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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]


Type: Side event clear filter
Tuesday, March 17
 

4:30pm CET

Side event - Economic and Social Development Infrastructure and Data Production: The Black Diplomats Academy and Canadian Youth Secretariat to Multilateral Institutions as Proof Points of a Sustainable Future for Youth of African Descent in Shaping the Ar
Tuesday March 17, 2026 4:30pm - 5:30pm CET
Economic and Social Development Infrastructure and Data Production: The Black Diplomats Academy and Canadian Youth Secretariat to Multilateral Institutions as Proof Points of a Sustainable Future for Youth of African Descent in Shaping the Architecture in Global and National Policymaking.

Description: Recalling the first intervention that the Black Diplomats Academy made calling for the creation of a youth secretariat to strengthen and extend the reach of the Permanent Forum during its inaugural meeting in Geneva in 2022, under the theme of “The Permanent Forum at five: Mandate, Achievements and Opportunities;” this side event will outline the activities of the Black Diplomats Academy and the creation of the Canadian Youth Secretariat in shaping the economic and social realities of youth of African descent, from intentional program design for career advancement in a changing world of work to the national data capture to reframe what inclusive sustainable development should look and feels like for African and afro-descent young people.

Date: April 17, 2026Time: 4:30 PM – 5:30 PM CESTT

Location: Virtual

Discussants: Candies Kotchapaw, Angelica Johnson Baptista, and Vibya NatanaModerator: Michael Brown

Tuesday March 17, 2026 4:30pm - 5:30pm CET
Online
 
Tuesday, March 31
 

8:30pm CEST

Side event - The Virtual Village: Safeguarding the Psychosocial and Structural Experiences of Black Doctoral Scholars
Tuesday March 31, 2026 8:30pm - 9:30pm CEST
Event Title: The Virtual Village: Safeguarding the Psychosocial and Structural Experiences of Black Doctoral Scholars

Proposed Date: Tuesday, March 31st, 7:00 PM – 8:30 PM EST

Format: Virtual Teach-In / Online SummitLead

Link to register: Registration: Virtual Teach-In – The Virtual Village

Organizing Entity: Black Doctorates Matter, led by Dr. Pamela Felder-Small

1. Background and Rationale
The right to education, free from systemic discrimination, is a fundamental human right recognized under international frameworks, including the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the mandate of the UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent (PFPAD). However, for People of African Descent navigating the highest levels of academia, this right is frequently compromised by profound institutional isolation, structural barriers, and a lack of culturally responsive support.

At the intersection of education law, institutional policy, and human rights, the systemic neglect of the psychosocial experiences of Black doctoral students represents a critical barrier to global educational equity. In response to these institutional gaps, grassroots digital networks have emerged not merely as networking tools, but as vital, life-sustaining infrastructure. These virtual communities safeguard the intellectual capital and well-being of Black scholars, ensuring they can complete their degrees and contribute their essential research to the global discourse.

2. Event Objectives This virtual teach-in will convene premier initiatives dedicated to Black doctoral success to map the ecosystem of virtual support. The summit will highlight the specific, nuanced contributions of these organizations to the survival and success of Black scholars, utilizing a unified three-pillar framework:

Intentionality: Defining the specific human rights purpose and focus of each digital initiative in combating academic isolation.
Guiding Frameworks: Exploring the theoretical, legal, and practical frameworks that guide the development of culturally responsive digital practices.
Community-Building Resources: Identifying the specific tools and resources utilized to build and sustain these protective virtual environments.

3. Alignment with the PFPAD Mandate By centering the lived experiences of Black doctoral students, this event aligns with the PFPAD’s commitment to dismantling systemic racism and promoting the full realization of human rights for People of African Descent. This summit asserts that equitable access to psychosocial validation and structural mentoring is a human rights imperative. It seeks to elevate the conversation surrounding academic socialization, urging international and institutional leaders to recognize, protect, and invest in virtual scholarly communities as essential conduits for educational justice.

4. Proposed Participating Organizations The teach-in will feature brief masterclasses and collaborative dialogue among the leaders of the following critical platforms:

● Black Doctorates Matter (Host)
● Dissertating While Black
● The Doctoral Student Writing Collective
● Write Your Dissertation Sis
● The Doc Chat

5. Expected Outcomes
● A comprehensive mapping of the digital ecosystems that support Black scholars globally.
● The articulation of best practices for safeguarding the psychosocial well-being of scholars of African descent.
● The foundational development of policy recommendations urging educational institutions to formally recognize and structurally support these virtual networks in alignment with international human rights standards.

Contact Information: Dr. Pamela Felder-Small, President and Founder, Black Doctorates Matter, [email protected]
Tuesday March 31, 2026 8:30pm - 9:30pm CEST
Online
 
Thursday, April 9
 

7:00pm CEST

Side event - Améfrica a 25 años de Durban: Tejiendo redes afrodiáspóricas en clave de Reparación histórica
Thursday April 9, 2026 7:00pm - 8:00pm CEST
“Améfrica a 25 años de Durban: Tejiendo redes afrodiáspóricas en clave de Reparación histórica”

Fecha, hora y zona horaria del evento paralelo: 9 de abril de 2026  
9:00 - 10:00 hora de Mexico

Organización(es) o entidad(es) patrocinadora(s)o: Consejo Latinoamericano de Ciencias Sociales y Programa Universitario de Estudios de la Diversidad Cultural y la Interculturalidad (PUIC).  Universidad Autónoma de México.

Idioma(s) en el que se celebrará el evento paralelo: Español.

Descripción
La reconfiguración del racismo genera un intenso y sostenido retroceso de los derechos humanos como parte de la policrisis global. Tales circunstancias imponen la de/construcción de la agenda antirracista, sobre la base del paradigma de reparación histórica de los pueblos afrodescendientes. Ello constituye un desafío prioritario para alcanzar las metas del Segundo Decenio Internacional de estos pueblos. Al respecto, nuestro evento paralelo desde el Ubuntu, valora el tejido de redes afrodiaspóricas con voces de mujeres, jóvenes y comunidades afrodescendientes de México, Cuba, Colombia, Chile, Brasil y Uruguay, como espacio articulador de las Academias, las mujeres amefricanas y las políticas.

Lugar del evento paralelo
El evento se realizará en línea, realice su inscripción mediante en: https://forms.gle/aSx35KemKHT7DBRh8

Nombre y dirección de correo electrónico de la persona organizadora principal:. Dra. Rosa Campoalegre Septien [email protected].

