Call for Special Issue Article Proposals: Queering Human Rights Education: Research, Praxis and Liberation for LGBTQIA2S+

Guest Editors: David Donahue, Maria Autrey Noriega, Lori Selke, Mauro Sifuentes

This special issue of the International Journal of Human Rights Education (IJHRE) queers human rights and human rights education, drawing on the multiple definitions of queer: as a noun, adjective, and verb. As a noun, queer is an umbrella term for members of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer/questioning, intersex, asexual/aromantic/agender, two spirit (LGBTQIA2S+) community, with the plus sign in the acronym holding space for new and expanding understanding about identity related to sexuality and gender. As an adjective, queer speaks to departing from the norm, differing from expectations regarding sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, and sex characteristics (SOGIESC). As a verb, queer refers to challenging all that is considered normal and natural. Queering is about troubling power and replacing binary thinking with more complex, fluid ways of understanding.

In keeping with these multiple definitions, the editors of the special issue seek articles that are about the human rights desires and celebrations of LGBTQIA2S+ people as well as the challenges and contestations of those rights. In addition, we seek articles that challenge normative thinking about human rights and HRE, particularly in terms of gender and sexuality and that trouble what it means to teach and research in the field of human rights. We welcome scholarship that not only expands what we know but questions, challenges, and complicates how we come to know something and why we think it is valuable.

We welcome contributions looking inside and outside of the classroom, across all global settings, from early childhood, primary, and secondary education to higher education, adult education, and immigrant/refugee education and their intersections with HRE curriculum and educational materials; HRE pedagogy and practices; HRE community and spaces; HRE history and scholarship; and/or HRE advocacy and policy. Visual art, poetry, and creative nonfiction are welcomed as well as texts grounded in social science. We also seek book reviews, including reviews focused on trade books and children’s literature, as well as scholarly texts, focused on SOGIESC.

Proposal deadline: April 10, 2024

>> Details and submission information

HRE USA will be present at the 2024 IAHRE Conference: Extending Human Rights Education


We’re pleased to announce that HRE USA will be presenting at the 2024 IAHRE Conference: Extending Human Rights Education in London, April 19, 2024!

The HRE USA Podcast Team’s poster session is titled, “Human Rights Education Now! Podcast: Building a Space for Critical Human Rights Education Discussions in the U.S.”

HRE USA has become a member of this global network, our members are encouraged to attend!

>> IAHRE conference information and registration
>> IAHRE website

Grassroots Global Justice Action Fund: Grassroots Global Justice Action Fund Director

Position Summary: The GGJ Action Fund Director will provide strategic leadership to build alignment and the clear goals necessary to grow the engagement of working class grassroots communities in policy and electoral organizing. They will oversee the political direction and program leadership of the c(4) structure; lead strategic planning and implementation; fundraise for the work of the organization; coordinate the GGJAF Member Working Group; and represent GGJAF publicly on a national and international level with members, movement allies, and funders.

Application deadline: February 24, 2024

>> Learn more

HRE USA Member Publication: Cosmopolitanism and Teaching Texts through the Lens of Human Rights: A Framework for Inspiring Global Citizenship

HRE USA Steering Committee Member and D.C. Regional Representative Jess Terbrueggen recently published this article with the National Council of Teachers of English (NCTE) December 13, 2023.

As committee members, we have contemplated what it means to be a citizen of the world and how to inspire such a simple yet complex idea in our students. Though Diogenes uttered these words some two thousand years ago, the concept of cosmopolitanism and identifying as a citizen of the world remains an influential—and at times, controversial—concept today. Cosmopolitanism has been interpreted, explicated, reimagined, and even derided; Socrates and Plato were said to have been unimpressed with Diogenes’s declaration. Whether criticized or lauded, Diogenes’s concept of world citizenship has stood the test of time, being revisited and redefined by various thinkers over the centuries. Prominent figures such as Chrysippus, Cicero, Marcus Aurelius, Seneca, Immanuel Kant, John Rawls, and Martha Nussbaum have all promoted cosmopolitanism in various forms.

>> Read here

February is Black History Month and this year’s theme is African Americans and the Arts

“African American art is infused with African, Caribbean, and the Black American lived experiences. In the fields of visual and performing arts, literature, fashion, folklore, language, film, music, architecture, culinary and other forms of cultural expression, the African American influence has been paramount. African American artists have used art to preserve history and community memory as well as for empowerment. Artistic and cultural movements such as the New Negro, Black Arts, Black Renaissance, hip-hop, and Afrofuturism, have been led by people of African descent and set the standard for popular trends around the world. In 2024, we examine the varied history and life of African American arts and artisans.”

>> Learn more from ASALH

NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS FOR OUR YOUTH ADVISORY BOARD!

The Youth Advisory Board (YAB) is Speak Truth to Power’s youth division, which aims to bring together young people from across the country to advance human rights in their communities and help their peers do the same. Our current network of YAB members embodies the virtues of Robert F. Kennedy with their desire to grow and learn through empathy, passion, and stewardship. If you’re a student interested in human rights advocacy, organizing, or education, we want to hear from you! Learn more and submit your application by February 12.

LEARN MORE AND APPLY

Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights announces the release of the Harry Belafonte Memorial Project

Robert F. Kennedy Human Rights is proud to announce the release of the Harry Belafonte Memorial Project, written and produced by Evan Malbrough & Kevin Khadavi of the Speak Truth to Power Youth Advisory Board. Join Khadavi and Malbrough as they explore the life of Harry Belafonte, a legendary singer, lifelong activist for justice and human rights, and RFK Human Rights Board of Directors member of three decades. Khadavi and Malbrough discuss Belafonte and his legacy through three conversations with those who knew him best: Harry’s daughter Gina, Harry’s granddaughter Maria, and David Goodman, a close friend and colleague of Mr. Belafonte.

Read more and watch the video

SIMA Academy Announced as a Silver Winner in Education, Art, & Culture: Literacy Platform for The 3rd Annual Anthem Awards

This year’s Anthem Award Winners were selected from a pool of over 2,000 submissions from 44 countries by the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences (IADAS). Anthem judges are intellectually diverse leaders from across the impact industry with expertise that spans across the Anthem cause areas. IADAS members include: Heather Dowdy, Director of Product Accessibility, Netflix; Alex Amouyel, President & CEO, Newman’s Own Foundation; Noel Kinder, Chief Sustainability Officer, Nike; Shaniqua McClendon, Vice President of Politics, Crooked Media/Vote Save America; Rawle Andrews Jr., Esq., Executive Director, American Psychiatric Association Foundation; Alison Moore, CEO, Comic Relief US; Christina Lang, Vice President of North American Marketing, Mozilla; Michelle Waring, Steward for Sustainability and Everyday Good, Tom’s of Maine; and more.

SIMA Academy is a transformative education platform that empowers educators and inspires students to be changemakers via award-winning documentaries from 140 countries. These stories ignite curiosity, foster empathy, nurture critical thinking and cross-cultural understanding, and build the global capacities in students to imagine and lead a more just and sustainable world.

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