Jorge Terra

23 de maio de 2023

1ª Feira de Direitos Humanos da PGE/RS

As instituições não existem para si mesmas! Existem para construir ou auxiliar a construir soluções para a sociedade!
Sob essa diretriz e com a convicção de que a educação em direitos humanos é um caminho a ser percorrido, a Comissão de Direitos Humanos da PGE/RS realizou, em 13.11.2018, a sua primeira feira de Direitos Humanos. Houve a apresentação de trabalhos decorrentes de pesquisas realizadas por estudantes, declamação de sonetos sobre diversos temas de direitos humanos e uma roda de conversa.
Fortes e emocionados agradecimentos ao Teatro da OSPA, à Associação dos Transportadores de Passageiros, à CORSAN, à administração do CAFF, às Escolas Municipais Moradas da Hípica, Professor Anísio Teixeira e Vila Monte Cristo, bem como ao Centro Municipal de Educação dos Trabalhadores Paulo Freire, à escola estadual Matias de Albuquerque, ao Colégio Marista Rosário e à Rede Romano.
Os trabalhos expostos foram:
EMEF Vila Monte Cristo
1) Título: QUADRO SOBRE A VIOLÊNCIA DOMÉSTICA NO BAIRRO VILA NOVA EM PORTO ALEGRE
Karolini Vitória Silva, Mariana da Silva Souza, Isabelle Nunes da Rocha e Rayssa Santos Marques.

2) Título: PROFESSORES E FUNCIONÁRIOS AFRODESCENDENTES: HISTÓRIAS E MEMÓRIAS
Felipe Gonçalves Rodrigues, Gabriel de Almeida Fernandes, Ícaro Moreira Borda, Sophia Diedrich da Silva e Yuri dos Santos Winck.

3) Título: PALMADAS: EDUCAÇÃO OU AGRESSÃO?
Diogo do Nascimento Costa Charão, Jenifer da Rosa Coelho, Nathália de Matos Dias Sito, Raíssa Alves de Fraga, Tainá Ramos Prudência e Vitória Schuch Cestari.

EMEF Prof Anisio Teixeira
4) Título: “QUEM RESPEITA OS DIREITOS HUMANOS? UMA DISCUSSÃO FUNDAMENTAL E NECESSÁRIA”
Hiago Adriano Oliveira Silva, João Vitor Guimarães Alves e José Luiz da Silva

5) Título: “LET ME HELP! O QUE PODEMOS FAZER PARA CONTRIBUIR COM UM MUNDO MELHOR?”
Nathanael de Oliveira Nascimento, Luis Fabiano Amaro Ferreira, Fabricio Adão Machado, Roberta Brum Feitoza da Silva, Giovana dos Santos Lunardi

6) Título: “GALERA CURTIÇÃO: UMA EXPERIÊNCIA DE CIDADANIA E DIREITOS HUMANOS”
Gabriel Verginio Tomazini, Isabel Gimenez de Mello, Letícia Santos da Silveira, Christian Cruz Brito

Rede Romano de Educação
7) Título: ME EMPRESTA O LÁPIS COR DE PELE? – (Destaque XIII Salão UFRGS Jovem 2018)
Anderson Lauenstein da Silva , Bárbara Oliveira Reckziegel, Enzo Gabriel Moura Cordeiro, Lays Roberta Mayela Ferreira Machado, Laura Rodrigues Pires

8) Título: SEMANA DA CONSCIÊNCIA HUMANITÁRIA – (Aula aberta aos alunos do ensino Fundamental II e Médio, que envolve debate sobre temas de interesse dos Direitos Humanos e show de talentos).
Maria Eduarda Carvalho de Souza – 1° ano do Ensino Médio, Laura Ehlers de Souza – 2° ano do Ensino Médio, Davi Kniest da Silva – 1° ano do Ensino Médio, Victoria Zuccarelli Machado – 2° ano do Ensino Médio

E. E. E. F. Matias de Albuquerque
09) Título: Exposição de Abayomis: UMA REFLEXÃO INTERDISCIPLINAR: DIVERSIDADE SOB UM OLHAR LÚDICO NA DESCONSTRUÇÃO DE PRECONCEITOS E NA PRESERVAÇÃO AMBIENTAL

