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Shaping human rights for all

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights has paved the way forward when it was adopted in 1948, inspiring more than 80 international treaties as well as UN photographers, who captured everyday struggles and triumphs over the decades in their latest photo essay on the heels of Human Rights Day.

Few documents have had as profound and enduring an impact on global governance as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

People return to their home village of Sehjanna, Sudan, after living seven years in a camp for internally displaced persons in Aramba in 2011. (file)
UN Photo/Albert González Farran
People return to their home village of Sehjanna, Sudan, after living seven years in a camp for internally displaced persons in Aramba in 2011. (file)

Cornerstone of universal rights

So central to the mission of the United Nations that the declaration is sealed, alongside the UN Charter, in the cornerstone of the UN Headquarters in New York City.

The declaration is not just a set of principles but a living framework that informs the UN’s work at every level, it is both a blueprint and a call to action.

Its resonance extends beyond its 30 articles, shaping such landmark treaties as the Convention on the Rights of the Child and international laws that safeguard the rights of asylum seekers, refugees and the stateless everywhere.

Officers of the Technical Secretariat for Electoral Administration drag a cart full of ballot boxes for distribution in remote communities of Timor-Leste, in preparation of elections in 2007. (file)
UN Photo/Steve Tickner
Officers of the Technical Secretariat for Electoral Administration drag a cart full of ballot boxes for distribution in remote communities of Timor-Leste, in preparation of elections in 2007. (file)

View the full essay here.