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Welcome to the draft programme of work for the fifth session of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent

This page provides detailed information about the main sessions and side events, including times, locations, and speakers

For any questions or further information, please feel free to contact the Permanent Forum Secretariat at [email protected]


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Friday, April 17
 

9:00am CEST

Side event - Measuring Harm, Advancing Reparations: The Black Audit of Racial Justice and AARN’s Harm Reports
Side event: Measuring Harm, Advancing Reparations: The Black Audit of Racial Justice and AARN’s Harm Reports

Date, time and time zone of side event: Friday, April 17, 9:00 AM

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies: Howard University’s Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center (TMCRC) and the African American Redress Network (Columbia University and the TMCRC)

Language(s) in which the side event will be held: English

Description of the side event:
This side event explores how data‑driven research and community‑informed documentation advance reparatory justice for people of African descent. Howard University Movement Lawyering students present the Black Audit, while the African American Redress Network discusses Harm Reports. These methods of rigorous inquiry document historical and ongoing racial harms through legal analysis, and ethnographic, community‑based recordkeeping. The application of these frameworks will touch upon a case involving land disposition affecting residents of Lakeland, Maryland. Together, the event demonstrates how documentation—akin to museum practices of preservation and interpretation—strengthens accountability and supports claims for restitution and reparation.

Location of the side event : Room III, building A, Palais des Nations, 1211 Geneva 10, Switzerland

Name and email address of the lead organizer Charkera Ervin, [email protected] (permission to publish granted)



Friday April 17, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CEST
Room III - Building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

10:15am CEST

Side event - We Got Us: Self-Determination, Structural Transformation, and the Future of Global Black Collective Action
“We Got Us: Self-Determination, Structural Transformation, and the Future of Global Black Collective Action”

Date: Friday 17 April

Venue: Room III, building A, Palais des Nations, Geneva, Switzerland

Time: 10:15 - 11:15 am

Organizers: International Civil Society Working Group for the PFPAD (ICSWG), Alliance for Diplomacy and Justice, Alcee Hastings Global Leadership Fellows

Background and Rationale
The global movement for justice, dignity, and development for People of African Descent is unfolding within an increasingly complex and uncertain geopolitical environment. Shifting state commitments and uncertainties within multilateral spaces (including the United Nations) call for renewed reflection on how we organize, sustain momentum, and safeguard long-term collective gains.

The Permanent Forum on People of African Descent (PFPAD) represents a historic institutional achievement and a key mechanism for advancing global Black agendas. However, current conditions invite critical reflection on the structural modalities, organizational practices, and strategic orientations required to ensure that the Forum and the broader ecosystem surrounding it remain resilient, effective, and grounded in the priorities of the communities it serves.

This side event will convene a strategic dialogue centered on self-determination as a political principle guiding collective action. It will explore how movements of People of African Descent can strengthen internal capacity, deepen alignment, and build sustainable infrastructures capable of advancing long-term agendas, particularly in contexts where state support, philanthropic engagement, or institutional stability may be uncertain. The discussion will also consider which forms of structural transformation may be necessary for the PFPAD to fully realize its mandate as a durable, community-anchored global platform.

The side event aims to:
-Facilitate strategic dialogue on structural transformation needed to strengthen the long-term effectiveness and resilience of the PFPAD.

-Explore self-determination as a guiding political framework shaping organizing practices, institutional engagement, and collective strategy.

-Identify pathways for sustainability, autonomous capacity-building, and collective investment within the global movement for People of African Descent.

-Strengthen shared understanding of how movements can maintain coherence, alignment, and strategic direction in evolving geopolitical contexts.

-Reflect on how communities can build resilient spaces for coordination and strategy that are not dependent on unstable external actors.

Potential Guiding Questions:
-What structural adaptations are necessary for the PFPAD to remain a resilient and effective mechanism in a shifting global environment?

-How can self-determination be operationalized in the political, institutional, and economic dimensions of global Black organizing?

-What strategies enable movements to build sustainable infrastructures and invest in their own long-term development?

-Which spaces, mechanisms, and forms of collaboration best advance collective strategies for People of African Descent?

Format
The side event will be organized as a facilitated strategic dialogue bringing together civil society leaders, movement actors, scholars, policy advocates, and institutional partners. The session will prioritize collective reflection, exchange of perspectives, and future-oriented strategic thinking. As this is meant to be a community dialogue, there will be no formal speakers or panelists.

