate justice, as well as the negative impact on human rights of the global rules governing the current international financial and tax systems.
Fiscal justice, climate crisis and gender just transition
On 8 October, GI-ESCR and partners participated in the “Reclaim Our Future” Conference in Marrakech (Morocco). The event was organised by a range of social movements and civil society organisations, aiming to hold the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank Group (WBG) accountable for a broken and outdated global financial and fiscal architecture.
GI-ESCR and partners co-organised an interactive workshop called “A Global Financial System that Advances Human Rights? Towards a shared vision for a green and gender-just transition”. This event brought together a group of experts and activists to share their views on the principles that should guide the transformation of the international financial architecture. It detonated a debate on (i) how public finance need should be reimagined to achieve a gender-just transition towards a sustainable future (ii) how human rights principles and standards could reshape the global financial and tax system, (iii) collectively mapped out advocacy strategies based in green, feminist, and rights-aligned principles; and (iv) brainstormed effective strategies to achieve a gender-just transition that includes cross-movement organising.
Energy and environmental justice
On 5 September, the Global Initiative for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (GI-ESCR), jointly with other 17 partner organisations, launched the Declaration on Energy Democracy. This results from the two-day Energy sector meeting as part of the Our Future is Public conference in Santiago, involving various organisations working towards sustainable, democratic and universal energy for all. This Declaration aims to strengthen, expand and unify the many social movements and networks committed to energy and environmental justice. This means a fundamental shift in the understanding, value, consumption, and management of energy, considered a human right, of public ownership, against colonialism, profiteering good living, reducing energy consumption and sufficiency for all.
As GI-ESCR continues to champion human rights principles, it looks forward to contributing to a transformative shift in the international financial architecture to ensure quality, gender-transformative and equitable public services for realising economic, social, cultural and environmental rights.
PROGRAMME OFFICER -PUBLIC SERVICES
Ana Clara works as a Programme Officer on Public Services with the Global Initiative for Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights. She holds a master’s degree in Human Rights and Humanitarian Action from Sciences Po in Paris, where she focused on economic, social, and cultural Rights, and Latin American and gender studies. She holds a Bachelor of Laws from Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso in Brazil.
Ana Clara previously worked on litigation claims concerning the right to social security and the right to health at the Public Defender’s Office and Federal Court of Justice in Brazil. She also supported the work of the Special Rapporteur on Economic, Social, Cultural, and Environmental Rights of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights. Recently, she worked on strategic litigation before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights as part of the team of the Center for Justice and International Law.
Ana Clara, country is Brazil (Based in Paris).
PROGRAMME OFFICER -PUBLIC SERVICES & REPRESENTATIVE FOR AFRICA
Ashina works as the Programme Officer for Public Services and Representative for Africa with the Global Initiative for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. She is an Advocate of the High Court of Kenya, with an LL.B degree from the University of Nairobi, Kenya, and an LL.M (with distinction) in Human Rights and Democratisation in Africa from the Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria, South Africa.
Passionate about social justice, she has worked in the human rights sector for over six years at the intersection of global and national struggles for just systems of public service delivery to ensure everyone can enjoy their socio-economic rights, first at the Economic and Social Rights Centre-Hakijamii in Kenya and then at GI-ESCR. In particular, she has led and supported research and advocacy at local, national and global research and advocacy focused on the human rights legal framework relating to the rights to land, housing, education, health and water, for marginalised communities. Her research interests also include human rights and economic policy and the contribution that human rights obligations can make to the formulation and implementation of economic policy.
Ashina is based in Nairobi, Kenya.