Enlace para obtener más información: https://forms.gle/aSx35KemKHT7DBRh8



Thursday April 9, 2026 7:00pm - 8:00pm CEST
Online

7:00pm CEST

Side event - Enfrentar para Reparar: compartilhando estratégias de enfrentamento às violências de Estado contra a população afrodescendente e a luta por reparações na América Latina / Enfrentar para Reparar: compartiendo estrategias de afrontamiento frent
Thursday April 9, 2026 7:00pm - 8:30pm CEST
Título do evento paralelo / Título del evento paralelo 

Enfrentar para Reparar: compartilhando estratégias de enfrentamento às violências de Estado contra a população afrodescendente e a luta por reparações na América Latina / Enfrentar para Reparar: compartiendo estrategias de afrontamiento frente a las violencias de Estado contra la población afrodescendiente y la lucha por reparaciones en América Latina


Data, horário e fuso horárioos do evento paralelo / Fecha, hora y zona horaria del evento paralelo - 09.04.2026 - 15h (horário de Brasília)/ 19h (horário de Genebra)

Organizações e entidades proponentes/ Organización(es) o entidad(es) patrocinadora - Odara Instituto da Mulher Negra, ILLEX Accion Jurídica e INREDH

Idiomas em que se realizará o evento paralelo / Idioma(s) en el que se celebrará el evento paralelo - português e espanhol

o Descrição do evento (no máximo 100 palavras) / Descripción del evento paralelo (no más de 100 palabras)

As violências de Estado perpetradas contra a população afrodescendente são observadas em diversos países que foram construídos a partir da razão colonial-escravagista, especialmente os países da diáspora africana na América Latina. Desta forma, as organizações proponentes pretendem convidar outras organizações para trocar experiências e compartilhar estratégias para o enfrentamento às violências e articular parcerias para intensificar a luta por reparações históricas dos Estados-nações para suas próprias populações afrodescendentes ou de nações submetidas ao jugo colonialista por outros Estados. A partir de uma análise dos históricos de colonização e escravidão, pretende-se discutir os efeitos desses fenômenos históricos na realidade contemporânea desses povos e as estratégias transnacionais para lutar por reparação.

____

Las violencias de Estado perpetradas contra la población afrodescendiente se observan en diversos países que fueron construidos a partir de una lógica colonial-esclavista, especialmente en los países de la diáspora africana en América Latina. De esta manera, las organizaciones proponentes pretenden invitar a otras organizaciones a intercambiar experiencias y compartir estrategias para enfrentar dichas violencias, así como articular alianzas que fortalezcan la lucha por reparaciones históricas por parte de los Estados-nación hacia sus propias poblaciones afrodescendientes o hacia naciones sometidas al yugo colonialista por otros Estados.

A partir de un análisis de los procesos históricos de colonización y esclavitud, se busca discutir los efectos de estos fenómenos en la realidad contemporánea de estos pueblos, así como las estrategias transnacionales para luchar por la reparación.

Lugar del evento paralelo (o sitio web para la inscripción, en el caso de los eventos - celebrados en línea). En el caso de los eventos en línea, asegúrese de enviar el enlace de conexión para facilitar el acceso de las personas participantes. Enfrentar para Reparar - evento paralelo Fórum Permanente Afrodescendente

Evento virtual. O link da sala será enviado em tempo hábil para as pessoas que se inscreverem através detes formulário: https://forms.gle/5eHVghidTz6CfKJ79

________

Evento virtual. El enlace de la sala será enviado oportunamente a las personas que se inscriban a través de este formulario: https://forms.gle/5eHVghidTz6CfKJ79

Nome e endereço de email da pessoa organizadora principal / Nombre y dirección de correo electrónico de la persona organizadora principal (y permiso para publicar los datos de contacto del organizador principal). 

Gabriela Ramos - [email protected].


Thursday April 9, 2026 7:00pm - 8:30pm CEST
Online

9:00pm CEST

Side event - El papel de las mujeres jóvenes afrodescendientes en el movimiento negro global: Desafíos, debates y articulaciones posibles en la era digital
Thursday April 9, 2026 9:00pm - 10:30pm CEST
‘El papel de las mujeres jóvenes afrodescendientes en el movimiento negro global: Desafíos, debates y articulaciones posibles en la era digital’


Fecha, hora y zona horaria del evento paralelo: Jueves 09 de abril 15:00 Col - 17:00 Arg


Organizaciones o entidades patrocinadoras
: Afrocolectiva,


Idioma en el que se celebrará el evento: Español


Descripción del evento paralelo: El conversatorio ‘El papel de las mujeres jóvenes afrodescendientes en el movimiento negro global: Desafíos, debates y articulaciones posibles en la era digital’ busca posicionar el liderazgo de las mujeres jóvenes afrodescendientes, destacando su incidencia y activismo en espacios digitales mediante la formulación de estrategias y buenas prácticas frente a la violencia digital, así como a la construcción y el posicionamiento de narrativas que desafíen el racismo, el machismo, y todas sus formas conexas de discriminación. Se invitarán a tres referentes de menos de 30 años, buscando convocar a las generaciones más jóvenes como la Alpha y la Z.


Sitio web de la inscripción:
https://forms.gle/TVaBdTNmC9KJMk7b9


Nombre y dirección de correo electrónico de la persona organizadora principal: Alejandra Pretel - [email protected] / [email protected]


Thursday April 9, 2026 9:00pm - 10:30pm CEST
Online
 
Saturday, April 11
 

11:00am CEST

Side event - “Voices of Durban: 25 Years Later — Why Identity Matters for Reparatory Justice”
Saturday April 11, 2026 11:00am - 1:00pm CEST
ALL FOR REPARATIONS AND EMANCIPATIONUNITED NATIONS PFPAD SIDE EVENT Proposal 2026Side Event Details

All for Reparations and Emancipation (AFRE/CURE) is an education and advocacy organization in support of reparations and self-determination for Afrodescendants across the slavery diaspora. AFRE was granted UN Consultative NGO Status in 1997

Title of the side event 

“Voices of Durban: 25 Years Later — Why Identity Matters for Reparatory Justice”
      
Date, time and time zone of side event 

Saturday,  April 11 at 11:00 AM EST    

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies 

All for Reparations and Emancipation (AFRE);  Afrodescendant Nation (ADN); 
Language(s) in which the side event will be held 

English
Description of the side event (no more than 100 words)

This session revisits the legacy of the World Conference against Racism (Durban 2001), where the international community formally recognized the transatlantic slave trade and slavery as crimes against humanity.

Twenty-five years later, hear directly from some of the “Voices of Durban”—individuals who were present at the historic conference and helped shape its legacy. Serving as keynote speakers, they will share firsthand reflections on the significance of the gathering and its lasting global impact. The discussion will explore why identity—particularly the recognition of Afrodescendant peoples—remains central to advancing meaningful reparations, policy change, and global solidarity, and what still must be done to fulfill Durban’s call for reparatory justice.

Location of the side event (or website for registration, for events held online).

Virtual Online - Registration Link below

You are invited to register for a Zoom webinar!

When: Apr 11, 2026 11:00 AM Eastern Time (US and Canada)

Topic:  “Voices of Durban: 25 Years Later — Why Identity Matters for Reparatory Justice”

Register in advance for this webinar:

https://us06web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_7F89VoxFSFmWhTlKD0pwyw

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

 

Name and email address of the lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead organizer’s contact details)

Ishmael Abdul-Salaam, Lead Organizer
CEO, All for Reparations and Emancipation (AFRE)
Email:  [email protected]
Website:  https://www.allforreparations.com/


Saturday April 11, 2026 11:00am - 1:00pm CEST
Online

8:00pm CEST

Side event - Restoring Stolen Legacies: Reparations, Cultural Property, and the Art of David Drake
Saturday April 11, 2026 8:00pm - 9:30pm CEST
Title of the Side EventRestoring Stolen Legacies: Reparations, Cultural Property, and the Art of David Drake

Date, Time, and Time ZoneDate: Saturday, April 11, 2026
Time: 11:00 AM PT  |  2:00 PM ET  |  8:00 PM CEST

Sponsoring OrganizationCoalition for a Just and Equitable California (CJEC)

Language(s)English, with French, Spanish, and Portuguese Zoom translated captions

Description of the Side EventThis panel explores how cultural restitution and reparations intersect through the legacy of David Drake ("Dave the Potter"), an enslaved African American artist whose ceramic works represent some of the most important surviving artistic expressions created under slavery. Speakers will examine the global market for artworks created by enslaved people, the moral and legal questions surrounding ownership, and pathways for restoration of such works to descendants — framed within California's ongoing reparations movement.

