Country Fact Sheets

Visualizing Rights is a series of fact sheets focused on a country and its economic, social and cultural rights obligations. This focus helps enable intergovernmental human rights mechanisms, such as the UN, and national and international NGOs, monitor governments' compliance with their economic, social and cultural rights obligations.

The latest available socioeconomic data is used, taken either from international sources such as the World Bank or the UNDP, or national sources, such as national statisticas bureaus. This data is displayed using graphs and charts, and then analyzed and interpreted. This is meant to shed light on the condition of governments' economic and social rights obligations

There are three key dimensions to the fulfillment of governments' economic and social rights obligations.

  • Minimum essential levels of rights are related to indicators such as maternal mortality or primary completion rates. Examining these rates shows whether, and by how much, the population is deprived of the minimum essential levels of the right to health, education, food and other economic and social rights.
  • Realizing rights progressively refers to the governments' complying with its obligations over time and in relation to its maximum available resources. This is monitored by examining indicators over time and comparing these indicators with other countries in the same region; regional comparisons provide a useful benchmarkt as to what can by achieved by other countries with similar resources.
  • Elimination of discrimination is tracked using national data disaggregated by gender, ethnicity, geographical location and socioeconomic status. This data is used to identify disparities and assess any progress in ending unequal enjoyment of these rights.

These fact sheets are meant to raise awareness about specific and limited economic and social rights situations in countries. Their scope is not to provide a comprehensive picture fo the ESC rights situation in a country, nor is it meant to provide conclusive evidence of a country's compliance with its ESC rights obligations. Rather, it is one of many instruments useful in analyzing this compliance.

PDF Downloads available

2010

United States fact sheet

2009

Egypt fact sheet

Equatorial Guinea fact sheet

Guinea Ecuatorial ficha informativa (en español)

Bangladesh fact sheet

Cambodia fact sheet

2008

Madagascar fact sheet

Madagascar fiche d'information (en français)

Angola fact sheet

Angola folha informativa (em português)

Kenya fact sheet

Guatemala fact sheet

Guatemala ficha informativa (en español)

India fact sheet

Bolivia fact sheet

Please contact CESR if you are interested in obtaining hard copies of the fact sheets.

U.S. Faces Rare International Scrutiny on Economic and Social Rights
May 5th, 2010
Despite being the world’s wealthiest economy, the United States has one the poorest records of economic and social rights achievement of all high-income countries, a new CESR analysis shows.
Social Rights in Equatorial Guinea Decline as Economy Grows
July 7th, 2009
Despite becoming a high-income country, Equatorial Guinea has some of the worst economic and social rights indicators in sub-Saharan Africa, a new CESR analysis reveals (English, Spanish).
Child Malnourishment Increases, Access to Water Declines in Bangladesh
April 29th, 2009
New CESR Analysis of Bangladesh’s Economic and Social Rights Focuses on Children’s Rights to Food, Health, Education, Housing and Water
Cambodia's Economic and Social Rights Under Scrutiny
March 23rd, 2009
A New CESR Analysis Asks if Cambodia's Government Is Dedicating Maximum Available Resources to Realizing Economic and Social Rights