When is language key?
This Compendium’s focus language comprises the constellation of terms and concepts that underpin evidence-based and rights-affirming responses to the global HIV epidemic and related sexual and reproductive health challenges. From among these terms and concepts, we have defined the key language which has been and is subject to contestation in the negotiation, interpretation and implementation of international agreements. By substantiating key language, this Compendium intends to (1) provide a bulwark against efforts to reverse the tide of progress by weakening language in future multilateral negotiations and agreements, and (2) support efforts to translate related commitments into norms into national law and policy.
This Compendium will be extended iteratively to encompass more key language. Sadly, the opposition to evidence-based and rights-affirming responses is such that the list of crucial language under dispute is long and growing. If you have suggestions on terms and concepts we should include, please reach out to us at policylab@georgetown.edu.
What substantiates key language?
We are seeking to substantiate the use, proper interpretation, and significance of the concepts and terms that compose our key language. Substantiation needs to be broadly persuasive and, in particular, credible within international negotiations. As such, this Compendium first and foremost substantiates key language with precedents of prior use in existing international agreements. Put simply, our authorities for high level precedents show what member states of one governing body have agreed to in the past on the presumption that this will be highly persuasive in negotiations at both the same governing body and different governing bodies comprising the same or similar Member States. Those using this Compendium will, accordingly, be able to reference a particular country’s prior assent to the inclusion of key language. This record of precedents is also relevant for establishing that the use and significance of key language is settled both for a particular governing body and across the United Nations system. Other agreements between smaller subsets of the international community will be similarly persuasive and are considered authorities for intergovernmental precedent.As noted by the Geneva Graduate Institute’s Global Health Centre “the importance of agreed language should not be underestimated. … Language on sexual and reproductive rights and vulnerable populations at high risk of HIV infection has been adopted, for example in the UN General Assembly resolutions on HIV/AIDS and can be used as a precedent to support such language in other resolutions in other organizations.”
In short: Precedents of prior use in international agreements and evidence of significance
We also identified reports, recommendations and decisions of United Nations appointed independent experts mandated with interpreting and evaluating compliance with legally binding treaties as authorities for expert precedent that substantiate the meaning and significance of key language. The only bodies identified so far under this heading are the treaty bodies and the special procedures of the United Nations human rights system. In interpreting and elaborating on the human rights commitments of States, these expert bodies also establish precedents for the use, meaning and significance of key language within and beyond the human rights system. Formal documents produced and published by intergovernmental organisations, in particular the secretariats of the UN and its specialised agencies, constitutes evidence on the meaning, significance and continued relevance of key language. This intergovernmental evidence is authoritative due to the character of the organisations that produce it as well as the processes by which the documents are produced. On the former, the secretariats of the UN and its specialised agencies derive normative authority from their political neutrality and by virtue of their technical expertise. On the latter, the publications are generally produced with technical rigour and pursuant to a mandate provided by relevant Member States technical rigour. Production and publication of documents is also often accompanied and preceded by consultation with relevant Member States.
Where is substantiation found?
Authorities for high-level precedent
High-level precedent for key language is derived from texts that have received high-level international approval by one of the significant governing bodies of the United Nations (UN) system. These bodies comprise a universal or near-universal proportion of the UN Member States. They must arrive at an agreement with one another to approve policies, political statements and other instruments. The agreements arrived at will form part of the binding mandate of their respective secretariats, be persuasive across the UN system and in certain cases be binding in international law. Put simply, this is because many of the same Member States that approved certain language in one agency’s governing body will also be part of the next agency’s governing body.
The Compendium offers precedents from the agreements of the Member States of the following UN governing bodies.
- UN General Assembly (UNGA) is the preeminent governing body of the UN system and consists of all 193 UN Member States. The scope of the General Assembly’s functions are, to put it simply, general and encompass both human rights and global health. Relevant high-level precedent can be drawn from General Assembly documents including political declarations, outcome documents, and other resolutions. In the process of drafting, negotiating, and revising documents, new rights-based language may be proposed and struck down; in those cases, UNGA members usually draw from previously accepted key language.
- World Health Assembly (WHA) is the decision-making body of the World Health Organization. It includes delegations from every UN Member State, which gather annually to address questions about WHO’s governance, budget, and progress. Although WHA resolutions are centred on health, they engage topics ranging from military aggression to migrant rights.
Authorities for intergovernmental precedent
Intergovernmental precedent for key language is derived from texts that have received international approval from multilateral intergovernmental organisations or bodies that are significant yet not universal. The relevant bodies in the United Nations (UN) system frequently contain a subset of the broader UN membership elected on a regionally equitable basis to represent the whole. The agreements arrived at may form part of the binding mandate of their respective secretariats and will be persuasive across the UN system and to other Member States. This holds even when not all Member States approve the inclusion of the language in question because the body that approved it is legitimate as a result of its procedure and the representative nature of its membership.
Future editions of the Compendium may be extended to include regional multilateral organisations as a source of intergovernmental precedent.
The Compendium offers precedents from the agreements of the Member States of the following UN governing bodies.
- The United Nations United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) serves as the UN’s central forum for advancing sustainable development’s economic, social and environmental dimensions. It is composed of 54 Member States elected regularly by the UN General Assembly.
- The United Nations Commission on Narcotic Drugs (CND) sets policies for the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, which in turn is responsible for monitoring international drug treaties. CND is also overseen by and works closely with the Economic and Social Council and the General Assembly. It is composed of representatives from 53 geographically diverse Member States elected by the Economic and Social Council.
