5 Celebrate All Our Rights - Politics Information

Celebrate All Our Rights


By David Gallup


December 10, 2021 marks the 73rd anniversary of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). This year also marks the 5th anniversary of the UN Declaration on the Right to Peace (DRP). As we celebrate the anniversaries of these two Declarations, let’s consider their interconnectedness and how world government, world law, and world citizenship are key to their implementation.

The UDHR and the DRP share the same ultimate goal: achieving world peace based on universal respect for human rights.


The interconnectedness between the Declarations becomes noticeable in the shared terms “peace” and “human rights,” which repeat multiple times in each document. Peace affirms human rights, and human rights affirm peace.

The UDHR refers to “peace” three times. The most significant occurrence appears in the Preamble: “Whereas recognition of the inherent dignity and of the equal and inalienable rights of all members of the human family is the foundation of freedom, justice and peace in the world.”

The DRP further affirms the indivisible link between rights and peace. Article 1 states, “Everyone has the right to enjoy peace such that all human rights are promoted and protected and development is fully realized.”

Education about our rights and of a culture of peace, according to both Declarations, is the principal way to raise awareness of these goals. To move beyond awareness into implementation, peace and human rights must be engaged and guaranteed by government at all levels from local to global.

Achieving peace and human rights must be the primary function of government. We must implement the UDHR and the DRP at the world level as well as lower levels because local and national governments alone do not have the capacity and oftentimes the willingness to fulfill this role.

The limitations of local and national governments hamper the achievement of peace. For example, within the nation-state system of exclusive sovereignty, our rights and duties begin and end at the border, allowing lawlessness and violence to reign beyond borders. In a global governmental system, our rights and duties apply to everyone, everywhere, placing accountability on each individual in society for upholding the rule of law.

We can learn from the effective aspects of national governmental institutions, such as parliaments and courts, which provide legislative processes and adjudication of disputes that allow for peaceful decision-making at the national level. By globalizing these legal processes, we can achieve peaceful decision-making beyond the nation-state – at the more impactful world level.

A world federal government, in its focus on the global rule of law, offers a system to transition from a society guided by war to a society guided by peaceful realization of our rights and duties.

If we define and implement peace by what it is – the presence of law – rather than by what it is not – the absence of war – then world peace becomes achievable. World peace is achievable through world law and world citizenship.

The UDHR provides a set of guiding principles to form the basis of an evolving world law. The UDHR provides a springboard for creating the participatory institutions and regenerative processes at the global level to help us to live together peacefully with each other and sustainably with the Earth.

To fulfill our right to peace as the DRP intends, we must move beyond the confines of our local identities that divide us. By seeing ourselves as world citizens, with universal rights and duties to each other and to the planet, we begin to govern our world with a unified voice -- a world governed by us, the people of the world. With a world citizen mindset, we better understand that peace depends upon respect for rights and respect for rights depends upon peaceful interactions at all levels of human society.

As we celebrate the anniversaries of the UDHR and the DRP, let’s consider how we may implement the Declarations’ principles and framework for human rights and peace in our own lives, in our communities, and in the world.

David Gallup is a human rights attorney, President of the World Service Authority, and a member of the Board of Directors of the Citizens for Global Solutions Education Fund.

More Resources


05/07/2024
New Data Should Have Team Biden Sweating
A recent analysis published by the left-leaning Brookings Institution -- which highlights Pew data -- demonstrates significant erosion within Joe Biden's 2020 victory coalition, across multiple key demographics.

more info


05/07/2024
Who Will Be Dumb Enough To Become Trump's VP?
Who will be Donald Trump's vice presidential candidate? It's frankly remarkable that anyone would want the job.

more info


05/07/2024
Democrats Use Legal System To Target the Right
Laws that hamper Democrats are ignored.A Laws that might be used to hurt Republicans are enforced to a€” and often well past - the limits of the law.

more info


05/07/2024
Judge Merchan Is Out of Good Options
In April, when Judge Juan Merchan first heard arguments about whether Donald Trump was violating a gag order in his criminal case in Manhattan, he sharply and skeptically questioned the former president's attorneys, accusing one of "losing all credibility."

more info


05/07/2024
U.S. Research $ Should Support U.S. Values, Not Antisemitism
College campuses across America - and in particular across the Ivy League - have erupted with antisemitic, pro-Hamas encampments and riots. These anti-American activities are not the peaceful protests on college campuses of the past. They are federally funded demonstrations of support for terrorism. and the Biden administration is encouraging them.

more info


05/07/2024
Gaza War Protests Don't Yet Rival Anti-Vietnam War Movement
For many a baby-boomer, the sights and sounds of student protests against U.S. complicity in Israel's war in Gaza brought back vivid memories of the anti-Vietnam War movement of their youth and of the conservative backlash that ultimately placed its legacy in question.

more info


05/07/2024
Political Violence in America
The leftist tumult, often sliding into intimidation and violence, overtaking American college campuses is neither temporary nor topical. That is, it won't end when the war in Gaza ends, nor is it even particularly about that war. What we are seeing in 2024 is the latest, dreary iteration of left-wing violence that seems predictably to strike during election years.

more info


05/07/2024
Will Renewed U.S. Support for Ukraine Be Enough?
Ian Bremmer explains how an additional $61 billion in aid and arms will, and will not, change the course of the war.