Expected Outcomes
Consolidated reflections on strengthening the structural resilience and long-term sustainability of the PFPAD and related global platforms.
Identification of strategic priorities for advancing self-determined, sustainable, and community-anchored collective action.
Strengthened alignment and dialogue across global actors working to advance the rights and development of People of African Descent.

Target Audience
Civil society organizations, movement leaders, representatives of People of African Descent, scholars, policy advocates, UN stakeholders, and strategic partners engaged in advancing the global agenda for People of African Descent.

Friday April 17, 2026 10:15am - 11:15am CEST
Room III - Building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

11:30am CEST

Side event - From Struggle to Solidarity: Cuba’s Revolutionary Legacy Matters Now
From Struggle to Solidarity: Cuba’s Revolutionary Legacy Matters Now

Date: Friday, April 17, 2026 11:30AM-12:30PM

Co-Sponsors: Solitude International Consortium, Malcolm X Center for Self Determination, KARIBUNI Local Development Project, Cuban Afrofeminist Articulation 

Language: Spanish and English

Description: This event combines a film screening and panel discussion to highlight Cuba’s pivotal role in African liberation struggles across the diaspora, examine the ongoing impact of United States sanctions on Cuba, and underscore the urgent need for renewed international solidarity. Through a screening of the documentary short Cuba in Africa and a moderated discussion, the event will connect the historical legacy of Cuba’s revolutionary internationalism with its present-day challenges in pursuing self-determination under prolonged economic pressure. Panelists will also highlight the Karibuni Local Development Project’s grassroots support for Cuban revolutionary elders as a model for solidarity in action. By bridging past and present, the event aims to foster dialogue on shared struggles, mutual support, and the continued relevance of global solidarity in advancing justice for people of African descent.

Location: Room III, building A, Palais des Nations

Lead Organizer: Tomiko Shine, [email protected] (permission granted)



Friday April 17, 2026 11:30am - 12:30pm CEST
Room III - Building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

12:45pm CEST

Side event - Seeking Redress for State Violence Against Black Women and Girls
Side Event Proposal for Fifth Session of the UN PFPAD



Title: Seeking Redress for State Violence Against Black Women and Girls

Date:Friday 17 April from 12:45 to 13:45 pm

Co-sponsors: Solitude International Consortium, Aging People in Prison Human Rights Campaign, Geneva Graduate Institute Afrique Students Association and Feminist Collective, Malcolm X Center for Self-Determination, Women’s Council.


Language: English
Description: Across the diaspora and through the centuries, state violence against women and girls of African descent has operated as a core instrument of colonial power. Under regimes of enslavement and mass incarceration, state violence against Black women and girls has produced massive direct and indirect harms: police violence, family separation, economic deprivation, intergenerational dispossession, and corrosive impacts on health and life expectancy. The event will connect these continuities to the imperative for transitional justice for impacted Black women and girls across the African diaspora, focusing on mechanisms for truth-telling and documentation, accountability, guarantees of non-repetition, and economic reparations.

Location: Palais du Nations, Room III, building A

Lead Organizer: Tomiko Shine, [email protected] (permission granted)
 
* * *
Seeking Redress for State Violence Against Black Women and Girls
Detailed Side Event Plan 
Objectives
Document continuity in gendered anti-Black state violence from slavery to contemporary mass incarceration, including school pushout, adultification, ultra-punishment of women and girls, and ripple effects in families and communities.
Examine avenues for legal and political accountability in a constrained and shifting landscape, particularly remaining international pathways in light of US disengagement.
Advance economic redress: reparative policy designs that center experiences of Black women and girls and address intergenerational harm.

Working Agenda

Welcome and framing (10 min) – Tomiko
Panel discussion (25 min) 
  • Legacies of gendered state violence against women and girls of African descent
  • How has state violence against Black women and girls functioned historically as a tool of colonial power, and how does that logic persist today?
  •  
    • Transitional justice pathways: truth, accountability, non-repetition
  • What transitional justice strategies are plausible across the diaspora (including in settler colonial nations like the US)? 
  • What role can UN mechanisms or other international solidarity action play?
     