Location / RegistrationFormat: Virtual (Zoom)
Registration Link: https://tinyurl.com/CJEC-PFAD

Lead OrganizerName: Tiffany Quarles
Email: [email protected]
Note: Permission granted to publish lead organizer's contact details.

Confirmed & Potential Speakers (Preliminary)Chris Lodgson — President, Coalition for a Just and Equitable California (CJEC)
Kellie Ferrish — Genealogist, Historian & Institutional Strategist


Format60–75 minute virtual panel discussion via Zoom
Presentation of CJEC's proposal regarding restoration and stewardship of David Drake's artworks
Conversation with legal, cultural, and reparations experts
Audience Q&A session


Further Information / Promotional MaterialsOrganization Website / Registration: https://tinyurl.com/CJEC-PFAD

Saturday April 11, 2026 8:00pm - 9:30pm CEST
Online

9:00pm CEST

Side event - Unbanned! Book Reveal - The Legendary African American Dance Company: Reparations & The Right to Institutions, Education and Culture
Saturday April 11, 2026 9:00pm - 10:30pm CEST
Unbanned! Book Reveal -  The Legendary African American Dance Company: Reparations & The Right to Institutions, Education and Culture (Interactive Discussion)



  • Date/Time: Saturday, April 11, 2026. 2:00pm Central Time, 3:00pm Eastern.

  • Sponsors: Office of OHBCU Development & International Cooperation (OHBCUD); International Human Rights Association of American Minorities (IHRAAM) and ICSWG PFPAD Reparations, Spirituality and Sacred Science, and Women’s Council Subcommittees

  • Language: English, with Zoom interpretation options.

  • Description: Legislators are increasingly imposing bans on African/African American studies, closing schools, libraries, and museums while mandating curriculum changes to downplay the impact of U.S chattel slavery. “Twenty-three (23) states have introduced laws banning discussion of ‘divisive’ concepts, including race and gender. [Amid] curriculum and book bans and devaluing Black history, it is imperative to amplify and uphold this history.” Distorting American (and World) history to exclude the contributions and oppression of people of African ancestry perpetuates systemic violence, denial, disenfranchisement and anti-Blackness (NREI). This virtual side event creates a discussion that challenges the erasure and produces recommendations for PFPAD5 on its themes of reparatory justice and cultural heritage, and future opportunities.

  • Location of the side event (online). https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/ScjqDYbZSQSzsfwowimXjg

  • Lead Organizer: Dr. Vickie Casanova-Willis, PhD, MBA [email protected]

-    Promotional Flyer: https://canva.link/95l2t8y796pcyut



Saturday April 11, 2026 9:00pm - 10:30pm CEST
Online
 
Sunday, April 12
 

10:00pm CEST

Side event - Narrative Power and Digital Memory: Storytelling as Infrastructure for Reparative Justice
Sunday April 12, 2026 10:00pm - 11:00pm CEST
Side event 
Narrative Power and Digital Memory: Storytelling as Infrastructure for Reparative Justice


Date: Sunday, April 12, 2026  (or any available slot, April 10–13, 2026)

Time: 1:00 PM PT  |  4:00 PM ET  |  10:00 PM CEST

Time Zone: Pacific Time (PT) / Central European Summer Time (CEST)

Format: Virtual (Zoom)
Registration Link: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/KPhKF_6WQ82vtRSYiwxgaA

Duration: 60 minutes

Language(s)
English — with AI-generated translated captions in Spanish, French, and Portuguese

SPONSORING ORGANIZATION(S)
Lead Organization: Just Like Me World (Digital Storytelling Platform)
Website: https://www.youtube.com/c/JustLikeMeTV

LEAD ORGANIZER
Name: Yaba Baker
Email: [email protected]

DESCRIPTION OF THE SIDE EVENT
This session explores the role of digital storytelling as critical infrastructure for advancing reparative justice and preserving cultural memory. Through the work of Just Like Me World, the discussion examines how narrative platforms translate historical recovery into accessible, community-centered storytelling. Drawing on projects connected to the descendants of David Drake ("Dave the Potter") and broader reparative initiatives, the session highlights how digital media amplifies descendant voices, shapes public understanding, and supports advocacy for restitution. By bridging lineage, identity, and storytelling, this model offers scalable approaches to reclaiming narrative power for communities of African descent.

CONFIRMED SPEAKERS
Yaba Baker
Founder — Just Like Me World (Digital Storytelling Platform) & DescendantsofDave.org, LLC

FORMAT
•  60-minute virtual panel discussion via Zoom
•  Presentation of the Just Like Me World storytelling framework and digital memory platform
•  Case study: descendant storytelling and cultural memory connected to David Drake's legacy
•  Audience Q&A session

FURTHER INFORMATION & WEB LINKS (OPTIONAL)
•  Just Like Me World — Digital Storytelling Platform youtube.com/c/JustLikeMeTV
•  DescendantsofDave.org — Descendant Community Hub descendantsofdave.org

ALIGNMENT WITH 5TH SESSION THEMES
This side event directly supports the following Forum discussion themes:
✔  Reparatory justice and cultural heritage: museums and restitution
✔  25 years after the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action: Strengthening global solidarity with people of African descent
✔  Youth of African descent: Rights-holders and agents of change

Sunday April 12, 2026 10:00pm - 11:00pm CEST
Online
 
Monday, April 13
 

7:30pm CEST

Side event - Youth Monday Launch Dinner: Networking and Preparation for the Forum
Monday April 13, 2026 7:30pm - 9:00pm CEST
SIDE EVENT AT THE 5th PERMANENT FORUM ON PEOPLE OF AFRICAN DESCENT

“Youth Monday Launch Dinner: Networking and Preparation for the Forum”

Monday, April 13, 2026


7:30 pm Geneva Time (CET)

The side event will be held in English but open to all languages

IN-PERSON LOCATION: The Palmarin
Rue de Bâle 14, 1201 Genève, Switzerland


The ICSWG Youth Sub-Committee welcomes youth to join us for dinner prior to the launch of the PFPAD forum. It is a chance to connect with fellow leaders of African descent and stay updated on youth forum engagement. This side event is tailored for individuals aged 35 and under.

This event is not sponsored. Attendees will be responsible for their own food and beverages.


