Publications
Compendium on Human Rights of Armed Forces Personnel: Military unions and associations
Publishing date: 4 March 2021
Content type: Factsheet
Where we are: OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
What we do: Human rights
Publisher: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
Military unions and associations provide assistance to service personnel in a variety of areas, including raising awareness of their rights, promoting their welfare, representing their interests and consulting or negotiating on the conditions of their service. Freedom of association, which is defined as the freedom to join professional bodies and trade unions, is a fundamental right. However, it does not apply without limitations to men and women in the armed forces throughout the OSCE region.
Compendium on Human Rights of Armed Forces Personnel: Freedom of expression
Publishing date: 4 March 2021
Content type: Factsheet
Where we are: OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
What we do: Human rights
Publisher: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
As with other civil and political rights, the freedom of expression of service personnel is sometimes restricted in an effort to ensure the political neutrality of the armed forces. In certain situations, including operational deployments, special restrictions will be necessary to maintain the security of armed forces personnel.
Compendium on Human Rights of Armed Forces Personnel: Civil and political rights
Publishing date: 4 March 2021
Content type: Factsheet
Where we are: OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
What we do: Human rights
Publisher: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
As citizens in uniform, armed forces personnel enjoy the same fundamental rights as other citizens, including civil and political rights. However, many states impose restrictions on the enjoyment of these rights for service personnel, for example because of the need for discipline and political neutrality within the armed forces. The degree to which they do so varies among OSCE participating States.
Compendium on Human Rights of Armed Forces Personnel: International human rights law
Publishing date: 4 March 2021
Content type: Factsheet
Where we are: OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
What we do: Human rights
Publisher: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
Human rights are explicitly articulated in international standards that carry very real and meaningful implications for every individual. They include the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights – the bedrock of international human rights law – the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (ECHR).
Compendium on Human Rights of Armed Forces Personnel: National laws
Publishing date: 4 March 2021
Content type: Factsheet
Where we are: OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
What we do: Human rights
Publisher: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
National laws provide democratic control of the armed forces, and include constitutional provisions, parliamentary oversight and legislation specifying the role of the military and the rights of its personnel.
Compendium on Human Rights of Armed Forces Personnel: Women
Publishing date: 4 March 2021
Content type: Factsheet
Where we are: OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
What we do: Human rights
Publisher: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
Women remain significantly underrepresented in the armed forces across the OSCE region. Women’s participation in the military goes beyond the question of representation, and encompasses recruitment, promotion and retention, working conditions, respect for family life, and issues of discrimination and sexual violence. Above all, women’s participation in the armed forces is about full respect for their human rights while appreciating their necessary contribution to the operational demands of a modern-day military.
Compendium on Human Rights of Armed Forces Personnel: How to use the publication
Publishing date: 4 March 2021
Content type: Factsheet
Where we are: OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
What we do: Human rights
Publisher: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
The compendium is aimed at all those working to promote, protect and ensure effective implementation of the human rights of armed forces members, including military personnel, policymakers, judges, ombuds institutions, professional military associations and non-governmental organizations.
Crimes Against Freedom
Publishing date: 24 February 2021
Content type: Book
Where we are: OSCE Project Co-ordinator in Ukraine (closed)
What we do: Human rights, Rule of law
Publisher: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
The treatise is aimed to highlight the core issues of the crimes against a freedom of the person. It is a useful reference for legal academia, law practitioners and students, experts in criminal law, philosophy of law and a human rights protection, as well as for the general audience, interested in
Human Rights of Armed Forces Personnel: Compendium of standards, good practices and recommendations
Publishing date: 4 March 2021
Content type: Study / report
Where we are: OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights
Publisher: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
This Compendium presents an overview of legislation, policies, and mechanisms for ensuring the protection and enforcement of the human rights and fundamental freedoms of armed forces personnel. It includes many examples and good practices from across the OSCE region that have proven successful. It also contains recommendations which can help participating States ensure that their policies and practices are in full compliance with international human rights standards and OSCE human dimension commitments.
Report Hate Crimes
Publishing date: 4 March 2021
Collections: Hate crimes related documents and publications
Content type: Guide / manual / handbook
Where we are: OSCE Mission to Bosnia and Herzegovina
What we do: Human rights, Rule of law, Tolerance and non-discrimination
Publisher: Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe
It is important to now what is a hate crime. When a hate crime is committed, one or more perpetrators target the victim, which can be one or more people or property, because of a protected aspect of the victim's identity, such as religion or ethnicity, race, sexual orientation or disability. Similarly, a hate incident is an act of hostility motivated by prejudice or bias that does not necessarily reach the threshold of a criminal offence, or the criminal nature of which is yet to be determined. A hate crime is any crime where the perpetrator is driven by prejudice or bias. Criminal offence + bias motive = hate crime