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Human rights: our everyday essentials


On 10 December, Human Rights Day invites all of us to reflect on what human rights truly mean in our daily lives. This year’s global theme “Human Rights: Our Everyday Essentials” reminds us that human rights are not abstract legal concepts. They are the foundations of everyday life: access to food and clean water, healthcare and education, land and shelter, decent work and social protection, participation and dignity.
In Laos, as in many countries across the region, these essentials shape whether people can build secure lives for themselves and their families. When access to these basic rights is strong, communities thrive. When it is fragile or uneven, people are pushed toward difficult choices that can include unsafe work, poverty, and even precarious migration.
A recent regional report by the United Nations highlights that gaps in access to decent work, healthcare, education, housing and a healthy environment are among the strongest drivers pushing people into insecure migration across South and South-East Asia. For many families, migration is not simply a choice, it is a necessity shaped by limited opportunities at home. 
The everyday essentials begin at home
For most people in Laos, “human rights” are experienced not in courtrooms, but in villages, schools, health centres, farms and factories. They are reflected in whether a child can attend school and complete their education; a mother can safely give birth and access healthcare; a farmer can rely on land, forests and water for livelihoods; a young person can find decent work without having to leave the family; an older person and persons with disabilities can live with security and dignity.
 These everyday realities are closely linked to economic, social and cultural rights, which are enshrined in international law and reflected in national development priorities. Investing in these rights is not charity, it is a smart and sustainable investment in people and in national resilience.
Land, environment and dignity: rights that sustain life
This year’s theme also invites renewed attention to the right to a clean, healthy and sustainable environment. Across Laos, land, forests and rivers are more than natural resources, they are the backbone of food security, culture, livelihoods and identity.
Secure land rights, transparent and inclusive land governance, and environmental protection are therefore not only environmental issues; they are core human rights issues. When land tenure is clear and people can participate meaningfully in decisions affecting their environment, communities are stronger, conflicts are reduced, and development becomes more equitable.
As climate change intensifies floods, droughts and food insecurity, strengthening environmental rights and land governance becomes ever more urgent – especially for rural communities, women, ethnic groups and future generations.
Human rights commitments in action: from recommendations to real change
In 2025, Laos marked two important milestones in its engagement with the United Nations human rights system. The country completed its fourth cycle of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) at the Human Rights Council and received the first-ever concluding observations of the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR) following the review of its initial report.
These two processes speak directly to this year’s theme of “Human Rights: Our Everyday Essentials”. Many of the recommendations focus precisely on the foundations of daily life: decent work, social protection, education, healthcare, land, environment, gender equality, non-discrimination and protection of the most vulnerable. They also underscore the importance of transparent governance, meaningful participation, independent accountability institutions and access to justice.
The value of these recommendations lies not only in their individual content, but in their collective and interlinked nature. Economic, social, civil, political and environmental rights reinforce one another. Access to education supports decent work; land rights strengthen food security; social protection cushions economic shocks; participation strengthens trust and accountability. Implementing some rights without others leaves gaps and ensures vulnerability persists.
 For this reason, the European Union and the United Nations strongly encourage a holistic, coordinated and inclusive implementation of all UPR and CESCR recommendations, integrated into national development strategies, sectoral plans and future socio-economic frameworks. When recommendations are addressed together, rather than in isolation, they become a powerful roadmap for sustainable, people-centred development.
The European Union and the United Nations stand ready to continue supporting Laos in translating these recommendations into concrete results, including through national action plans, institutional strengthening, capacity-building, data systems, legal reform support and inclusive policy dialogue. This partnership approach ensures that human rights commitments are not only reported on but felt in everyday life.
Human rights are the foundation of everyday life
On this Human Rights Day, the message is simple and powerful:human rights are not luxuries. They are our daily essentials. They are present whenever a child learns, a worker earns a fair wage, a family enjoys clean water, a community protects its land, or a young person finds hope at home instead of risk abroad.
The European Union and the United Nations reaffirm our commitment to continue working with the Government of Laos, civil society, youth, communities and development partners to ensure that every person, in all their diversity, can enjoy these everyday essentials in dignity, equality and safety.
Because when human rights are protected in daily life, society as a whole becomes stronger, more resilient and more just.
--Authors: Ambassador and Head of Delegation of the European Union to Laos, Mr Mark Gallagher and UN Resident Coordinator to Laos, Mr Bakhodir Burkhanov.


(Latest Update
December 11, 2025
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