EMEF MORADAS DA HIPICA
10) Título: GÊNERO, CINEMA E HISTÓRIA: AS MULHERES SOB A ÓTICA CINEMATOGRÁFICA
Gabriela Augustin Santos, Mariana Morais Carlotto Rego, Thabatha Fiorin Pires

11) Título: RELAÇÕES DE GÊNERO E PODER: POR UMA ANÁLISE DO MACHISMO ENTRE MORADORES DO BAIRRO HÍPICA, NA CIDADE DE PORTO ALEGRE (2018)
Sophia Laura Garcia, Thainara Broda Nascimento, Melane Matos dos Santos, Melissa Ribeiro
Centro Municipal de Educação dos Trabalhadores Paulo Freire
12) Título: DECLARAÇÃO UNIVERSAL DOS DIREITOS HUMANOS
Nathalie Correa Bidart, Anna Júlia Garcia, Arthur Carneiro do Prado Biondo

13) Título: DIVERSOS TEMAS SOBRE DIREITOS HUMANOS
Camile Vitória Ulmann de Andrade, Victória Caroline Silva da Silva, André Gustavo Bom Reis Barbosa, Nicolas Matheus Vidal Nunes Alves, Erica Gonçalves Sansona, Gesiel Bernardes Canosa

Colégio Marista Rosário
14) Título: MULHERES NA HISTÓRIA
Bernardo Staudt de Oliveira Peixoto, Lorenzo Bolzan Ciulla, Pedro Alvarenga Piassini

15) Título: COTAS UNIVERSITÁRIAS O BRASIL E A SUPERAÇÃO DAS DESIGUALDADES
Alice Jacques Barco, Isabella Generoso, Marina Dalrosso Oliveira, Maria Rita Suñé Marques, Stela Nicolas da Costa Ribeiro

16) Título: A INFLUÊNCIA DO PRECONCEITO E DA REPRESENTATIVIDADE NA FORMAÇÃO DA AUTOESTIMA E DA IDENTIDADE RACIAL DE CRIANÇAS E ADOLESCENTES NEGROS E NEGRAS
Carolina Michel Ferreira, Isabella Prando Madeira, Maria Eduarda Moreira Neves, Victória Pereira Terra Silva

17) Título: A EVOLUÇÃO DO FEMINISMO: UMA ANÁLISE DAS PRINCESAS DA DISNEY
Gabriela Hoff Jacobus, Isabella Poças Rodrigues, Manoela Rehmenklau Feijó, Mariah Oliveira da Silva, Nicolle Costa Rodrigues

18) Título: COMUNICAÇÃO PARA SURDOS E CEGOS: OUTRAS POSSIBILIDADES
Carolina Toledo Carvalho Leite, Giovanna Strapasson Faccin, Rafaela Severo Oliva, Rafaela Silva Schöepping, Roberta Zanette Garcia

19) Título: MULHERES NA POLÍTICA BRASILEIRA
Gabriela Uchôa Silveira , Mariana Gonçalves Carvalho

20) Título: COLORISMO: COMO SE DEFINIR NEGRO NO BRASIL
Luana Tubino, Kira Luize Venzon , Fernanda Cesar

21) Título: A VISÃO DOS REPRESENTANTES DAS PRINCIPAIS RELIGIÕES BRASILEIRAS ACERCA DA LAICIDADE DO ESTADO
Rafael Vasconcellos Tonding, Rodrigo Sandrin Righesso, Yasmin Nassar Cabral

22) Título: VIOLÊNCIA CONTRA A MULHER NA SOCIEDADE BRASILEIRA – A LUTA DIÁRIA DE MULHERES VIOLENTADAS
Nathalia Carvalho, Raquel Terra , Sofia Marcon

SONETOS DECLAMADOS
Emef Moradas da Hípica
Título: Direitos Humanos – Estudante: Melissa Melo

Centro Municipal de Educação dos Trabalhadores Paulo Freire
Título: ESTATUTO DO HOMEM – Estudantes: Nathalie Correa Bidart e Brenda Spineli