This is limited seating, RSVP at the following link: https://luma.com/fhnpq1i0


Contact:
Qadira Muhammad and Jadayah Spencer, [email protected]

Monday April 13, 2026 7:30pm - 9:00pm CEST
Restaurant Le Palmarin Rue de Bâle 14, 1201 Genève

9:00pm CEST

Side event - Reparative Genealogy as Infrastructure: Lineage, Cultural Restitution, and the Recovery of Stolen Legacies
Monday April 13, 2026 9:00pm - 10:00pm CEST
Reparative Genealogy as Infrastructure: Lineage, Cultural Restitution, and the Recovery of Stolen Legacies


Date: Monday, April 13, 2026

Time: 12:00 PM PT  |  3:00 PM ET  |  9:00 PM CEST
Time Zone
Pacific Time (PT) / Central European Summer Time (CEST)


Format
Virtual (Zoom)

Duration: 60 minutes

Language(s)
English — with AI-generated translated captions in Spanish, French, and Portuguese

SPONSORING ORGANIZATION(S)

Lead Organization: Reparative Genealogy

In Collaboration With: Just Like Me World (Digital Storytelling Initiative)


LEAD ORGANIZER: Kellie Farrish - [email protected] 

DESCRIPTION OF THE SIDE EVENT
This session introduces reparative genealogy as critical infrastructure for advancing reparations, cultural restitution, and municipal redress. Drawing on case studies including the descendants of David Drake (“Dave the Potter”), the Ebony Beach Club in Santa Monica, and community-based reparative justice initiatives, the discussion demonstrates how genealogical research identifies rightful stakeholders, supports legal and policy frameworks, and informs asset return. The session further explores how narrative platforms translate lineage into public memory and advocacy. By connecting archival research, municipal engagement, and cultural property claims, this model offers scalable pathways for restoring stolen legacies to descendant communities globally.

CONFIRMED SPEAKERS

Kellie Farrish
 
Founder and Lead Architect — Reparative Genealogy

Yaba Baker
 Founder — Just Like Me World (Digital Storytelling Platform) & DescendantsofDave.org, LLC


SESSION AGENDA & FORMAT

0–10 min: Reparative Genealogy Framework — Kellie Farrish
10–25 min: Storytelling & Narrative Power as Advocacy — Yaba Baker
25–45 min: Case Studies: Ebony Beach Club, Reparation Generation, Descendants of Dave
45–60 min: Open Audience Q&A

LOCATION & REGISTRATION

Format: Virtual — Zoom Webinar
Registration link: https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/KPhKF_6WQ82vtRSYiwxgaA
Zoom connection link will be distributed to registered participants prior to the event


FURTHER INFORMATION & WEB LINKS (OPTIONAL)
• Reparative Genealogy — Lead Organizer Website https://www.reparativegenealogy.com
• Just Like Me World — Digital Storytelling Partner https://www.youtube.com/c/JustLikeMeTV
• DescendantsofDave.org — Descendant Community Hub descendantsofdave.org

ALIGNMENT WITH 5TH SESSION THEMES
This side event directly supports the following Forum discussion themes:

✔  Reparatory justice and cultural heritage: museums and restitution
✔  25 years after the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action: Strengthening global solidarity with people of African descent
  ✔  The Permanent Forum at five: Mandate, Achievements and Opportunities


Monday April 13, 2026 9:00pm - 10:00pm CEST
Online
 
Tuesday, April 14
 

12:00am CEST

Side event - Durban +25: Servicios públicos, mujeres afrodescendientes y justicia reparadora para un mundo sin racismo
Tuesday April 14, 2026 12:00am - 1:00am CEST
Evento paralelo: 
“Durban +25: Servicios públicos, mujeres afrodescendientes y justicia reparadora para un mundo sin racismo”

Fecha, hora y zona horaria: 14 de Abril  a las 19:00 hrs de Argentina / Brasil / Chile / Uruguay  / 17:00 hrs de Costa Rica /Panamá

Organización(es) o entidad(es) patrocinadora(s):  Comité contra el Racismo, la Discriminacion y la Xenofobia - Afrodescendientes Conosur de la ISP (Internacional de Servicios Públicos)

Idioma(s) en el que se celebrará el evento paralelo: Español

Descripción del evento paralelo: Durban +25: Servicios públicos, mujeres afrodescendientes y justicia reparadora para un mundo sin racismo”, como espacio de diálogo político-sindical para analizar avances y desafíos frente al racismo estructural. Se abordarán desigualdades en servicios públicos, subrepresentación en el empleo estatal e impacto de la IA, con foco en mujeres afrodescendientes y personas migrantes así como el papel del sindicalismo en la promoción de la igualdad, la justicia reparadora y la erradicación de toda forma de discriminación.

Participan:
-Senadora de Uruguay Mae Susana Andrade
-Directora de AfroLeaders - IAl la Dra Nathalie Cooke,Comité Subregional Conosur - Combate al racismo, la discriminacion, la xenofobia - Afrodescendiente de la ISP
- Tamara Barbará Presidente del COSOC-SERMIG
-Michel-Ange JOSEPH

Modera: Olga Fernandez (UPCN - Argentina) Cierre y reflexión final: Andrea Betegon (Fenasep - Panama) y Erika Ayala (FENAJE - Ecuador)

Lugar del evento: En línea (Zoom) https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82931710400?pwd=nfwLCeKvDzmoneHb3VJRyhA638Jjq5.1

Nombre y dirección de correo electrónico de la persona organizadora principal: Tamara Barbará e-mail: [email protected]

Enlace web para obtener más información: @ispracismo @afrosapl


Tuesday April 14, 2026 12:00am - 1:00am CEST
Online

9:00am CEST

Side event - Building Together (Kujenga Pamoja): From Foundational Pathways to Sustainable Institutional Mechanisms for People of African Descent
                       Permanent Forum on People of African Descent – Fifth Session

Title of the side event:  Building Together (Kujenga Pamoja): From Foundational Pathways to Sustainable Institutional Mechanisms for People of African Descent

Proposed date and time: Tuesday 14 of April from 9:00 to 10:00 AM

Location: Room III, building A, Palais des Nations

Sponsoring organization: Caribbean African Canadian (CAFCAN) Social Services

Language(s) in which the side event will be held: English (with potential French participation and translation)

Description of the side event (no more than 100 words) 
Marking 25 years since the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action, this side event examines foundational pathways for building sustainable national institutional mechanisms for people of African descent. Using Canada’s Kujenga Pamoja initiative—supporting the establishment of the Canadian Institute for People of Afrikan Ancestry (CIPAA)—as a case study, the session will explore how Black-led, evidence-based initiatives can evolve into lasting institutions. The initiative reflects a community-driven approach led by civil society and supported through engagement with government institutions to advance the objectives of the International Decade for People of African Descent. The discussion aims to inform the Permanent Forum’s work on strengthening mechanisms advancing recognition, justice and development.