SENIOR COMMUNICATIONS OFFICER
Belén has a BA in International Relations. She lived in India and the Philippines just after graduating where she volunteered for three years in health and education projects. Upon her return to Argentina, where she is native from, she joined Red Solidaria as volunteer and international aid coordinator. She worked as a journalist and program manager at La Nación newspaper foundation in Buenos Aires, to later become Social Media information specialist at the US Embassy in Buenos Aires. She acted there as Liaison Officer with other sections and became Grant Officer representative. She was selected to become HelpArgentina's Executive Director to help expand fundraising opportunities abroad for NGOs from other Latin American countries, and successfully transitioned the organization into PILAS, Portal for Investment in the Latin American Social Sector. From there she moved on to working at a new media startup, RED/ACCION, as Engagement Editor and Membership coordinator before joining us as Communications Officer.
Belén is based in Buenos Aires, Argentina.
RESEARCH ASSOCIATE
Lorena Zenteno is a PhD student at the University of Edinburgh. Her primary research interests include the human rights dimensions of climate change and environmental impacts, climate change justice, gender, and the judiciary’s role in the climate change crisis. Lorena has worked for several years in Chile, as a judge, as a law clerk, in the Court of Appeal of Concepcion, Santiago and in the Constitutional Chamber of the Supreme Court of Chile. She is a member of the Environment and Human Rights Commission of the National Association of the Chilean Judiciary, dedicated to study and discuss climate change and environmental impacts on human rights. Lorena is the Chilean National Rapporteur on Global Climate Litigation database for the Sabin Center for Climate Change Law of Columbia University.
She was a senior researcher for the former UN Special Rapporteur on Cultural Rights, Karima Bennoune, from September 2018 until September 2021. Supported and assisted the UN Special Rapporteur to fulfil his mandate to the UN General Assembly and UN Human Rights Council.
She holds an LL.B. from Universidad de Concepcion, a LL.M. in Environmental Law from the University of Davis, California, and a Master in Business Law from the University Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona, Spain. Lorena is a member of the the Global Network for the Study of Human Rights and the Environment.
Lorena is based in Geneva, Swiss.
PROGRAMME OFFICER -RIGHT TO EDUCATION
Zsuzsanna works as Right to Education Officer with the Global Initiative for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Prior to joining GI-ESCR, she assisted in the drafting process of the Abidjan Principles on the Right to Education and the development and publication process of the Commentary of the Abidjan Principles as a consultant. Previously, she has worked with the Open Society Justice Initiative as an Aryeh Neier Fellow on issues such as equality and non-discrimination, Roma rights, the right to education, economic justice, access to justice and the rule of law. She has also worked as a lawyer with the Hungarian Civil Liberties Union on educational segregation, Roma rights and hate crimes. She holds an LL.M in Public International Law from the University of Edinburgh and a Law Degree from the Eötvös Loránd University Budapest.
Zsuzsanna is based in Budapest, Hungary.
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OFICIAL DE PROGRAMA - SERVICIOS PÚBLICOS Y REPRESENTANTE PARA ÁFRICA
Ashina es oficial del Programa para los Servicios Públicos y Representante para África de la Global Initiative for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Es abogada de la Corte Suprema de Kenia, egresada (LL.B) de la Universidad de Nairobi, Kenia, y con un máster (LL.M) en derechos humanos y democratización en África, completado con honores, en el Centro para los Derechos Humanos de la Universidad de Pretoria en Sudáfrica.
Ashina es una apasionada de la justicia social, y ha trabajado en el área de los derechos humanos en el marco de las luchas nacionales y mundiales por sistemas más justos de prestación de servicios públicos, que garanticen a todos el disfrute de sus derechos socioeconómicos. Primero trabajó en el Economic and Social Rights Centre de Hakijamii, Kenia, y luego, en el GI-ESCR. Concretamente, ha dirigido y apoyado la investigación y la defensa, a nivel local, nacional y mundial, del marco legal de derechos humanos para los derechos de las comunidades marginadas a la tierra, la vivienda, la educación, la salud y el agua. Sus intereses en la investigación se orientan también a los derechos humanos y las políticas económicas, así como a la contribución que el cumplimiento de los derechos humanos hace a la formulación y ejecución de las políticas económicas.
Ashina reside en Nairobi, Kenia.