Colégio Marista Rosário
Título: EU JÁ OUVI DIZER – Estudante: Dandara Rossato da Silva
Título: SONETO REVOLTADO – Estudante: Raquel Battilana Severo
Título: LIVRE-ARBÍTRIO – Estudante: Valentina Prado Filomena

 

 

10 de maio de 2021

AGEISM IS A GLOBAL CHALLENGE

Every second person in the world is believed to hold ageist attitudes – leading to poorer physical and mental health and reduced quality of life for older persons, costing societies billions of dollars each year, according to a new United Nations report on ageism.

18 March 2021 News release – Geneva, Switzerland

Every second person in the world is believed to hold ageist attitudes – leading to poorer physical and mental health and reduced quality of life for older persons, costing societies billions of dollars each year, according to a new United Nations report on ageism.

The report released today by WHO, Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA) and United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), calls for urgent action to combat ageism and better measurement and reporting to expose ageism for what it is – an insidious scourge on society.

The response to control the COVID-19 pandemic has unveiled just how widespread ageism is – older and younger people have been stereotyped in public discourse and on social media. In some contexts, age has been used as the sole criterion for access to medical care, lifesaving therapies and for physical isolation.

“As countries seek to recover and rebuild from the pandemic, we cannot let age-based stereotypes, prejudice and discrimination limit opportunities to secure the health, well-being and dignity of people everywhere,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “This report outlines the nature and scale of the problem but also offers solutions in the form of evidence-based interventions to end ageism at all stages.”

Findings from the report

Ageism seeps into many institutions and sectors of society including those providing health and social care, in the workplace, media and the legal system. Healthcare rationing based solely on age is widespread.  A systematic review in 2020 showed that in 85 per cent of 149 studies, age determined who received certain medical procedures or treatments.

Both older and younger adults are often disadvantaged in the workplace and access to specialized training and education decline significantly with age. Ageism against younger people manifests across many areas such as employment, health, housing and politics where younger people’s voices are often denied or dismissed. 

“Ageism towards younger and older people is prevalent, unrecognized, unchallenged and has far-reaching consequences for our economies and societies,” said Maria-Francesca Spatolisano, Assistant Secretary-General for Policy Coordination and Inter-Agency Affairs in the Department of Economic and Social Affairs. “Together, we can prevent this. Join the movement and combat ageism.” 

Ageism has serious and wide-ranging consequences for people’s health and well-being. Among older people, ageism is associated with poorer physical and mental health, increased social isolation and loneliness, greater financial insecurity, decreased quality of life and premature death. An estimated 6.3 million cases of depression globally are estimated to be attributable to ageism.  It intersects and exacerbates other forms of bias and disadvantage including those related to sex, race and disability leading to a negative impact on people’s health and well-being.

“The pandemic has put into stark relief the vulnerabilities of older people, especially those most marginalized, who often face overlapping discrimination and barriers – because they are poor, live with disabilities, are women living alone, or belong to minority groups,” said Natalia Kanem, Executive Director, United Nations Population Fund. “Let’s make this crisis a turning point in the way we see, treat and respond to older people, so that together we can build the world of health, well-being and dignity for all ages that we all want.”

Ageism costs our societies billions of dollars. In the United States of America (USA), a 2020 study showed ageism in the form of negative age stereotypes and self-perceptions led to excess annual costs of US$63 billion for the eight most expensive health conditions. This amounts to US$1 in every US$7 spent on these conditions for all Americans over the age of 60 for one year (see note to editors).

Estimates in Australia suggest that if 5 per cent more people aged 55 or older were employed, there would be a positive impact of AUD$48 billion on the national economy annually. There are currently limited data and information on the economic costs of ageism and more research is needed to better understand its economic impact, particularly in low- and middle-income countries.

“Ageism harms everyone – old and young. But often, it is so widespread and accepted – in our attitudes and in policies, laws and institutions – that we do not even recognize its detrimental effect on our dignity and rights said Michelle Bachelet, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. “We need to fight ageism head-on, as a deep-rooted human rights violation.”

