Language
Languages
English
Español
Français
العربية
Português
简体中文
Türkçe
Русский
हिन्दी
اردو
ภาษาไทย
עברית
Bahasa
Deutsch
தமிழ்
မြန်မာဘာသာ
Kiswahili
বাংলা
한국어
සිංහල
日本語
Српски
shqiptar
فارسی
Kreyòl
नेपाली
Zulu
Setswana
Українська
isiXhosa
Rohingya
Tagalog
Italiano
ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
Na Vosa Vakaviti
Limba Română
Kiriol
Somali
Search
Articles
Sections
Sections
Topics
Business & Human Rights
Climate & Environment
Conflict & Justice
Democracy
Economic Inequality
Gender & Sexuality
Health
Migration
Race & Ethnicity
Technology & AI
Regions
Africa
Americas
Asia
Europe
Middle East
Global
Strategies
Futures
Funding
Movement Building
Narratives
Training & Education
Tools
Practical Guides
Reports
Series
Series
OGR Series
War, Conflict, and Human Rights
A Year of Elections
The Future of Rights and Governance (FORGE)
Justice for Animals
AI and Human Rights
(Misappropriation) of Human Rights
See more
Partnerships
Legal Empowerment Efforts
Right to a Healthy Environment
Overturning 1.5 Degrees
Human Rights and Sustainability
Women, Climate, Insecurity
Future's Past: Human Rights
See more
Multimedia
Multimedia
Videos
FORGE 2023
Dream Strategy
Creative Activism
Art as Activism
Time and Human Rights
Webinars
Gene Editing and Human Rights
Conflict and Male Sexual Assault
New Human Rights Business Models
About us
Write for us
Language
English
Espanol
French
العربية
Português
简体中文
Türkçe
Русский
हिन्दी
اردو
ภาษาไทย
עברית
Bahasa
Deutsch
தமிழ்
မြန်မာဘာသာ
Kiswahili
বাংলা
한국어
සිංහල
日本語
Српски
shqiptar
فارسی
Kreyòl
नेपाली
Zulu
Setswana
Українська
isiXhosa
Rohingya
Tagalog
Italiano
ਪੰਜਾਬੀ
Na Vosa Vakaviti
Limba Română
Kiriol
Somali
Search
Kate Bermingham
Kate Bermingham is a social affairs journalist and alumni of the Irish Centre for Human Rights.
Espanol
|
June 30, 2023
Hereditary monarchies are the antithesis of a human rights culture
By
Kate Bermingham