    • Economic accountability + material redress
  • What does it look like to center women and girls of African descent in claims for material redress for state violence?
  • Facilitated Q&A (20 min) – Tomiko

    Friday April 17, 2026 12:45pm - 1:45pm CEST
    Room III - Building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

    1:00pm CEST

    Side event - From Recognition to Transmission: Youth of African Descent as Changeseeds of the Future
    Friday April 17, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm CEST
    Side Event
    From Recognition to Transmission: Youth of African Descent as Changeseeds of the Future


    Date, Time and Time Zone17 April 2026, 13:00 – 14:00 (CET, Geneva time)

    Organizing EntityBafing Projects, AIG (Association des Ivoiriens de Genève)

    Language(s)Bilingual – English and French

    FormatOnline event (link to be provided upon confirmation)
    Registration:  https://forms.gle/UqQT2d8XUtgsatq98

    Description This bilingual side event highlights youth of African descent as agents of change in a world where race continues to shape lived realities. Moderated by Emerald Agulanna, Head of Events at Bafing Projects and DBA candidate at Geneva Business School, the discussion will feature emerging voices including Nathan Pache and Samira Ibrahim. The event will explore how a new generation of changemakers carries forward the legacy of history while shaping inclusive futures. By centering youth perspectives, it aims to foster dialogue, recognition and actionable pathways toward justice, identity and empowerment.

    Speakers and Moderator-Emerald Agulanna – Head of Events, Bafing Projects; DBA Candidate, Geneva Business School (Moderator)
    -Nathan Pache – Candidate for Youth Presidency, Association des Ivoiriens de Genève
    -Samira Ibrahim – Master Candidate, Graduate Institute Geneva
    -Additional youth speakers to be confirmed

    Main Organizer ContactName: EMERALD AGULANNA Email: [email protected]

    Additional Information This event is part of a broader initiative titled “From Recognition to Transmission”, a three-part journey connecting institutional dialogue, cultural expression and youth education. It includes a cultural celebration in Geneva on 18 April 2026 ( inscriptions here: https://forms.gle/jPcwjD6CAAUw6uUr7 )and an in-person youth conference at Collège de Claparède on 23 April 2026 (inscription here: https://forms.gle/Dy7uLQQBcWqXVTfD7 ), extending the impact of the Permanent Forum beyond its formal session.


    11. Website / Registration Link https://forms.gle/UqQT2d8XUtgsatq98


    Friday April 17, 2026 1:00pm - 2:00pm CEST
    Online

    2:00pm CEST

    Side event - Economic Sovereignty and Economic Rights, and New Development Frameworks in a Changing Global Order

     Economic Sovereignty and Economic Rights, and New Development Frameworks in a Changing Global Order  


    Date: Friday 17 April 

    Time: 14:00 - 15:00 

    Venue: Room XI, building A, Palais des Nations

    Organizers: International Civil Society Working Group (ICSWG)

    Background and Rationale
    Questions of economic sovereignty are more urgent now than ever. The global geopolitical landscape is shifting rapidly, and the economic interventions being advanced must respond to the changing nature of the global order. Across regions, including recent developments in the Sahel and the emergence of the Alliance of Sahelian States, there are growing efforts to chart new pathways for economic cooperation, regional integration, and sovereignty beyond historically imposed colonial economic structures.

    Communities across the African world are increasingly demanding that national resources be used in service of the people rather than directed toward servicing unsustainable and often illegitimate debt burdens tied to international financial systems that have perpetuated structural inequality and dependency. These demands reflect a broader call for economic justice, resource sovereignty, and development grounded in dignity and collective well-being.

    For too long, economic rights have been treated as secondary within global human rights discourse. Civil society movements are now calling for the centering of economic rights as foundational to achieving justice, equality, and sustainable development for Africans and People of African Descent. At the same time, the global reparations movement continues to grow, raising important questions about how to ensure that reparatory justice processes remain grounded in the priorities of affected communities and are not reduced to technocratic or state-centered exercises disconnected from grassroots realities.

    This side event provides a space for civil society/grassroots to engage in strategic reflection and dialogue and offer pathways to move forward on the economic transformation and interventions necessary to ensure relevance, autonomy, and advancement for Africans and People of African Descent in a rapidly changing global context.



    Objectives
    The side event aims to:

    -Advance dialogue on economic sovereignty as a core pillar of self-determined development for Africans and People of African Descent.

    -Promote reflection on the need to center economic rights within global human rights discourse.

    -Examine structural inequalities, debt dynamics, and economic arrangements that continue to constrain equitable development and resource sovereignty.

    -Identify pathways for community-rooted economic transformation, reparatory justice, and sustainable economic autonomy grounded in civil society/grassroots priorities.