Name and email address of the lead organizer
Caribbean African Canadian (CAFCAN) Social Services
[email protected]
 
Lead organizer contact
Floydeen Charles-Fridal
Email – [email protected]
Phone: 416-919-4211
Address: 995 Arrow Road, North York
M9M 2Z9 ON, Canada
Website: www.cafcan.org
Permission to publish contact details: Yes
Visual material: To be shared subsequently.
Weblink for any further information
https://cafcan.org/cipaa/
Tuesday April 14, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CEST
Room III - Building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

12:45pm CEST

Side event - Rewrite the Equation: Black Women as Architects of the Global Economy
Side Event Proposal
Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, Fifth Session, Geneva, April 2026

Title of the side event:
Rewrite the Equation: Black Women as Architects of the Global Economy

Date, time and time zone of side event:
Tuesday 14 April from 12:45 to 13:45 hrs.
Room III, building A, Palais des Nations

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies:
Boss Women Institute Inc. (Canada) and La Passerelle I.D.É. — Intégration et Développement Économique (Canada/Paris)

Language(s) in which the side event will be held:
English and French (bilingual delivery)

Description of the side event (no more than 100 words):
Black women represent the fastest-growing entrepreneurial force globally, yet remain structurally excluded from capital systems, governance institutions, and international economic decision-making. This side event, co-convened by Boss Women Institute and La Passerelle, reframes Black women’s entrepreneurship not as survival but as economic architecture. Anchored in the Durban Declaration and the Second International Decade for People of African Descent (2025–2034), the session introduces the Sovereignty Framework™, linking governance literacy, capital system reform, and diaspora institutional infrastructure. The event produces concrete bilingual policy recommendations advancing the economic inclusion and institutional recognition of women of African descent.

Location of the side event: Room III
Palais des Nations UN Geneva, Switzerland.

Full event details and registration: bosswomeninstitute.com/geneva26

Name and email address of the lead organizer:
Nadine Spencer, Boss Women Institute Inc.

nadine@bosswomeninstitute.com[email protected]

Optional: Weblink for any further information:
bosswomeninstitute.com/geneva26




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

2:00pm CEST

Side event - Foro @5: De cara al 2do Decenio de los Afrodescendientes
Foro @5: De cara al 2do Decenio de los Afrodescendientes

Contexto
El Foro Permanente sobre los Afrodescendientes (PFPAD), establecido por las Naciones Unidas como mecanismo consultivo para promover el pleno respeto, protección y cumplimiento de los derechos humanos de las personas afrodescendientes, cumple cinco años en un contexto global caracterizado por la persistencia del racismo estructural, las desigualdades sistémicas y la exclusión histórica de estas poblaciones.

A pesar de avances normativos y de visibilidad en la agenda internacional, las personas afrodescendientes continúan enfrentando barreras significativas en el acceso a la justicia, el desarrollo, la participación política y el reconocimiento pleno de sus derechos. En este escenario, el balance del PFPAD resulta crucial para evaluar su impacto real como espacio de incidencia y su capacidad para traducir recomendaciones en transformaciones concretas.

Asimismo, el inicio del segundo Decenio Internacional de los Afrodescendientes de las Naciones Unidas plantea una oportunidad estratégica para redefinir prioridades, fortalecer mecanismos de implementación y consolidar alianzas entre Estados, sociedad civil y organismos internacionales. Este nuevo ciclo exige un enfoque renovado que incorpore de manera transversal la interseccionalidad, particularmente en relación con género, territorio y condiciones socioeconómicas, así como una mayor atención a las dinámicas regionales.

Objetivo
El evento tiene como objetivo generar un espacio de diálogo para analizar los principales logros y desafíos del PFPAD en sus primeros cinco años, así como identificar prioridades y recomendaciones estratégicas de cara al segundo Decenio Internacional de los Afrodescendientes. Se busca contribuir al fortalecimiento del mandato del Foro y a la consolidación de una agenda global más efectiva para la promoción de los derechos de las personas afrodescendientes.

Contenido y enfoque
El panel abordará, desde una perspectiva crítica e interseccional, los avances alcanzados por el PFPAD en áreas como la incidencia normativa, la visibilización de las problemáticas que enfrentan las comunidades afrodescendientes y la generación de espacios de diálogo internacional. Al mismo tiempo, se analizarán los desafíos persistentes, incluyendo la limitada implementación de recomendaciones, la articulación con actores locales, y las brechas en el acceso a recursos y mecanismos de seguimiento.

Asimismo, se discutirán las oportunidades que ofrece el segundo Decenio para fortalecer la cooperación internacional, promover la justicia reparadora, avanzar en el reconocimiento de los aportes culturales y sociales de las personas afrodescendientes, y garantizar la participación efectiva de las comunidades en los procesos de toma de decisiones.

Agenda

Título:             Foro @5: De cara al 2do Decenio de los Afrodescendientes

Fecha y hora: Martes, 14 de abril de 2026, 14:00 – 15:00 (hora local)

Modalidad:      Evento presencial

Lugar:            Salon XI, edificio A, Palacio de las Naciones - Ginebra, Suiza


Interpretación: Espanol - Ingles

Organizan:
  • Iepé – Instituto de Pesquisa e Formação Indígena (organización con estatus ECOSOC)
  • Raza e Igualdad
 
Agenda preliminar:

14:00 – 14:05: Palabras de apertura y contextualización (Rodnei Jericó da Silva (Raza e Igualdad))
14:05 – 14:12: Experiencias y balance desde Brasil - Lúcia Xavier (CRIOLA
14:12 – 14:20: Perspectivas de género y juventud desde la sociedad civil afrodescendiente - Alejandra Pretel (RMAAD)
14:20 – 14:27: Experiencias desde Cuba y contexto actual  - Yanelys Núñez (El Obserbatorio de Género de Alas Tensas)
14:27 – 14:35:  Articulación regional y desafíos estructurales - Nathalie Cook (ALDA)
14:35 – 14:42: Balance del PFPAD a cinco años: avances y limitaciones - Pastor Murillo Experto, PFPAD
14:42 – 14:50: Reflexiones estratégicas - Carlos Quesada (Raza e Igualdad)
14:50- 15:00: Preguntas y respuestas - Público
15:00: Cierre - Organización

Resultados esperados
Se espera que el evento genere recomendaciones concretas orientadas a fortalecer el mandato del PFPAD, mejorar la implementación de sus resultados y posicionar prioridades clave para el segundo Decenio Internacional de los Afrodescendientes. Asimismo, se busca contribuir a la construcción de una agenda más inclusiva, efectiva y centrada en las necesidades y demandas de las comunidades afrodescendientes a nivel global.

Tuesday April 14, 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 - Afro-Brazilian civil society assesses the implementation of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action — examining structural racism, racial justice, and the rights of people of African descent in Braziltion and Platform of Action

Afro-Brazilian civil society assesses the implementation of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action — examining structural racism, racial justice, and the rights of people of African descent in Brazil

📅 DATE: April 14th, 2026
GENEVA TIME: 14:00 — 15:30 UTC+2 (CEST); BRAZIL TIME: 09:00 — 10:30 (BRT)
📍 LOCATION: Conference room at ISHR (International Service for Human Rights) - Rue de Varembé 1, 5th floor, Geneva, Switzerland, or Online (Zoom)
🌐 LANGUAGES: Brazilian Portuguese and English
🔗 RSVP: http://bit.ly/4cxhvTO | Please confirm by April 13th. Spots are limited for both Zoom and in-person participation.

