From Southern Poverty Law Center <[email protected]>
Subject On the International Stage: SPLC to present evidence of systemic racism in US to UN committee in Geneva
Date August 6, 2022 2:01 PM
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On the International Stage: SPLC to present evidence of systemic
racism in US to UN committee in Geneva

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Esther Schrader | Read the full piece here

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Friend,

When Terrance Winn takes a seat on a flight to Geneva this month as
part of a Southern Poverty Law Center delegation traveling to address
a United Nations committee, it will be an extraordinary departure for
a man who until two years ago had been incarcerated for 30 years.

But as he looks out over the ocean separating himself from his former
life, Winn will be a fitting symbol of the departure the delegation
represents for the SPLC. Long rooted in advocating for racial justice
at home, the organization will for the first time formally appeal to
an international body to recognize systemic racism in the United
States as a human rights emergency of global concern.

Winn
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, who was released two years ago from the vast Louisiana State
Penitentiary, known as "Angola," has become a widely
respected advocate for prison reform.

Several members of the SPLC's leadership team will accompany
Winn. Leading the delegation is Lisa Borden, senior policy counsel.
Borden heads the SPLC's new international advocacy initiative
- established last December. A civil rights lawyer in Alabama
for three decades, Borden joined the SPLC last year and is charged
with using the pressure of international condemnation as a powerful
new mechanism for advocacy in a country where democratic institutions
are in peril.

Also with the delegation will be SPLC Chief Policy Officer LaShawn
Warren, along with Page Dukes
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, a formerly incarcerated Georgia woman who since 2019 has worked on
voting rights and other issues at the Southern Center for Human Rights
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.

Together the delegation will carve a new path for an organization that
- since its founding in 1971 as a small law firm working to help
implement federal civil rights legislation and constitutional
guarantees - has focused its legal work
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within the U.S., even as it evolved into a powerful advocate for the
human rights of all people.

Now, the SPLC is looking to international institutions for added focus
on the dearth of justice experienced by many in the Deep South and
across the U.S.

"We have always had people who bring the question of justice to
the courts, and we have always had people who work on policy, on the
state level and more recently on the federal level," Borden
said. "Now we want to bring the gaze of our international peers
to the deep issues of civil and political rights plaguing
America."

Seeking international pressure

The occasion is the 107th session of the U.N. Committee on the
Elimination of Racial Discrimination
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(CERD), a body of independent experts that monitors implementation of
the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial
Discrimination

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. The treaty has been signed by 128 countries, including the U.S., and
is the oldest and most widely ratified U.N. rights convention.

Governments party to the treaty come under review by CERD regularly,
generally every four years. Along with reports submitted by the
governments, human rights organizations like the SPLC can submit their
own reports, giving their perspectives, concerns and evidence of the
country, its public officials or institutions engaging in racial
discrimination against individuals, groups of people or organizations.

The committee issues recommendations based on the reports it receives.
Though it has no mechanism to enforce those recommendations, the
pressure of its public reports can have an impact.

The U.S. has an ambivalent history with CERD. It signed the treaty in
1966, but Congress did not ratify it for nearly three decades -
until Oct. 21, 1994. And while the treaty commits the U.S. to
"adopt all necessary measures for speedily eliminating racial
discrimination," the American Bar Association found in 2020 that
the U.S. "has consistently failed to meaningfully uphold this
mandate."

Since ratifying the treaty, the U.S. has nullified its impact by
submitting reservations, failing to enact anti-racism legislation,
preventing citizens from bringing claims under the treaty and failing
to deliver timely reports of measures it has taken to address racial
discrimination.

During the administration of former President Donald Trump,
CERD's work was ignored entirely. The U.S. was to have submitted
a report to it in 2018 but did not begin working on one until
President Joe Biden took office in January 2021. The Biden
administration has pledged a new level of commitment to CERD.

READ MORE

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In solidarity,

Your friends at the Southern Poverty Law Center

The SPLC is a catalyst for racial justice in the South and beyond,
working in partnership with communities to dismantle white supremacy,
strengthen intersectional movements, and advance the human rights of
all people.

Friend, will you make a gift to help the SPLC fight for
justice and equity in courts and combat white supremacy?

DONATE

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