The objective of this curriculum is for students to define and explain the importance of individual and civic responsibilities. It includes pre-activity discussion, living and acting responsibly, and concluding questions.
This resource is the sixth module of the manual Making Human Rights Real: A Human Rights Education Program for Women in Morocco. The focus is on women’s human right to education and includes two sessions: women’s right to education and the impact of illiteracy on women’s human rights.
The one-page table of contents for the Arab Council for Judicial and Legal Studies (ACJLS) Rule of Law Toolkit lists the six chapters in Arabic and English.
This report presents a demographic breakdown of survey findings on how people in Lebanon manage their assets. It focuses on women controlling assets, how earnings are spent, who makes financial decisions and control over property and savings. The survey was implemented in August 2009.
This resource is the eleventh module of the manual Making Human Rights Real: A Human Rights Education Program for Women in Morocco. It highlights women’s human right to freedom from stereotyping with two sessions: images of women in advertising and school textbooks; and the role of the media in promoting responsibility for human rights violations.
The curriculum focuses on due process at an international and national levels. Major themes include the definition and history of due process, international standards, the importance of international and national due process instruments, and strategies to protect, ensure and promote due process. It provides facilitator's notes, including key learning objectives, glossary of terms, activities, handouts and case study scenarios for a 40 minute session.
The presentation focuses on market disruption, international supervisory efforts, lessons learned, overview of the 2008 Basel Liquidity Principles and looking forward.
This report presents survey findings on the extent to which women in Morocco enjoy freedom of movement. It also examines attitudes toward violence against women with a focus on domestic violence. The survey was implemented in December 2009 and January 2010.
This report presents a demographic breakdown of survey findings on attitudes toward policy change in Lebanon. The reforms covered an optional civil marriage law, the introduction of gender quotas in elected bodies and a reformed citizenship law. The survey was implemented in August 2009.