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Search Result for “Malala Yousafzai”

Showing 1 - 6 of 6

OPINION

Does 'slacktivism' deserve its bad reputation?

Oped, Lisa Mueller, Published on 23/08/2024

» Earlier this year, activists opposing the war in Gaza marched onto the Golden Gate Bridge and Interstate 880 in Oakland. They blocked traffic for hours, some chaining themselves to vehicles or cement-filled drums. Twenty-six were arrested and charged.

OPINION

Defeat symbolises normalisation

News, Justice Malala, Published on 03/06/2024

» Last Thursday, a television news crew made its way to former South African president Jacob Zuma's homestead, an ugly monstrosity controversially built at a cost of 250 million rand (500 million baht) of taxpayers' money, in his rural village of Nkandla. The crew got to interview Zuma after midnight. At about 2am, the crew watched in amazement as a genial Zuma, aged 82, welcomed a delegation of French diplomats into his living room for a meeting.

OPINION

Is inclusive education a myth?

Oped, Giulia Ajmone Marsan and Ravindra Ngo, Published on 13/05/2022

» Has the current pandemic changed our behaviours and the way students and children learn? Yes, definitely.

OPINION

EU is putting gender equality first and foremost

Oped, Josep Borrell & Jutta Urpilainen, Published on 26/11/2021

» Rarely in the world have women and girls' rights been challenged in such a concerning way as they have been in Afghanistan. The European Union has made it clear that future EU development assistance will depend on the respect for norms on human rights, including women's and girls' rights. The EU will continue to support women and girls worldwide, sticking to our values and beliefs.

OPINION

Students rebelling against a bleak future

News, Wasant Techawongtham, Published on 07/03/2020

» Youth is always a conundrum for adults. That is odd, since all adults were once youths themselves.

OPINION

The 7-decade battle for universal human rights

News, Robert Destro, Published on 10/12/2019

» In today's splintered world, it is tempting to assume that there is absolutely nothing upon which all nations can agree and all cultures can embrace as an integral part of their communities. But International Human Rights Day, celebrated on Dec 10, reminds us that it wasn't so long ago that the world came together to do exactly that. On Dec 10, 1948, the United Nations unanimously adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR), a set of rights to which all individuals are entitled. Rights such as being free from torture and cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment or punishment. Rights like freedom of religion or belief. The freedoms of expression, association, and peaceful assembly. The right to form and join trade unions. Under the UDHR, every human being in the world can claim these as their own birthright, no matter their citizenship or allegiance.