OFICIAL DE PROGRAMA - DERECHO A LA EDUCACIÓN
Zsuzsanna es oficial del Programa de Derecho a la Educación de la Global Initiative for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Antes de unirse a GI-ESCR, colaboró, como consultora, en la redacción de los Principios de Abiyán sobre el derecho a la educación, así como en la elaboración y publicación del Comentario de los Principios de Abiyán. Previamente, Zsuzsanna trabajó con la Open Society Justice Initiative como becaria de la Aryeh Neier Fellowship, en temas como la igualdad y la no discriminación, los derechos de los romaníes (Roma Rights), el derecho a la educación, la justicia económica, el acceso a la justicia y el estado de derecho. También ha trabajado como abogada con la Hungarian Civil Liberties en la segregación educativa, los derechos de los Romaníes y los crímenes de odio. Tiene un máster (LL.M) en derecho público Internacional por la Universidad de Edimburgo y una licenciatura en Derecho por la Universidad Eötvös Loránd, Budapest.
Zsuzsanna reside en Budapest, Hungría.
SENIOR AGENT DE COMMUNICATION
Belén est titulaire d’un BA en relations internationales. Juste après avoir obtenu son diplôme, elle a vécu en Inde et aux Philippines, où elle s'est portée volontaire pendant trois ans pour des projets de santé et d'éducation. À son retour en Argentine, d'où elle est originaire, elle a rejoint Red Solidaria en tant que volontaire et coordinatrice de l'aide internationale. Elle a travaillé comme journaliste et responsable de programme à la fondation du journal La Nación à Buenos Aires, pour devenir ensuite spécialiste de l'information sur les médias sociaux à l'ambassade des États-Unis à Buenos Aires. Elle y a joué le rôle d'agent de liaison avec les autres sections et est devenue représentante des agents de subvention. Elle a été choisie pour devenir la directrice exécutive de HelpArgentina afin d'aider à développer les possibilités de collecte de fonds à l'étranger pour les ONG d'autres pays d'Amérique latine, et a réussi la transition de l'organisation vers PILAS, le portail d'investissement dans le secteur social latino-américain. Elle a ensuite travaillé pour une start-up de nouveaux médias, RED/ACCION, en tant que rédactrice chargée de l'engagement et coordinatrice des membres, avant de nous rejoindre en tant que responsable de la communication.
Belén vit à Buenos Aires, en Argentine.
OFICIAL ASOCIADO DE PROGRAMA- SERVICIOS PÚBLICOS
Ana Clara Cathalat colabora como socia en la Global Initiative for Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights, mientras prosigue con su máster en derechos humanos y acción humanitaria en la Universidad Sciences Po, París. Allí centra su interés en los derechos económicos, sociales y culturales y en estudios de género en América Latina. Tiene una licenciatura en derecho por la Universidad Federal de Mato Grosso, Brasil.
Previamente, Ana Clara trabajó en reclamaciones judiciales relacionadas con el derecho a la seguridad social y el derecho a la salud en la Oficina del Defensor Público y el Tribunal Federal de Brasil. Asimismo, apoyó la labor del Relator Especial en Derechos Económicos, Sociales, Culturales y Ambientales de la Comisión Interamericana de Derechos Humanos. Recientemente, trabajó en litigios estratégicos ante la Corte Interamericana de Derechos Humanos, como miembro del equipo del Centro por la Justicia y el Derecho Internacional.
Ana Clara, Brasil. (Reside en París).
INVESTIGADORA ASOCIADA
Lorena Zenteno es estudiante de doctorado en la Universidad de Edimburgo. Entre sus principales intereses de investigación se encuentran el impacto del cambio climático y su efecto ambiental sobre los derechos humanos, la justicia ambiental, el género y el papel del sistema de justicia en la crisis por el cambio climático. Trabajó varios años en Chile como jueza y como asistente jurídico en la Corte de Apelaciones de Concepción, Santiago, y en la Sala Constitucional de la Corte Suprema de Chile. Es miembro de la Comisión de los Derechos Humanos y Ambientales de la Asociación Nacional de Magistrados y Magistradas de Chile, la cual se dedica a estudiar el impacto del cambio climático y su efecto ambiental sobre los derechos humanos. Lorena es la relatora nacional chilena de la base de datos de los litigios por el cambio climático del Sabin Center for Climate Change Law de la Universidad de Columbia.
