Allada Gowri Sankara Ganapati Rao
All India Primary Teachers Federation
The future of Article 26 — the right to education — must be understood in the context of the broader crisis facing the international human rights system, especially the weakening of the United Nations, the United Nations Charter, and foundational documents like the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR).
- Article 26: More Than Schooling
Article 26 of the UDHR establishes that:
Education is a universal human right
Elementary education shall be free and compulsory
Education shall promote human dignity, freedom, peace, and understanding
It is not just about literacy or workforce training — it is about forming autonomous, critical, and humane individuals capable of sustaining democracy and peace.
When education is reduced to a market commodity, militarized nationalism, or ideological control, Article 26 is hollowed out.
- The Erosion of the UN System
Today, we see multiple pressures weakening the UN system:
Geopolitical polarization and paralysis of the Security Council
Increasing disregard for international law
Underfunding of UN agencies
Rise of authoritarian populism
Privatization of public goods like education
Attacks on academic freedom and critical pedagogy
These trends undermine both the spirit and institutional capacity of the UN to uphold human rights.
The crisis is not only institutional — it is philosophical. The humanist foundations of the post-1945 order are being challenged by ethno-nationalism, corporate dominance, and technocratic governance detached from social justice.
- Defending the Right to Education
To defend and extend Article 26, action is required at multiple levels:
- Strengthening Public Education
Resist privatization and commercialization
Defend free, universal, quality public education
Ensure education budgets are protected from austerity
Education must remain a public good, not a commodity.
- Protecting Academic Freedom
Safeguard teachers’ rights and union organizing
Defend critical thinking against censorship
Oppose ideological manipulation of curricula
Teachers’ organizations and global networks play a crucial role here.
- Embedding Human Rights Education
Education should include:
Human rights literacy
Democratic participation skills
Peace education
Environmental responsibility
Gender equality
Human rights must not be abstract principles — they must become lived civic competencies.
- Extending Human Rights in a Fragmenting World
Beyond education, the broader human rights system must be revitalized:
- Democratizing Global Governance
Reform Security Council structures
Expand participatory roles for civil society
Increase transparency and accountability
- Linking Social and Economic Justice
Human rights must be indivisible:
Right to education
Right to health
Right to decent work
Right to social security
Neoliberal fragmentation weakens them; integration strengthens them.
- Building South–South and Grassroots Alliances
Global solidarity movements can compensate for institutional paralysis. Networks of educators, unions, youth movements, and humanist organizations can keep the human rights agenda alive from below.
- Toward a “Humanist UN”
A “humanist UN” would mean:
Placing human dignity above geopolitical rivalry
Prioritizing prevention over militarization
Ensuring universal social protection floors
Strengthening agencies like UNESCO and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights
Embedding climate justice and intergenerational equity
It would require political will from member states — but also pressure from global civil society.
- Practical Pathways Forward
Global campaigns to reaffirm Article 26 as binding moral law
Constitutional protection of the right to education at national levels
International legal mechanisms to prevent education privatization from undermining equality
Digital commons for open educational resources
Strengthening teacher and student global solidarity networks
Revitalizing commitment to the UDHR’s universalist philosophy
Conclusion
The erosion of the UN is not inevitable — it reflects political choices.
Article 26 remains a radical and transformative vision: education as the foundation of freedom, equality, and peace.
The defense of the right to education is therefore not a sectoral issue — it is central to defending democracy, preventing authoritarianism, and preserving the humanist project of the post-1945 international order.