PANEL OF SPEAKERS

Paulo Lugon – Coordinator of the Europe Brazil Office and Executive Director of the Brazilian Institute of Human Rights (Brazil)

Sara Branco – Coordinator of the International Advocacy Department at the Peregum Black Reference Institute (Brazil)

Andréia Coutinho – Executive Director of the Brazilian Center for Climate Justice (Brazil)

Ronan Lima – Coordinator of the Martin Luther King Jr. Program – Black Evangelical Movement of Brazil (Brazil)

Thuane Nascimento
– Executive Director of PerifaConnection (Brazil)

MODERATOR

Manuela Thamani – Executive Director of the Observatory of Whiteness (Brazil)

NAME AND EMAIL ADDRESS OF THE PERSON RESPONSIBLE FOR ORGANIZING:

Katharine Trajano (secretary of the Coalizão Negra por Direitos/Black Coalition For Rights): [email protected]



Tuesday April 14, 2026 2:00pm - 3:30pm CEST
International Service for Human Rights (ISHR) Rue de Varembé 1, 5th floor, Geneva, Switzerland
 
Wednesday, April 15
 

9:00am CEST

Side event - Let’s Mobilise Together for the 25th Anniversary of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action
Side event:

Let’s Mobilise Together for the 25th Anniversary of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action


Date and time: 15 April 2026, 9:00-10:00 am

Location: Room III, building A, Palais des Nations

Sponsoring organizations: World Against Racism Network, International Youth and Student Movement for the United Nations (ISMUN), Commission africaine des promoteurs de la santé et des droits de l'homme, International Organization for the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination, Europe Pan-African Forum for People of African Descent, Kingdom of Kush, AUADS 6th Region High Council, Global African Sheroes Union, Drammeh International-Lawyers.Org, Global Action on Aging, African Center for Democracy and Human Rights Studies, Global African Congress, European Network for People of African Descent, Geneva International Center for Justice. Centre d'Etudes Juridiques Africaines, International Federation for the Protection of the Rights of Ethnic, Religious, Linguistic & Other Minorities,

Language:
English

Description of the side event.
Its time for a drastic peoples mobilisation to ensure that the implementation of DDPA is secured and made a global priority. Telling the facts from past  struggles against racism, slavery and colonialism that finally lead to the decision to hold the Durban World Conferece and ensuring full implementation. The DDPA is probably the least known of outcomes from UN world conferences. It has been unjustly campaigned against and its anniversaries been boycotted. The 25th Anniversary open up an opportunity to fight back for truth and justice and reparations for past crimes.

Name and email address of the lead organizer: ISMUN, [email protected]

Wednesday April 15, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CEST
Room III - Building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

9:00am CEST

Side event - Life, Equity, and Access: Advancing Kidney Care for People of African Descent
Side Event

Life, Equity, and Access: Advancing Kidney Care for People of African Descent

Date and Time: 
Wednesday 15 April
9:00 – 10:00 am

Duration:
60 minutes

Location: Room XI, building A, Palais des Nations, Geneva, Switzerland

Registration: Interested participants can register in the following link: https://luma.com/BairdFoundationUN

Sponsoring Organization(s)
Doris Baird Dialysis Clinic
In collaboration with global partners advancing health equity and medical access for communities of African descent.

Language of Event      
English            

Description of the Side Event
Kidney disease disproportionately affects people of African descent globally, yet access to dialysis treatment remains limited in many regions. This side event will examine how awareness, health infrastructure, and international partnerships can expand life-saving dialysis access. Anchored in the objectives of the International Decade for People of African Descent and aligned with Sustainable Development Goal 3 (Good Health and Well-Being), the discussion will highlight the work of the Doris Baird Dialysis Clinic as a model for community-driven health solutions. Participants will explore pathways to strengthen healthcare capacity, increase awareness of kidney disease disparities, and improve survival outcomes in underserved communities.

Background and Context
Kidney disease is a growing global health challenge and one of the most severe non-communicable diseases when treatment is not accessible. For patients experiencing kidney failure, dialysis is often the only life-sustaining option.

Yet access to dialysis remains deeply unequal. In many regions, treatment is limited, unaffordable, or entirely unavailable. These disparities disproportionately affect communities of African descent, where gaps in healthcare infrastructure, specialist care, and early diagnosis persist.

The Doris Baird Dialysis Clinic was established to respond to this urgent need by expanding access to dialysis treatment and strengthening healthcare capacity in underserved communities.

This side event places kidney care within the broader global discussion on health equity, emphasizing the need for awareness, investment, and coordinated international action.

Alignment with the United Nations Mandate
International Decade for People of African Descent
The International Decade for People of African Descent is grounded in three pillars: Recognition, Justice, and Development.

This side event advances these priorities by:
• Increasing global awareness of health disparities affecting people of African descent
• Addressing inequities in access to life-saving healthcare
• Supporting development through strengthened health systems and medical infrastructure
• Health equity is fundamental to advancing human rights, dignity, and long-term well-being for communities of African descent.

United Nations Sustainable Development GoalsSDG 3 – Good Health and Well-Being
This event contributes directly to SDG 3 by focusing on:
• Expanding access to essential healthcare services
• Reducing premature mortality from non-communicable diseases
• Strengthening healthcare systems in underserved regions
• Improving access to dialysis is a critical component of achieving equitable health outcomes globally.

The Role of Awareness
Awareness is essential to addressing disparities in kidney disease.
In many affected communities:
• Diagnosis occurs at advanced stages
• Access to treatment is limited or unavailable
• The scale of the issue remains under-recognized

Without increased awareness, the urgency of the crisis is not fully understood, and necessary investments and policy responses remain insufficient.

This side event seeks to elevate awareness as a catalyst for action, enabling stronger engagement from governments, health institutions, and international partners.

Discussion
Themes
Health Inequities and Kidney Disease
Examining the disproportionate impact of kidney disease on people of African descent.

Awareness and Early Detection
Understanding the role of awareness in improving diagnosis, treatment access, and outcomes.

Expanding Dialysis Infrastructure
Exploring scalable approaches to increasing dialysis capacity in underserved regions.

Partnerships for Health Equity
Identifying opportunities for collaboration among governments, healthcare providers, and global partners.


Event Format
Moderated panel discussion with audience engagement.

Structure:
  1. Opening remarks – 5 minutes
  1. Panel discussion – 30 minutes
  1. Audience dialogue – 20 minutes
  1. Closing reflections – 5 minutes

Expected Outcomes
• Increased global awareness of kidney disease disparities
• Strengthened recognition of dialysis access as a health equity priority
• Engagement of partners to support expansion of dialysis services
• Practical recommendations to improve healthcare access and infrastructure

A summary of conclusions and recommendations will be submitted following the event.

Conclusion
Access to life-saving healthcare remains one of the defining equity challenges of our time.
For individuals living with kidney failure, dialysis is not optional. It is survival.
By advancing awareness, strengthening partnerships, and supporting scalable healthcare solutions, this side event contributes to global efforts to ensure equitable access to care and improved health outcomes for communities of African descent.