- The United Nations Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) is a functional commission of the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC). It is the most important global intergovernmental body exclusively dedicated to the promotion of gender equality and the empowerment of women. Although its declarations are non-binding, it plays an instrumental role in shaping global standards on gender equality, that is, women’s enjoyment of their rights in political, economic, and social fields.
- The United Nations Human Rights Council (HRC) is composed of elected representatives from 47 Member States; together, they are responsible for coordinating investigations of and responses to human rights violations.
Authorities for expert precedent
Expert precedent for key language is derived from the reports and recommendations of United Nations (UN) appointed independent experts. Their work often concerns the implementation of human rights treaties by evaluating progress, clarifying provisions, and identifying violations. In interpreting and elaborating on the human rights commitments made by UN members, these expert bodies also establish precedents for the use, meaning and significance of key language within and beyond the human rights system.
The Compendium offers precedents from the reports and recommendations of the following UN mandated independent experts.
- The 10 treaty bodies that monitor the implementation of specific human rights treaties. They are committees of independent experts with recognised competence in human rights nominated and elected for fixed renewable terms of four years by State parties to the relevant human rights treaty. Crucially, treaty bodies are responsible for releasing guidelines and general comments that clarify treaty provisions; as such, their expert precedent constitutes internationally authoritative definitions for key language concerning health and human rights.
- Individual Special Procedures of the UN Human Rights Council—also known as Special Rapporteurs and Independent Experts—are human rights experts with mandates to report and advise on human rights from a thematic or country-specific perspective. To ensure their objectivity, they are neither paid nor formal UN staff members. They are also required to meet with government actors, nonprofit organisations, and civil society organisations when making state-specific recommendations, allowing for high levels of detail and nuance in the precedents they set. They can provide authoritative expert precedent for the application of key language to fight health and human rights violations.
Authorities for intergovernmental evidence
Intergovernmental evidence is derived from the technical documents produced by the United Nations (UN) Secretariat and the secretariats of its specialised agencies. The work of these bodies is carried out pursuant to mandates provided by the Member States that govern them. Member States are also often consulted on the content of these documents prior to their publication by the relevant secretariat. Because of this, the language used as well as the meaning and significance given and accorded this language, in these publications is usually the product of direct consultation with Member States as well as extensive research and review by leading experts.
Technical documents vary in their formality and we intend to provide guidance on the extent to which particular sources of intergovernmental evidence should be treated as an authority for a particular topic on a case by case basis.
The Compendium includes evidence drawn from the technical documents of the following secretariats.
- The UN Secretariat, made up of numerous UN departments and offices specializing in areas such as women’s and children’s human rights, humanitarian affairs, policy and advocacy, and law enforcement, supports the other main organs of the United Nations and manages the programs and policies they establish. The Secretary General of the UN heads the Secretariat and is also entrusted with unique political prerogatives, such as bringing matters to the attention of the Security Council under Article 99 of Chapter XV of the Charter of the United Nations.
- The World Health Organization (WHO) which is the UN’s directing and coordinating authority for health. WHO’s Secretariat serves the organisation’s 194 Member States by implementing the resolutions and decisions of the World Health Assembly through its global and regional headquarters as well as its 150 country offices. Its Director-General is accorded certain political prerogatives under the International Health Regulations 2005. WHO Secretariat derives normative authority from its expertise and political neutrality. It is a widely respected public health authority in the UN system and beyond. Its guidelines and technical reports are authoritative sources of evidence.
- The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) which is a coalition of 11 UN agencies and the World Bank helping to coordinate the global AIDS response by engaging with governments, civil society and people living with HIV. UNAIDS is overseen by a Programme Coordinating Board composed of representatives from 22 geographically diverse countries; the 11 UN agencies, including the World Health Organization, UN Women, and the United Nations Population Fund; and five nongovernmental organisations. UNAIDS is the only UN entity that has representatives of civil society on its board.
- United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) which is the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency, operating in over 150 countries. It is one of four specialised agencies overseen by the UN Secretary-General, head of the UN system, and its board is composed of representatives of 36 Member States. The agency also has strategic partnerships with 138 universities around the world. UNFPA’s reports often take a human rights approach; among the recipients of its reports is the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
What is opposition language?
Opposition language comprises the terms and concepts proposed by those seeking to undermine evidence-based and rights-affirming responses to HIV and related sexual reproductive health challenges. These opposition terms and concepts are proposed in negotiations as alternatives that are intended to displace, negate and weaken key language. Later editions of the Compendium will have a dedicated section on opposition language. This section will provide examples of the often euphemistic, seemingly agreeable and even banal language that is proposed as a means of undermining and displacing key language. These examples will help ensure those involved in negotiations are forewarned of these opposition alternatives and, therefore, prepared to dispute their inclusion. They will also provide examples of when this language has been proposed and rejected in past negotiations and, in this way, provide precedents for rejection that can be used in disputing the inclusion of language that denies rights and fails to follow the evidence.
Examples of opposition language include:
- Language emphasising national sovereignty at the expense of universal rights such as “sovereign rights” and “national contexts”.
- Language claiming a particular moral stance as status quo and traditional such as “family values” and “responsible and healthy relationships”.
- Language that stigmatises key populations and other marginalised communities such as “a healthy way of life” and “risk-taking”.
If you have suggestions on opposition language we should include in the next edition of the Compendium, please reach out to us at policylab@georgetown.edu.