more info


05/07/2024
Putin Won't March on Europe If We Stop Funding Ukraine
If Washington elites are hell bent on continuing to fund another war, impoverishing Americans as inflation is raging, they should pick a more clever excuse.

more info


05/07/2024
The Collapse of the News Is Taking Its Soul Down With It
A general view of the Kansas City bureau of the Associated Press. In the foreground is the East desk. Next is the Coast desk, then the State desks and in the background the Local desk, on April 22, 1940. | AP Corporate Archives

more info


05/07/2024
Lawmakers Urge U.S. Action To Halt China's Organ Trade
A group of leading China critics in Congress is urging the State Department to step up its efforts to curb Beijing's gruesome $1 billion forced organ harvesting trade, which targets ethnic and religious minorities, including Uyghurs, Tibetans, Muslims, Christians, and Falun Gong practitioners.

more info


05/07/2024
Inside the Cold Calculation of the Biden Brain Trust
In Wilmington, Joe Biden's reelection team is tackling stubborn polls, Gaza protests, and third-party threats as it assembles a sophisticated machine to defeat Donald Trump. And the stakes couldn't be higher: We could lose the thing that matters most to me, says campaign chair Jen O'Malley Dillon, which is a future for my kids.

more info


05/07/2024
The People Setting America on Fire
An investigation into the witches' brew of billionaires, Islamists, and leftists behind the campus protests

more info


05/07/2024
U.S. Forgets Disruption & Disorder Are Point of Protests
I have trespassed in peaceful protest. I have shutdown government offices in civil disobedience. I have made the powerful uncomfortable. That's the point

more info


05/07/2024
Biden Risks Radicalizing the Center
The president can reverse the chaos narrative. He must act.

more info



Custom Search

More Politics Articles:

Related Articles

Pelosi's Drug Plan Would Kill Innovation -- and Hope


"Help is on the way." That's what House Speaker Nancy Pelosi told American patients when she unveiled her sweeping plan to lower drug prices.

Solving the Looming Superbug Crisis Will Require Bold Action From Congress


Antimicrobial resistance killed upwards of 160,000 Americans in 2010. More and more infections are becoming resistant to antibiotics and antifungals — and while Americans know this is a growing problem, few know how bad it already is.

One Nation Under God?


"I had no idea how critical religion is to the functioning of democracy." So said a Marxist economist from China conversing with Harvard Professor, Clayton Christensen.

The Art of the Budget Deal: White House and Congress Cooperate?


Last week, President Donald Trump and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi announced a two-year budget deal that suspends the debt ceiling, and will raise federal spending $320 billion over amounts agreed to during the Obama years.

Showdown with the Ayatollahs: A Dangerous Situation


Yesterday, President Donald Trump imposed more economic sanctions on Iran. In response, Iranian officials denounced the sanctions. Does diplomacy have a chance in this situation? Or is war inevitable?

AOC's Ravings Against Billionaires


"No one ever makes a billion dollars. You take a billion dollars."

House Drug Bill Dooms Medical Research


House lawmakers recently voted to pass the "Lower Drug Costs Now Act," which would enable government officials to set the price of lifesaving medicines. The bill would reduce pharmaceutical companies' revenues by a staggering $1 trillion over the coming decade.

To Boost the Economy, Fight Chronic Disease


To understand the health of an economy, look at the health of those who participate in it.

Animal Rights Groups Choose Coronavirus Over Your Safety


Top U.S. health officials recently delivered a sobering message: Americans must prepare for the inevitable spread of the coronavirus within the United States. So far in the U.S., 11 people have died. The virus has claimed the lives of more than 3,200 people and infected over 95,000 worldwide.

How To Draw On The Power Of Perseverance During COVID-19


People's ability to keep up their spirits is being put to the test during the COVID-19 pandemic. Health concerns, job concerns, and disruptions to day-to-day routines have combined to create a challenging situation for Americans and for people throughout the world.

Trump's "Buy America" Plan Will Backfire


In response to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, the Trump administration wants to quarantine American manufacturing. At any time now, the president could sign an executive order aimed at returning the pharmaceutical supply chain to the United States.

Exercising Bayh-Dole March-in Rights Would Handicap COVID-19 Innovation


Scientists across America are working hard to develop treatments for and vaccines against COVID-19. Unfortunately, several activist groups are making their jobs harder.

Academic Research Can't End the Pandemic Without Private Backing


Scientists at Yale University and scores more research institutions nationwide are working around the clock to identify potential avenues of diagnosing, preventing, and treating COVID-19. Many of these projects are backed by the federal government's National Institutes of Health. Any one of them could lead to a game-changing insight that helps end this pandemic.

Natural Gas Will Power Our Economic Recovery


After months of sheltering in place, Americans are finally returning to their favorite restaurants, stores, and barbershops.

"All the News That's Fit to Print," As Long As It Promotes a Progressive Agenda


One hundred and 23 years later, the New York Times still boasts of its alleged objectivity with the phrase "All the News That's Fit to Print" located on the upper left-hand corner of its front page. The slogan was the idea of the paper's owner Adolph S. Ochs in 1897. He meant it as "a declaration of the newspaper's intention to report the news impartially," according to the language arts Website ReadWriteThink.