Lead Organizer
Doris Baird Dialysis Clinic

Website:dorisbairdfoundation.org

Contact: Dr. Wycliffe Baird, [email protected]
Wednesday April 15, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CEST
Room XI, building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

12:30pm CEST

Side event - "The Pan African Journey: Lessons of Transformation and Strategy"
 Title of the Side Event

The Pan African Journey: Lessons of Transformation and Strategy

Voices of Durban: 25 Years later: Why identity matters for reparatory justice


Date, time and time zone of side event
Wednesday, April 15, 2026
12:30pm-2:30pm with Light Lunch

o Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies
World Council of Churches, African Union, Advocacy for Africa Network (AdNA), Africans and African Diaspora Conference (AAD)

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

o Description of the hybrid side event 
While the dominance of the colonial and enslaving powers is predominantly shared and entrenched globally, there have been strong Pan African resistance movements and strategies (in both political, economic, cultural, epistemological, and religious spheres). The enslavement and colonial legacies often attempt to erase these resistance, decolonial movements to create a sense of hopelessness among descendants of their historic victims.  This side event will seek to draw upon the heritage from early Pan-African journeys to strengthen activities that can make the Second International Decade for People of African Descent robust in its resistance to the recolonizing agenda in a renewed geo-political space, globally, regionally and nationally.

In-Person Venue (10-15 minute Bus Ride from UN Venue) : Kyoto Building, WCC Ecumenical Center (Jura), 42 Chemin du Pommier, 1218 Le Grand Saconnex.  Street Address: Hybrid at the World Council of Churches, 150 route de Ferney, Geneva, Switzerland

From the United Nations, take bus 5, 8, or 22 at Appia Bus Stop Pl. N going to Airport, Palexpo, or Carouge-Rondaeu respectively and disembark at Grand-Saconnex, Morillons (second stop from Appia). Follow the bus, Kyoto Building (Glass building on your left ahead of you after the curve). Ecumenical Center is on the second floor).

o Name and email address of the lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead organizer’s contact details)

Dr. Masiiwa Gunda ([email protected]) and Rev. Dr. Angelique Walker-Smith ([email protected]


Registration and Weblink for any further information
Register in advance for this meeting online and virtually:Meeting Registration - Zoom

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the meeting.


Wednesday April 15, 2026 12:30pm - 2:30pm CEST
Kyoto Building, WCC Ecumenical Center (Jura) 42 Chemin du Pommier, 1218 Le Grand Saconnex

12:45pm CEST

Side event - Objets pillés en Afrique : Un héritage à redéfinir ou un trésor à restituer ?
5ᵉ Forum Permanent des Personnes d’Ascendance Africaine


Venue:
Palais des Nations – Genève, Suisse - Salle III

Dates:
15 avril 2026


Side event organised by:
FMI–PAD Network

Theme / Panel:
Panel sur les Objets Culturels Africains
(Panel on African Cultural Objects)

Panelists:
  • Dido Mulumba
  • Jonathan Mbiya
  • Manon Buchallot

Panel Title / Question:
« Objets pillés en Afrique : Un héritage à redéfinir ou un trésor à restituer ? »
(“Looted Objects in Africa: A Heritage to Redefine or a Treasure to Return?”)

Partnership Mentioned Partenaire :
MEKAS ASBL




Wednesday April 15, 2026 12:45pm - 1:45pm CEST
Room III - Building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

12:45pm CEST

Side event - Reparation and Its Many Faces
Side event
Reparation and Its Many Faces

Date, time and time zone of side event: 
Wednesday 15 April
12:45 – 13:45 pm

Location of the side event: Room XI, building A, Palais des Nations

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies: Observatório da Branquitude (Whiteness Observatory), African Futures Lab, The Guardian, Libera

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

Description of the side event
Reparation is a historical debt that must be claimed. The legacy of slavery and colonialism continues to produce structural racism, poverty and violence against Black populations across all continents. Since Durban (2001), the international recognition of these crimes opened a political agenda that the Whiteness Observatory takes as its central mission: to interrogate the privileges that sustain racial inequalities and to build, alongside leaders from North America, Latin America, Europe and Africa, concrete pathways toward restorative justice. Without memory there is no reparation. Without reparation there is no democracy.

Name and email address of the lead organizer Manuela Thamani; Executive Director, Observatório da Branquitude (Whiteness Observatory) [email protected]

Wednesday April 15, 2026 12:45pm - 1:45pm CEST
Room XI, building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

1:00pm CEST

Side event - Reparations From Below: A Reparations Simulation Workshop
Reparations From Below: A Reparations Simulation Workshop
Date: Wednesday 15 April

Time: 1:00pm – 2:30pm CET

Sponsoring organizations: The Amendment Project and the Thurgood Marshall Center for Civil Rights at Howard Law School

Language: English

Description: This workshop will begin with a short lecture on Reparations from Below, utilizing participatory action research from a land restitution case in Burundi by author Theodore Mbazumutima to examine the limitations of top-down, government helmed reparations mechanisms, and explore localized, community-led reparations epistemologies. Guided by facilitators from TAP, participants will select case studies within which to devise reparations plans utilizing Action Cards to represent mechanisms like Truth Commissions, debt cancellations, or foreign asset seizure, putting them in conversation with reparations from below mechanisms that we will develop collectively. We’ll conclude with concrete reparations trajectories and expanded imaginations for repair.

Extended Description: This workshop we will introduce a framework for youth-led reparations developed by reparations scholar Sydni Scott at the University of Oxford: Reparations From Below challenges popular ideas about reparative justice understood as a sequential checklist: cessation of harm, guarantees of non-repetition, restitution, compensation, rehabilitation, and satisfaction. Instead, we explore reparations as two intercommunicating streams of action with different loci of power and agency - reparations from above and from Below - This is not a panel, this is a simulation exercise in co-production of revolutionary imagination with the goal of concretizing reparations tools and mechanisms in context. Join us to put the wisdom and lessons from the conference into concrete strategy within the reparations ecosystem

Location: Le Centre International de Conférences (CIGC) 17 rue de Varembe, Genf, CH 1211, Room 9

Lead organizer: Sydni Scott – [email protected] permission to share contact details

Co-organizers: Rute Ayalew and Alexis Rich

RSVP Link: https://forms.gle/8h6x8K5GaE4Rvc9b7

Wednesday April 15, 2026 1:00pm - 2:30pm CEST
Le Centre International de Conférences (CIGC) - Room 9 17 rue de Varembe, Genf, CH 1211

1:30pm CEST

Side event - U.S. Domestic and Foreign Policy Impacts on People of African Descent
Wednesday April 15, 2026 1:30pm - 3:00pm CEST
Working Title: “U.S. Foreign Policy Impacts on People of African Descent”


Date: 15 April at 13:30 pm


Location: Auditorium de la Pastorale
106 rue de Ferney, 1202, Geneva

Organizers: The Alliance for Diplomacy and Justice ([email protected]) & the International Civil Society Working Group for the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, Southern Poverty Law Center, Black Alliance for Just Immigration, Race, Equality and Human Rights


Background and Rationale
We are experiencing geopolitical shifts that are having significant economic, political, and safety impacts on People of African Descent globally prompted by the election of a U.S. administration that is animated by destroying anything deemed “woke” or “diversity, equity, and inclusion.” The U.S. is now openly encouraging Western nations to join in a return to colonialism and imperialism under the guise of restoring Western civilizational expansion and eschewing the need to “atone for the purported sins of past generations.” The growing global network of right-wing, anti-rights governments is expanding rapidly and is facilitated by the U.S. government. This coalition shares a disdain for global efforts to promote the dignity, equality, and rights of marginalized communities and they are actively undermining the United Nations and its bodies, including its anti-racist mechanisms, under the guise of protecting national sovereignty. These efforts have already had devastating consequences on communities of African descent around the world and have the potential to further destabilize the UN mechanisms created to promote the dignity, justice, and development of People of African Descent around the world.
It is against this backdrop that a serious discussion is needed to not only assess the damage of these geopolitical shifts, but to more importantly devise solutions to ensure the safety and rights of People of African Descent worldwide.


