Universal Declaration of the Rights of Peoples (1976)
The Universal Declaration of the Rights of Peoples (also known as the Algier's Charter)was adopted in Algiers, July 4, 1976 on the initiative of Lelio Basso.[1] This was at the conclusion of an international conference of jurists, politicians, sociologists, and economists, meeting from 1 July to 4 July at the Palais des Nations in Algiers. They prepared, discussed and approved a declaration which "consecrates the rights of self-determination, of protection of the environment, of control of natural resources, and of the protection of minorities."[2] It served as a foundational document for the Permanent Peoples' Tribunal.
Content
editIt contains a preamble with seven sections: Right to Existence , Right to Political Self-determination, Economic Rights of Peoples, Right to Culture, Right to Environment and Common Resources, Rights of Minorities and Guarantees and Sanctions.
References
edit- ^ "Algiers Charter". Fondazionebasso. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
- ^ Richard Falk; Samuel S. Kim; Saul H. Mendlovitz, eds. (1982). "Universal Declaration of the Rights of Peoples". Toward a Just World Order. pp. 432–434. doi:10.4324/9780429269400-35. ISBN 978-0-429-26940-0.
External links
edit- About the Algiers Charter
- Full text of the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Peoples of 1976
- Human Rights and Peoples' Rights: An Introduction