Trabajó como investigadora principal para la Relatora Especial sobre los Derechos Culturales de las Naciones Unidas, Karina Bennoune, desde septiembre de 2018 hasta septiembre de 2021. Apoyó y asistió al Relator Especial de las Naciones Unidas en sus labores ante la Asamblea General y el Consejo de Derechos Humanos de las Naciones Unidas.
Tiene una licenciatura en derecho por la Universidad de Concepción, un máster en derecho ambiental por la Universidad de Davis, California, y un máster en derecho empresarial por la Universidad Pompeu Fabra en Barcelona, España. Lorena es miembro de la Global Network for the Study of Human Rights and the Environment.
Lorena reside en Ginebra, Suiza.
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OFICIAL DE PROGRAMA - SERVICIOS PÚBLICOS Y REPRESENTANTE PARA ÁFRICA
Ashina es oficial del Programa para los Servicios Públicos y Representante para África de la Global Initiative for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Es abogada de la Corte Suprema de Kenia, egresada (LL.B) de la Universidad de Nairobi, Kenia, y con un máster (LL.M) en derechos humanos y democratización en África, completado con honores, en el Centro para los Derechos Humanos de la Universidad de Pretoria en Sudáfrica.
Ashina es una apasionada de la justicia social, y ha trabajado en el área de los derechos humanos en el marco de las luchas nacionales y mundiales por sistemas más justos de prestación de servicios públicos, que garanticen a todos el disfrute de sus derechos socioeconómicos. Primero trabajó en el Economic and Social Rights Centre de Hakijamii, Kenia, y luego, en el GI-ESCR. Concretamente, ha dirigido y apoyado la investigación y la defensa, a nivel local, nacional y mundial, del marco legal de derechos humanos para los derechos de las comunidades marginadas a la tierra, la vivienda, la educación, la salud y el agua. Sus intereses en la investigación se orientan también a los derechos humanos y las políticas económicas, así como a la contribución que el cumplimiento de los derechos humanos hace a la formulación y ejecución de las políticas económicas.
Ashina reside en Nairobi, Kenia.
RESPONSABLE DE PROGRAMME - DROIT À l’ÉDUCATION
Zsuzsanna travaille actuellement en tant que responsable du droit à l'éducation pour l'Initiative mondiale pour les droits économiques, sociaux et culturels. Avant de rejoindre GI-ESCR, elle a participé, en tant que consultante, au processus de rédaction des Principes d'Abidjan sur le droit à l'éducation et au développement et à la publication du Commentaire des Principes d'Abidjan. Auparavant, elle a travaillé avec l'Open Society Justice Initiative en tant que boursière Aryeh Neier sur des questions telles que l'égalité et la non-discrimination, les droits des Roms, le droit à l'éducation, la justice économique, l'accès à la justice et l'État de droit. Elle a également travaillé en tant qu'avocate pour l'Union hongroise des libertés civiles sur la ségrégation scolaire, les droits des Roms et les crimes haineux. Elle est titulaire d'un master en droit international public de l'Université d'Édimbourg et d'un diplôme de droit de l'Université Eötvös Loránd de Budapest.
Zsuzsanna vit à Budapest, en Hongrie.
CHARGÉE DE PROGRAMME ASSOCIÉE – SERVICES PUBLICS
Ana Clara Cathalat collabore actuellement, dans le cadre d’une bourse, à l’Initiative mondiale pour les droits économiques, sociaux et culturels, tout en préparant un master en droits de l'Homme et action humanitaire à Sciences Po Paris, où elle se spécialise en droits économiques, sociaux et culturels, ainsi qu’en études de genre et latino-américaines. Elle a une licence de droit de l’Université Fédérale du Mato Grosso au Brésil.