Combatting ageism

The report notes that policies and laws that address ageism, educational activities that enhance empathy and dispel misconceptions, and intergenerational activities that reduce prejudice all help decrease ageism.

All countries and stakeholders are encouraged to use evidence-based strategies, improve data collection and research and work together to build a movement to change how we think, feel and act towards age and ageing, and to advance progress on the UN Decade of Healthy Ageing.

Note to Editors

The Global report on ageism compiles the best evidence on the scale, the impact and the determinants of ageism, effective strategies to tackle the problem and recommendations for action to create a world fit for all ages. The report is directed at policymakers, practitioners, researchers, development agencies and members of the private sector and civil society. 

  • Ageism arises when age is used to categorize and divide people in ways that lead to harm, disadvantage, and injustice. It can take many forms including prejudicial attitudes, discriminatory acts, and institutional policies and practices that perpetuate stereotypical beliefs.
  • Prevalence figures based on a survey of 83 034 people in 57 countries found one in every two people held moderately or highly ageist attitudes (i.e. stereotypes and prejudice). More information: https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/9/3159.
  • Excess costs of health care: Ageism influences health through three pathways: psychological, behavioural and physiological. Psychologically, negative age stereotypes can exacerbate stress; behaviourally, negative self-perceptions of ageing predict worse health behaviour, such as noncompliance with prescribed medications; physiologically, negative age stereotypes predict detrimental brain changes decades later, including the accumulation of plaques and tangles and reduction in the size of the hippocampus.

    In the USA, ageism led to excess costs of US$63 billion for a broad range of health conditions during one year. This amounts to US$1 of every US$7 spent on the eight most expensive health conditions for all Americans over the age of 60 during one year. The excess health care spending due to ageism was derived from the following: (a) number of Americans aged 60 years or older in 2013; (b) prevalence of interpersonal and self-directed ageism based on percentage of people that agree to the following statements: “You are treated with less courtesy or respect than other people”, “Forgetfulness is a natural occurrence just from growing old” and “The older I get the more useless I feel.” (c) evidence of the impact of such ageist statements on the eight health conditions; (d) prevalence of the eight health conditions in 2013, the most recent year for which health care spending was available; and (e) Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) costs per person of the eight health conditions in 2013.  More information: https://academic.oup.com/gerontologist/article/60/1/174/5166947.

Related links

The Global report on ageism.

To watch the launch event on Thursday, 18 March from 13.00 – 14.00 CET, please register here.

—————

The World Health Organization (WHO) provides global leadership in public health within the United Nations system. Founded in 1948, WHO works with 194 Member States, across six regions and from more than 150 offices, to promote health, keep the world safe and serve the vulnerable. Our goal for 2019-2023 is to ensure that a billion more people have universal health coverage, to protect a billion more people from health emergencies, and provide a further billion people with better health and wellbeing. For more information about WHO, visit www.who.int. Follow WHO on Twitter and Facebook.

The Office of the United Nations Commissioner for Human Rights is the leading UN entity on human rights. We represent the world’s commitment to the promotion and protection of the full range of human rights and freedoms set out in the  Universal Declaration of Human Rights. To fulfil its mission, UN Human Rights follows a robust framework of results known as the OHCHR Management Plan (OMP). This roadmap is based on the outcomes of consultations with Member States, the UN system, civil society, the donor community and the private sector.

United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA), rooted in the United Nations Charter and guided by the transformative 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, upholds the development pillar of the United Nations. UN DESA brings the global community together to work towards common solutions to the world’s most pressing problems. The Department helps countries translate their global commitments into national action in the economic, social and environmental spheres. It is a leading analytical voice for promoting inclusion, reducing inequalities and eradicating poverty, and a champion for tearing down the barriers that keep people in poverty.

United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) is the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency. Our mission is to deliver a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth is safe and every young person’s potential is fulfilled. UNFPA calls for the realization of reproductive rights for all and supports access to a wide range of sexual and reproductive health services – including voluntary family planning, maternal health care and comprehensive sexuality education.