    Potential Guiding Questions
    -What does economic sovereignty mean for Africans and People of African Descent in the context of a rapidly shifting global order?

    -How do debt structures, global financial systems, and historical/colonial economic arrangements continue to shape present realities?

    -How can economic rights be centered more meaningfully within global human rights frameworks?How can reparatory justice and economic transformation remain grounded in grassroots priorities rather than state or elite-driven processes?

    Format
    This side event will take the form of a facilitated civil society/grassroots dialogue bringing together movement leaders, organizers, scholars, economic justice advocates, and policy actors. The discussion will prioritize collective reflection, strategic exchange, and forward-looking approaches to advancing economic sovereignty and self-determined development.

    Expected Outcomes
    -Shared civil society reflections on advancing economic sovereignty and centering economic rights within global justice and development frameworks.

    -Identification of strategic priorities for strengthening community-anchored, sustainable, and self-determined economic transformation.

    -Strengthened dialogue and alignment among actors working to advance economic justice and reparatory frameworks for Africans and People of African Descent.

    Target Audience
    Civil society organizations, members of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent (PFPAD), grassroots leaders, scholars, policymakers, economists, development practitioners, UN stakeholders, and partners engaged in advancing economic justice and self-determined development.



    Friday April 17, 2026 2:00pm - 3:00pm CEST
    Room XI, building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

    2:00pm CEST

    Side event - Girls Can Run the World: Shaping the Economy for Young Workers and Protecting our Data Against Cyber Threats
    5th Session of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent
    Organization for Economic Development and Diplomacy

    The Making of Global Leaders: Youth of African Descent Advancing Diplomacy, Economic Equity, and Cyber Protection

    Description: The Fireside Chat will detail OEDD’s multilateral diplomacy infrastructure development project to deliver technical skills training, mentorship and network access promotion for Afro-descent young professionals.

    Date: Friday, April 17, 2026
    Time: 2:00 PM - 3:15 PM CEST
    Location: Palais Des Nations, Room 3

    Discussants:
    Part 1: Candies Kotchapaw (OEDD Executive Director and Head of Mission at the Diplomatic Horizons Mock Embassy and Consulate); Dr. Gaynel Curry (Vice Chair of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, Human Rights Lawyer and Mentor in the Black Diplomats Academy); Dr. Epsy Campbell Barr, Former Vice-President of Costa Rica (Inaugural Chair of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent and champion on the Strategic Alliance between African and Afro-descendent Women.

    Moderator: Vibya NatanaTime:

    2:00 - 2:45pm
    ● Presentation of Award to Dr. Epsy Campbell Barr - Diplomatic Ambassador of the International Decade on People of African Descent.
    ● Remarks by Dr. Campbell Barr on her leadership and the establishment of the Strategic Alliance Between African and Afro-descendent Women.

    Time: 2:45 - 2:55
    Part 2: Kimara Russell (Program officer for youth in Digital Innovations), Aliyah Kotchapaw (Digital Innovations program participants), Natisha Archer (Attaché for Youth in Parliamentary Diplomacy - Lead Like A Girl program) and Ruth McDonald (Lead Like A Girl program participant).

    Time: 2:55 - 3:15pm
    Moderator: Angelica Johnson Baptista

    Friday April 17, 2026 2:00pm - 3:00pm CEST
    Room III - Building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

    3:15pm CEST

    Side event - : UNPFPAD: Youth Council: Engagement & Open Floor
    UNPFPAD: Youth Council: Engagement & Open Floor

    Name of the associated organization: Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center at Howard University


    Language: English

    Date: 17 April 2026

    Location: Room XI,building A, Palais des Nations 

    Description: After 5 years of the Permanent Forum's creation, and various calls from member states, civil society, organizers and diverse attendees, demand of Youth presence, participation and advocacy has been constant. Our event will showcase what that could look like.
    A future UNPFPAD Youth Council would serve as a sustainable, multilayered mechanism to promote the global unity of African-diasporic youth and facilitate the increased contribution of Black youth in global policy. It would ensure our voices and recommendations are valued and remain rooted in global solidarity as we begin to take our places at the forefront of decision-making in the Second International Decade.
    Our main objective is to give all interested parties more detailed insight into the proposed foundation and initiatives our development team has created, and then spend the rest of the session having a communal based conversation as a group in order to identify the interests, concerns, suggestions, and hopes held by the global youth in attendance!

    Friday April 17, 2026 3:15pm - 4:15pm CEST
    Room XI, building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève
     

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