
RWI Regional Africa Programme (2017-2023)
With funding from Swedish Development Cooperation (Sida), RWI is further expanding and developing its cooperation regionally in Africa. The overall objective of the Regional Africa Programme (2017-2023) is to secure a demonstrable improvement in access to justice for all and implementation of human rights commitments in Africa. This objective is framed by the premise that the key challenge for increased respect for human rights regionally is not primarily a lack of standards and institutions, but making existing standards and institutions work.
Core Principles:
- Transparency through access to information for all stakeholders.
- Participation of key programme partners for enhanced ownership.
- Accountability for the effective implementation of human rights commitments.
- Non-discrimination and (gender) equality in Programme processes and outcomes.
- Knowledge production and dissemination towards regional discourse on human rights commitments.
Theory of Change:
If the human rights capacity of key regional institutions and related duty-bearers is strengthened, and the abilities of other key regional actors able to influence and follow-up the work of such institutions enhanced – with linkages to the national level and cooperation between these stakeholders being improved thus maximising synergies – then development challenges, including of a cross-border nature, facing Africa can be dealt with more effectively, because human rights commitments in the region will be increasingly implemented, enhancing good governance and the rule of law.
Approach:
- Cooperation with key regional actors able to follow up and influence the implementation of human rights commitments in the region;
- Direct cooperation with bodies of the African Union (AU), Regional Economic Communities, and related duty-bearers in the region, in the area of human rights; and
- Continuous monitoring and evaluation of programme processes to ensure consistent learning for effective programme implementation.
Key expected outcomes:
- Enhanced cooperation and usage of mechanisms to further access to justice and implementation of human rights commitments in Africa.
- Targeted regional institutions and related duty bearers increasingly consider gender equality a core aspect in access to justice and human rights advancement.
- Improved human rights performance of targeted bodies of the African Union, Regional Economic Communities and related duty bearers in the region.
Implementing partners:
- Academic Network – generating research and resources, building capacity, and developing spaces for inter-sectoral dialogue.
- African Court Coalition (ACC) – monitoring and strengthening implementation of decisions by the African Court on Human and People’s Rights and strengthening the complementary relationship between the Court and the African Commission on Human and People’s Rights.
- African Policing Civilian Oversight Forum (APCOF) – increasing the ability of regional, primarily Eastern Africa Police Chiefs Cooperation Organisation (EAPCCO) and national bodies and organisations, primarily police services, in East Africa to promote human rights compliant policing.
- East Africa Law Society (EALS) – increasing understanding of the East African Court of Justice and strengthening implementation of its decisions.
- Equality Now – developing knowledge and skills among targeted institutions in gender equality and increasing access to objective information on women’s human rights and means and mechanisms for their implementation.
- Network of African National Human Rights Institutions (NANHRI) – enhancing the ability of National Human Rights Institutes to influence human rights developments and follow-up on human rights commitment.
- Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU) – strengthening implementation of Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) Community Court of Justice decisions and supporting implementation of the 10-Year Human Rights Action Plan.
Direct cooperation partners
- The African Union and its organs including the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights
- Regional Economic Communities and their organs including the East African Court of Justice, EAC Department of Peace and Security, and ECOWAS Community Court of Justice
Chris Muthuri
Regional Africa Programme — Focal Point: African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights (ACtHPR), ECOWAS Community Court of Justice, Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU), Continuous Monitoring and Evaluation
Chris has over a decade’s experience working with several international, regional and local organisations across Africa. He has extensive experience in advocacy, programme management and fundraising having taken up leadership roles on several instances. Chris joined the Institute in October 2017 working on the Regional Africa Programme from RWI’s Nairobi office.
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Damaris Seina
Regional Africa Programme. Focal Point: African Policing Civilian Oversight Forum (APCOF), East African Community (EAC)
Damaris has worked at the Raoul Wallenberg Institute since 2015 as the Kenya Programme Officer and is responsible for planning, implementation and follow-up of cooperation projects in Kenya so as to achieve expected results.
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Yvonne Oyieke
Yvonne Anyango Oyieke joined the Raoul Wallenberg Institute of Human rights and Humanitarian Law in May 2018, from the University of Nairobi where she taught Jurisprudence and Equality Law. She is based at the Regional Office in Nairobi as Programme Officer working with academic cooperation’s under the Ethiopia and Regional Africa Programme, and serves as the gender focal point.
Prior to that she was based at the University of Pretoria in South Africa serving as a Programme Coordinator with the Gender Unit of the Centre for Human Rights and then as a Researcher with the Institute for International and Comparative Law in Africa.
She holds an LLM in Jurisprudence and an LLB from the University of Pretoria and is currently reading for her doctorate at the same institution, with a focus on the link between law and memory towards the quest for justice in post-authoritarian contexts.
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Grace Mbogo
Regional Africa Programme — Focal Point: East African Law Society (EALS), Network of National Human Rights Institutes (NANHRI), East African Court of Justice (EACJ)
Grace Mbogo joins RWI from its longstanding partner the Pan African Lawyers Union, and has just completed an LLM with focus on Transnational Criminal Justice and Crime Prevention at the University of Western Cape. She will work as Programme Officer with the Regional Africa Programme, in particular the partnerships with the East African Court of Justice, East Africa Law Society and Network of African NHRIs, as well as with our bilateral cooperation in Ethiopia.
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