What are the most violated human rights?
Looking at historically data, nationally and internationally, what are the human rights that are violated most?
There are a few different frames that this question can be viewed in. There is not a single answer, nor a list, of what human rights have been violated the most. When thinking about this question, it is important to consider different locations, different time frames, and different perspectives.One frame that this question could be viewed from is a localization frame. People tend to answer from their own context. When searching online, it will be filtered depending on where you search from. In the United States, we tend to focus on discrimination. For example, in 2021, President Biden issued an executive order that established the White House Gender Policy Council. This council has listed goals including the following:(i) combat systemic biases and discrimination, including sexual harassment, and to support women’s human rights;(ii) increase economic security and opportunity by addressing the structural barriers to women’s participation in the labor force and by decreasing wage and wealth gaps;(iii) address the caregiving needs of American families and support the care-workers they depend upon;(iv) support gender equity and combat gender stereotypes in education, including promoting participation in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) fields;(v) promote gender equity in leadership (Exec. Order No. 14020, 2021)The focus on discrimination in the United States shows the power differential between the United States and many other countries. While no human rights issue is unimportant, we in the U.S. are able to focus on problems such as discrimination, while many others are concerned about very different issues. In South Sudan, government security forces and armed groups committed many human rights violations, including killings, detention, acts of sexual violence, torture, abductions, the recruitment and use of children, and destruction of civilian property.Another frame to look at human rights violations from is from a certain time period, such as the last 500 years. One such violation is the genocide of native peoples. For example, when settlers from Europe came to the Americas, the population of Native Americans dropped from 10 million to under 300,000. Many Native Americans were seen as subhuman due to not being Chrisitians. A variety of tactics were used in this genocide, one of which was the distribution of blankets from smallpox patients to Native Americans in the late 1800s. On November 3, 1755 Council and Lieutenant Governor Spencer Phips approved a law passed by the Massachusetts House of Representatives that declared the people of the Penobscot tribe to be enemies, rebels, and traitors. He offered rewards for bringing in scalps of those in the Penobscot tribe, with the highest reward being for males over the age of 12, and the lowest being for children. In the 1830s, Native Americans were forced off of the land that they had been occupying for decades and forced to walk across the Mississippi River to a new territory that was designated for them. This trek, often called the Trail of Tears, left thousands of Native Americans dead.Violations of human rights during European colonization of the Americas did not stop at genocide. Colonialism includes economic exploitation of another country. In 1663 King Charles II ordered the colonial British Empire seize all the land of Native Peoples between 31 and 36 degrees latitude from coast to coast. In the 1740s the Earl of Granville was given Durham County, which is now northern North Carolina (26,000 square miles) by King George II of England. Many natives’ land were carved into parcels and sold to English settlers. The Durham land had rich, fertile soil, and the settlers began reusing the soil without rest, fertilization, crop rotation, replenishment or erosion prevention, resulting in diminished yields.In addition to economic exploitation, other violations were occurring through these processes as well. The land cultivation occuring in Durham County was helped by West African people, who were forcefully taken from their homeland from the 1500s through the 1800s and enslaved to do farm labor. Additionally, millions of Native Americans were enslaved during this time period. Many of them were shipped to locations including Barbados, Bermuda, Jamaica, the Azores, Spain and Tangier in North Africa. This allowed them to remove Native Americans from the land to allow more European settlement, and for them to make money from the sales. Effects of this enslavement were long lasting, with Native Americans’ children and grandchildren often becoming indentured servants in European households.Many human rights were violated during wars that occurred over this time period. During World War I, which lasted from 1914 to 1918. For example, the Imperial German Government deported about 100,000 men, women and children from Belgium and France who were then used as forced labor in Germany. Additionally, many Belgians and French were held as hostages and many died in captivity. Millions of soldiers were also held as prisoners of war. Many of these POWs were held in harsh and inhumane conditions. They were forced into labor, beaten, and killed. Another violation was the bombing or other damage done to hospitals of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, along with hospital ships, healthcare workers, vehicles, and supplies. Directing attacks against Red Cross personnel, buildings or vehicles, is a war crime.World War II (1939-1945) is one of the most well known and horrendous human rights violations in world history. Similar to World War II, but far more extreme, about 12,000,000 people were removed from their homes in Nazi Germany and forced into labor, often in munitions factories. This same practice occurred in Japan on a smaller scale. There was a mass genocide of various groups of people, including Jews, ethnic Poles, Roma, people with disabilities, and more. They were sent to concentration camps, and many were killed via gas chambers, mass shootings, or being deprived of necessities such as food or warmth.Another well known example of human rights violation was the system apartheid in South Africa, which lasted from 1948 to 1990. This was a system that, on paper, intended to keep Black South Africans and White South Africans separated but living in equal conditions. In practice, Black South Africans were severely discriminated against and subject to harsh conditions and treatment. Various laws were passed that perpetuated this discrimination. For example, the Population Registration Act of 1950 required people to register according to their racial group, and people were treated differently depending on that group. The Group Areas Act of 1950 required people be moved into set areas for their race group, and many people were forcibly removed from their homes. The Prohibition of Mixed Marriages Act allowed for those who had romantic relationships outside of their racial group to be arrested, and often subject to violence. Black South Africans were killed, beaten, and subjugated as second class citizens for over 50 years.Violations have continued to occur into the 21st century, but for the purpose of this question I will end with this overview of some of the most major violations that occurred up until this point. Violations that have happened since and are still happening now can be the subject of another essay.