Ana Clara a auparavant travaillé sur des actions en justice relatives au droit à la sécurité sociale et au droit à la santé auprès du Bureau de l’aide juridictionnelle et de la Cour de justice fédérale du Brésil. Elle a également appuyé les travaux de la Rapporteuse spéciale sur les droits économiques, sociaux, culturels et environnementaux de la Commission interaméricaine des droits de l'Homme. Elle a récemment travaillé sur des actions en justice dans des cas stratégiques auprès de la Cour interaméricaine des droits de l'Homme, au sein de l’équipe du Centre pour la Justice et le Droit International (CEJIL).
Ana Clara, le pays est le Brésil (Basée à Paris).
ASSOCIÉE DE RECHERCHE
Lorena Zenteno est doctorante à l’Université d’Édimbourg. Ses principaux thèmes de recherche sont les dimensions du changement climatique et des problèmes écologiques relatives aux droits de l'Homme, la justice climatique, le genre, et le rôle de la Justice dans la crise du changement climatique. Lorena a travaillé pendant plusieurs années au Chili, comme juge et comme légiste, auprès des Cours d’appel de Concepción et Santiago et de la Chambre constitutionnelle de la Cour suprême du Chili. Elle fait partie de la Commission de l’environnement et des droits de l'Homme de l’Association nationale de la magistrature chilienne, dont la mission est d’étudier et de débattre des conséquences du changement climatique et des problèmes écologiques sur les droits de l'Homme. Lorena est la Rapporteuse nationale chilienne sur la base mondiale des actions en justice climatiques pour le Centre Sabin pour le droit du changement climatique de l’Université de Columbia.
Elle a occupé le rôle de chercheuse principale pour l’ancienne Rapporteuse spéciale sur les droits culturels de l’ONU, Karima Bennoune, entre septembre 2018 et septembre 2021. Elle a appuyé et soutenu la Rapporteuse spéciale de l’ONU dans l’accomplissement de son mandat conféré par l’Assemblée générale de l’ONU et le Conseil des droits de l'Homme de l’ONU.
Elle a une licence de droit de l’Université de Concepción, un master en droit de l’environnement de l’Université de Davis (California) et un master en droit des affaires de l’Université Pompeu Fabra de Barcelone (Espagne). Lorena fait partie du Réseau mondiale pour l’étude des droits de l'Homme et de l’environnement.
Lorena vit à le Chili, basé à Genève.
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Aucun montant n'est trop petit. Votre contribution nous aidera à lutter pour un changement transformateur afin de mettre fin aux problèmes endémiques d'injustice sociale et économique.
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SENIOR OFICIAL DE COMUNICACIONES
Belén es licenciada en Relaciones Internacionales. Apenas se graduó, vivió en la India y en Filipinas, donde fue voluntaria durante tres años en proyectos de salud y educación. Al regresar a su nativa Argentina se incorporó a la Red Solidaria como voluntaria y coordinadora de ayuda internacional. Trabajó como periodista y gestora de programas de la fundación del diario La Nación en Buenos Aires, para luego convertirse en especialista en información de medios sociales en la Embajada de Estados Unidos en Buenos Aires. Allí actuó como oficial de enlace con otras secciones y se convirtió en oficial representante de los programas de subvenciones. Fue seleccionada como Directora Ejecutiva de HelpArgentina con la función de ampliar las oportunidades de recaudación de fondos internacionales de las ONG de otros países latinoamericanos, y logró la transición exitosa de la organización hacia PILAS, Portal para la Inversión Social en Latinoamérica. De allí pasó a trabajar en una nueva empresa de medios de comunicación, RED/ACCION, como editora y coordinadora de membresías, antes de unirse al equipo de la GI-ESCR como oficial de comunicaciones.
Belén reside en Buenos Aires, Argentina.