Events
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Start: 7:30 pm
In 1948 the United Nations General Assembly adopted the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, a deeply inspiring document that has
been translated into over 300 languages and dialects. But because its
provisions are not enforceable, its promise has not been fulfilled. Human
rights violations continue in every corner of the globe, the cause of countless
individual tragedies as well as large-scale disasters like war, poverty and
environmental ruin.
It’s time to take the next step. 2048 sets out a visionary, audacious, but, Kirk Boyd insists,
achievable goal: drafting an enforceable international agreement that will
allow the people of the world to create a social order based upon human rights
and the rule of law. Boyd and the 2048 Project aim to have this agreement, the
International Convention on Human Rights, in place by the 100th anniversary of
the Universal Declaration.
Written documents have always played a key role in advancing
human rights: the Code of Hammurabi, the Magna Carta, the Declaration of
Independence. The express purpose of the International Convention is to
safeguard what Boyd calls the Five Freedoms, adding freedom for the environment
to Franklin Roosevelt’s famous Four Freedoms: freedom of speech, freedom of
religion, freedom from want, and freedom from fear.
Boyd anticipates objections to the notion of a universal and
enforceable written agreement -- that it would be culturally insensitive, too
expensive, unacceptably limit national sovereignty -- and convincingly answers
them. He describes existing transnational agreements with effective compliance
mechanisms that can serve as models.
But Boyd wants to inspire more than argue. In 2048 he urges everyone to participate
in the drafting of the agreement via the 2048 website and describes specific
actions people can take to help make it a reality. “What you do with what you
read” Boyd writes, “is as important as what this book says.”
Kirk Boyd is a
lawyer, professor, and Executive Director of the 2048 Project.
He teaches international human rights, civil rights, international law, free
speech, and constitutional law at the University of California.
Boyd has argued at every level of court, including the United States Supreme
Court.
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