Making Right to Housing Work: Learnings from YUVA’s Approach of Enabling the Right to Adequate Housing
Author:
Joseph Marina,Siddharth K J,Jaikishen Doel
Abstract
Abstract
This article presents a model of human rights practice in India, specifically focused on the right to adequate housing for marginalized groups. It details this through the praxis of a 40-year-old non-profit organization called Youth for Unity and Voluntary Action (YUVA). The article presents the approach, rooted in the specific socio-legal contexts of Indian cities where YUVA works. Four key elements from YUVA’s model of work are elaborated: a) facilitating access to citizenship rights to enable individual claim-making; b) formation of people’s organizations towards collectivization; c) formation of wider city- and state-level alliances towards policy and advocacy shifts; d) strategic inputs to drive inclusion in urban plans. Although the insights embody the experience of a single organization, they offer several lessons for wider human rights practice with respect to realizing the right to housing in developing country contexts, especially in the Global South.
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Law,Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science,History