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| Uzbek women working in a cotton field in Tajikistan. Carolyn Drake for The New York Times |
The World Bank Should Champion Human Rights
Editorial Board / New York Times | 27 June 2016
Much of the evidence supporting the emerging consensus that strong
human rights safeguards promote and enhance development has come out of
research from the World Bank.
Yet the institution has been far too reluctant to make adherence to human
rights a core principle by which it evaluates projects intended to reduce
poverty and improve the lives of the world’s most vulnerable people.
The bank is now
in the final stages of updating its policies on how to reduce the environmental
and social risks of projects and loans. This offers an opportunity to chart a
new course.
The World Bank
was created in 1944 to play a leading role in
rebuilding Europe after World War II.
As its mission shifted to the developing world, the bank held on to a foundational principle: It stays out of
the politics of the countries it works with and makes decisions based solely on
“economic considerations.” That may have made sense in the geopolitical
landscape of the post-World War II era and the Cold War. But it is
anachronistic today.
While the World
Bank cannot reasonably be expected to become an enforcer of human rights law,
there is much it can do to protect human rights and persuade borrowers to live
up to commitments they have made in international treaties. Adopting a clear
and substantive human rights policy would mirror the bank’s efforts to more
carefully consider the environmental impact of the projects it funds.
Bank officials,
shareholders and borrowing countries have wrestled with this issue since 2012,
when the latest review of the bank’s so-called
safeguard policies began. The first draft of the new policy, which was
released in 2014, was widely criticized by human rights advocates for
presenting support for human rights as a vague, aspirational goal. Philip
Alston, the United Nations special rapporteur on extreme poverty and human
rights, said in a report last year that the bank was a
“human rights-free zone” with operational policies that treat “human rights
more like an infectious disease than universal values and obligations.”
He and other critics say the bank has failed to adopt effective
protocols to examine the potential social harm of projects it bankrolls. They
also contend that the bank too often passes the burden of assessing and
mitigating the impact of development work to the governments that get the
funding.
Labor and human rights activists have
chided the World Bank for itsslow and inadequate response to
allegations that its funding was abetting forced labor in cotton fields in
Uzbekistan. The Bank Information Center, a group that monitors World Bank
projects, faulted it for the involuntary
displacement of thousands of families that resulted from an initiative to help
poor people establish a legal claim to property in Cambodia.
The bank has
failed to play a more assertive role in human rights in part because bank
executives have been reluctant to add more regulations to the work of an
institution that is already infamously bureaucratic. They are also mindful of
the rise of other international financial institutions — most significantly
from China — that pay less attention to environmental and labor standards in
financing.
Still, the World
Bank’s own research shows that embracing the protection of human rights as a
core part of its mission is more than a moral imperative; it makes good
economic sense. Bank studies have concluded that reducing gender inequity is good for
prosperity and that communities where human rights are violated with impunity
are moreprone to armed conflict.
Members of the
bank’s Committee on Development Effectiveness received the latest draft of the
bank’s proposed safeguards on Friday. As they review it, they should aim to
make human rights integral to the bank’s development work.

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