Human Rights
Human Rights
This support includes supporting the distribution of a new guide to human rights, which aims to show why they are important to the everyday lives of people in Swansea. PDF versions of the guides can be downloaded from the council website.
Swansea’s declared ambition to become a Human Rights City is shared by the University and other key organisations such as the police, health board, fire service, and voluntary groups as well as businesses and residents across the city.
Human Rights
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Tackling poverty
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Supporting vulnerable children and families
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Tackling discrimination
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Tackling domestic abuse and violence
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Raising awareness of human rights
Human Rights
Becoming a Human Rights City
Becoming a Human Rights City
In the eighty or so years since U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s speech on January 6, 1941 in which he articulated ‘the Four Freedoms’, the world has changed beyond recognition but today in many parts of our world those fundamental freedoms are under threat. In his address Roosevelt proposed four fundamental freedoms that people “everywhere in the world” ought to enjoy:
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Freedom of Speech
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Freedom of Worship
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Freedom from Want
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Freedom from Fear
Eight decades on and the City of Swansea is aiming to become Wales’ first Human Rights City.