4 June 2025, 13:30-15:00
Event
Adobe Stock
Side Event to the 37th Treaty Body Chairpersons Meeting
The United Nations human rights treaty bodies are at crossroads. When discussions over the last decade focused on efforts to enhance the effectiveness and efficiency of their work in order to strengthen the universality of human rights, current debates circle around the question of what part of the status quo can be maintained, in times of a triple crisis of budget, cash-flow, and politics.
Due to the political and financial situation which affects all of the United Nations, and the human rights mechanisms in particular, sessions of the Treaty Bodies have been shortened, and are currently confirmed only up to July 2025. The holding of further sessions is termed ‘uncertain’ to ‘highly unlikely’.
This crippling of sessions immediately undoes the achievements of recent years, where not only backlogs of reports in most TBs have been reduced, but most notably a shift to a predictable fixed reporting calendar seemed at hand.
Initiated by the report of the High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay in 2012, the ten-year process of strengthening these bodies has led to significant developments, including the Chairs’ conclusions of June 2022, the OHCHR Working Paper of May 2023, and the Chairs’ conclusions of June 2023 and the Chairs’ Conclusions of June 2024. These milestones, derived from the co-facilitation process on treaty body review 2020, aimed to address the challenges faced by the treaty bodies and to improve their functioning. A major step forward were the achievements towards the establishment of a fixed calendar for State reviews and the harmonization of working methods, coupled with the decision to establish an inter-committee Advisory Mechanism on Harmonization.
As part of this continuous effort, the Geneva Human Rights Platform has supported the treaty bodies through facilitating discussions on substantive issues and working methods and in particular via the organization of a series of informal meetings, the latest one in December 2024 focusing on practical achievements of harmonization and an ‘all-mechanisms’ approach. Skepticism present already in December 2024 about what steps could be realized in what time-frame has since been aggravated by the current crisis.
This side event represents a critical opportunity to reflect on the innovative approaches taken through the treaty body strengthening process and to consider the future direction of the treaty body system. By fostering a dialogue on these pivotal issues, the session aims to contribute to the ongoing efforts to enhance the effectiveness of the treaty body system and to confirm the universality of human rights.
Geneva Academy
The GHRP’s annual training equipped 19 diplomats with key insights into the UN Human Rights Council’s mechanisms and multilateral processes.
Adobe
Our research brief 'Neurotechnology - Integrating Human Rights in Regulation' examines the human rights challenges posed by the rapid development of neurotechnology.
Adobe Stock
The event, as part of the AI for Good Summit 2025 will explore how AI tools can support faster data analysis, help uncover patterns in large datasets, and expand the reach of human rights work.
This training course will delve into the means and mechanisms through which national actors can best coordinate their human rights monitoring and implementation efforts, enabling them to strategically navigate the UN human rights system and use the various mechanisms available in their day-to-day work.
Participants in this training course will be introduced to the major international and regional instruments for the promotion of human rights, as well as international environmental law and its implementation and enforcement mechanisms.
UN Photo / Jean-Marc Ferré
Geneva Academy
Geneva Academy