Every second person in the world is believed to hold ageist attitudes – leading to poorer physical and mental health and reduced quality of life for older persons, costing societies billions of dollars each year, according to a new United Nations report on ageism.

The report released today by WHO, Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA) and United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), calls for urgent action to combat ageism and better measurement and reporting to expose ageism for what it is – an insidious scourge on society.

The response to control the COVID-19 pandemic has unveiled just how widespread ageism is – older and younger people have been stereotyped in public discourse and on social media. In some contexts, age has been used as the sole criterion for access to medical care, lifesaving therapies and for physical isolation.

“As countries seek to recover and rebuild from the pandemic, we cannot let age-based stereotypes, prejudice and discrimination limit opportunities to secure the health, well-being and dignity of people everywhere,” said Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, WHO Director-General. “This report outlines the nature and scale of the problem but also offers solutions in the form of evidence-based interventions to end ageism at all stages.”

Findings from the report

Ageism seeps into many institutions and sectors of society including those providing health and social care, in the workplace, media and the legal system. Healthcare rationing based solely on age is widespread.  A systematic review in 2020 showed that in 85 per cent of 149 studies, age determined who received certain medical procedures or treatments.

Both older and younger adults are often disadvantaged in the workplace and access to specialized training and education decline significantly with age. Ageism against younger people manifests across many areas such as employment, health, housing and politics where younger people’s voices are often denied or dismissed. 

“Ageism towards younger and older people is prevalent, unrecognized, unchallenged and has far-reaching consequences for our economies and societies,” said Maria-Francesca Spatolisano, Assistant Secretary-General for Policy Coordination and Inter-Agency Affairs in the Department of Economic and Social Affairs. “Together, we can prevent this. Join the movement and combat ageism.” 

Ageism has serious and wide-ranging consequences for people’s health and well-being. Among older people, ageism is associated with poorer physical and mental health, increased social isolation and loneliness, greater financial insecurity, decreased quality of life and premature death. An estimated 6.3 million cases of depression globally are estimated to be attributable to ageism.  It intersects and exacerbates other forms of bias and disadvantage including those related to sex, race and disability leading to a negative impact on people’s health and well-being.

“The pandemic has put into stark relief the vulnerabilities of older people, especially those most marginalized, who often face overlapping discrimination and barriers – because they are poor, live with disabilities, are women living alone, or belong to minority groups,” said Natalia Kanem, Executive Director, United Nations Population Fund. “Let’s make this crisis a turning point in the way we see, treat and respond to older people, so that together we can build the world of health, well-being and dignity for all ages that we all want.”

Ageism costs our societies billions of dollars. In the United States of America (USA), a 2020 study showed ageism in the form of negative age stereotypes and self-perceptions led to excess annual costs of US$63 billion for the eight most expensive health conditions. This amounts to US$1 in every US$7 spent on these conditions for all Americans over the age of 60 for one year (see note to editors).

Estimates in Australia suggest that if 5 per cent more people aged 55 or older were employed, there would be a positive impact of AUD$48 billion on the national economy annually. There are currently limited data and information on the economic costs of ageism and more research is needed to better understand its economic impact, particularly in low- and middle-income countries.

“Ageism harms everyone – old and young. But often, it is so widespread and accepted – in our attitudes and in policies, laws and institutions – that we do not even recognize its detrimental effect on our dignity and rights said Michelle Bachelet, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. “We need to fight ageism head-on, as a deep-rooted human rights violation.”

Combatting ageism

The report notes that policies and laws that address ageism, educational activities that enhance empathy and dispel misconceptions, and intergenerational activities that reduce prejudice all help decrease ageism.

All countries and stakeholders are encouraged to use evidence-based strategies, improve data collection and research and work together to build a movement to change how we think, feel and act towards age and ageing, and to advance progress on the UN Decade of Healthy Ageing.

Note to Editors

The Global report on ageism compiles the best evidence on the scale, the impact and the determinants of ageism, effective strategies to tackle the problem and recommendations for action to create a world fit for all ages. The report is directed at policymakers, practitioners, researchers, development agencies and members of the private sector and civil society. 

  • Ageism arises when age is used to categorize and divide people in ways that lead to harm, disadvantage, and injustice. It can take many forms including prejudicial attitudes, discriminatory acts, and institutional policies and practices that perpetuate stereotypical beliefs.
  • Prevalence figures based on a survey of 83 034 people in 57 countries found one in every two people held moderately or highly ageist attitudes (i.e. stereotypes and prejudice). More information: https://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/17/9/3159.
  • Excess costs of health care: Ageism influences health through three pathways: psychological, behavioural and physiological. Psychologically, negative age stereotypes can exacerbate stress; behaviourally, negative self-perceptions of ageing predict worse health behaviour, such as noncompliance with prescribed medications; physiologically, negative age stereotypes predict detrimental brain changes decades later, including the accumulation of plaques and tangles and reduction in the size of the hippocampus.

    In the USA, ageism led to excess costs of US$63 billion for a broad range of health conditions during one year. This amounts to US$1 of every US$7 spent on the eight most expensive health conditions for all Americans over the age of 60 during one year. The excess health care spending due to ageism was derived from the following: (a) number of Americans aged 60 years or older in 2013; (b) prevalence of interpersonal and self-directed ageism based on percentage of people that agree to the following statements: “You are treated with less courtesy or respect than other people”, “Forgetfulness is a natural occurrence just from growing old” and “The older I get the more useless I feel.” (c) evidence of the impact of such ageist statements on the eight health conditions; (d) prevalence of the eight health conditions in 2013, the most recent year for which health care spending was available; and (e) Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) costs per person of the eight health conditions in 2013.  More information: https://academic.oup.com/gerontologist/article/60/1/174/5166947.

Related links

The Global report on ageism.

To watch the launch event on Thursday, 18 March from 13.00 – 14.00 CET, please register here.

—————

The World Health Organization (WHO) provides global leadership in public health within the United Nations system. Founded in 1948, WHO works with 194 Member States, across six regions and from more than 150 offices, to promote health, keep the world safe and serve the vulnerable. Our goal for 2019-2023 is to ensure that a billion more people have universal health coverage, to protect a billion more people from health emergencies, and provide a further billion people with better health and wellbeing. For more information about WHO, visit www.who.int. Follow WHO on Twitter and Facebook.

The Office of the United Nations Commissioner for Human Rights is the leading UN entity on human rights. We represent the world’s commitment to the promotion and protection of the full range of human rights and freedoms set out in the  Universal Declaration of Human Rights. To fulfil its mission, UN Human Rights follows a robust framework of results known as the OHCHR Management Plan (OMP). This roadmap is based on the outcomes of consultations with Member States, the UN system, civil society, the donor community and the private sector.

United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA), rooted in the United Nations Charter and guided by the transformative 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, upholds the development pillar of the United Nations. UN DESA brings the global community together to work towards common solutions to the world’s most pressing problems. The Department helps countries translate their global commitments into national action in the economic, social and environmental spheres. It is a leading analytical voice for promoting inclusion, reducing inequalities and eradicating poverty, and a champion for tearing down the barriers that keep people in poverty.

United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) is the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency. Our mission is to deliver a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every childbirth is safe and every young person’s potential is fulfilled. UNFPA calls for the realization of reproductive rights for all and supports access to a wide range of sexual and reproductive health services – including voluntary family planning, maternal health care and comprehensive sexuality education.

fonte: World Health Organization

4 de março de 2021

Leitura e prática

Se acreditas que o racismo e que o sexismo são fenômenos do passado, leia mais sobre tecnologia.

Se acreditas que sexismo e racismo são fenômenos do passado, leia mais sobre comunicação.

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Se acreditas que sexismo e racismo são fenômenos do passado, leia mais sobre política.

Se acreditas que racismo e sexismo são fenômenos do passado, leia mais sobre cidadania.

Se acreditas que sexismo e racismo não existem, leia mais sobre mercado de trabalho.

Se acreditas que sexismo e racismo existem e estão presentes na vida diária, também leia sobre homofobia, gordofobia, xenofobia, discriminação etária (ageism), capacitismo…

Jorge Terra

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