The side event aims to:
Discuss in an open and honest way U.S. foreign policy and its current and potential impacts on People of African Descent globally and the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent (PFPAD).
Reflect on how communities of African descent historically have responded to and built resilience against fascism, racism, and slavery, while using our own history as potential blueprints for this moment.
Strengthen a shared understanding of how movements can maintain coherence, alignment, and strategic direction in evolving geopolitical contexts.


Potential Guiding Questions:
What tangible impacts have we seen on People of African Descent due to U.S. foreign policy shifts in the Americas and around the world?
What are the likely impacts of U.S. pressures on the UN given the current fiscal crisis and the UN80 reform efforts on the PFPAD and other anti-racism mechanisms?
How can People of African Descent across borders respond to these new realities to ensure the safety and prosperity of our communities?


Fortmat
The side event will be organized as a small conversation to have a focused and action-oriented discussion on how People of African Descent globally can collectively meet this moment through international, national, and local actions. To ensure a meaningful conversation, we will limit participation to 30 people. The discussion will be kicked off by a brief panel of 4-5 experts to set the scene with their analysis of the current policies of the U.S. administration and their impacts on People of African Descent in the United States and around the world. Panelists will be from countries directly impacted by U.S. foreign policy shifts, including Cuba, Venezuela, Nigeria, and/or South Africa, and will include someone from the United States to discuss how domestic policy shifts have impacted Black Americans.

Expected Outcomes
Clearer understanding of the new geopolitical realities and their impacts on People of African Descent through changing bilateral and multilateral priorities.
Identification of ways to protect against the growing global backlash against anti-racism work both domestically and through UN mechanisms.
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, and PFPAD Members.


Wednesday April 15, 2026 1:30pm - 3:00pm CEST
Auditorium de la Pastorale 106 rue de Ferney, 1202, Geneva

2:00pm CEST

Side event - 25 Years of Durban: Global Afro-descendant Solidarity, Reparations and Affirmative Action — Pathways to Inclusion in Public Service


SIDE EVENT 
25 Years of Durban: Global Afro-descendant Solidarity, Reparations and Affirmative Action — Pathways to Inclusion in Public Service

Date and time:
15 April 2026, from 14:00 to 15:00 Geneva time

Sponsoring Organizations or entities:
Peregum Black Reference Institute, Ministry of Racial Equality (Brazil), General Coordination of Memory and Truth on Slavery and the Transatlantic Trafficking of Enslaved People of the Ministry of Human Rights and Citizenship (Brazil), UN Anti-Racism Coalition (UNARC), and International Service for Human Rights (ISHR)

Language in which the side event will be held: Portuguese and English 
*simultaneous translation will be provided 

Description:
Marking the 25th anniversary of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action, this event reflects on its implementation through global solidarity among people of African descent. Acknowledging progress and persistent gaps, it will examine affirmative action and reparatory policies as key tools to address the enduring impacts of slavery, colonialism, and structural racism in different countries. Focusing on access to, retention in, and advancement within public service, the event will foster exchange among human rights defenders and strengthen collective strategies to advance racial equality, social justice, and the democratization of public institutions.

Moderator
:Jéssica Ferreira, Esperança Garcia Program Coordinator at Peregum Black Reference Institute

Panelists:
● Rachel Barros, Ministry of Racial Equality (Brazil)
● Douglas Belchior, Advocacy Director at Peregum Black Reference Institute
● Claudia Trindade, Special Advisor for Diversity and Inclusion at the Office of the Attorney General of Brazil (AGU)
● Shari García, International Project Manager at Afro Colombian Women Association (AMUAFROC)

Simultaneous translation to English, Portuguese and Spanishwill be provided(*)
* Those who need translation, please make sure to bring your own cellphones and headphones.

Registration link: https://forms.gle/3VcevoUuQkbbJRjPA

Location:
Conference room at ISHR (International Service for Human Rights), Geneva
Address:
Rue de Varembé 1, 5th floor, Geneva, Switzerland

Name and email of the person responsible for organizing the event:
Sara Branco
[email protected]

Wednesday April 15, 2026 2:00pm - 3:00pm CEST
International Service for Human Rights (ISHR) Rue de Varembé 1, 5th floor, Geneva, Switzerland

2:00pm CEST

Side event - Salud y Derechos Afrodiásporicos: justicia y salud desde la perspectiva afrodescendiente y sus liderazgos
Salud y Derechos Afrodiásporicos: justicia y salud desde la perspectiva afrodescendiente  y sus liderazgos.
(DIGNIDAD, JUSTICIA, EQUIDAD Y REPARACIÓN)
 
Propuesta de evento paralelo

Organizado por la Asociación UbuntuEs en Colaboración con: EPIsoHD Research Lab, Pan-Diáspora, Aicold y S&DA

Fecha: 15 de Abril de 14:00 a 15:00 hrs.

Sala III del Palacio de las Naciones, Ginebra, Suiza.

Descripción: El evento paralelo “Salud y Derechos Afrodiásporicos: justicia y salud desde la perspectiva afrodescendiente y sus liderazgos” abordará las desigualdades estructurales y sistemáticas como determinantes sociales de la salud de las personas afrodescendientes y de la diáspora africana. Se centrará en la garantía del derecho humano a la salud, la justicia, la equidad y las reparaciones, en el marco de la Declaración y Programa de Acción de Durban y otros instrumentos internacionales que promueven la igualdad y los derechos humanos. Organizado por UbuntuEs y aliados, promoverá diálogo, visibilización y fortalecimiento de liderazgos afrodescendientes.

Resumen: La diáspora africana constituye una de las comunidades transnacionales más grandes del mundo. Se estima que más de 200 millones[1] de afrodescendientes viven en America latina y muchos millones más viven en otras partes del mundo, fuera del continente africano. Principalmente en las Américas, como resultado de procesos históricos como la trata transatlántica de personas esclavizadas, la herencia de la colonización y la consolidación del racismo estructural, cuyos efectos atraviesan diversas dimensiones de la vida y condicionan los determinantes sociales de la salud de estas poblaciones. Estas inequidades se traducen en vulneraciones de derechos —especialmente del derecho fundamental a la salud—, en un acceso limitado a condiciones materiales para una vida digna y en una mayor exposición a riesgos que deterioran la salud integral. Dichos impactos se ven además agravados en el contexto de fenómenos contemporáneos que interactúan con las manifestaciones actuales del racismo, incluyendo el racismo algorítmico en la inteligencia artificial, así como con dinámicas sociales como la migración, el cambio climático y el desplazamiento forzado.
 
Objetivo GeneralFortalecer la garantía del derecho a la salud de las personas afrodescendientes y de la diáspora africana, mediante la articulación de iniciativas comunitarias, académicas y de incidencia política que promuevan la equidad, la justicia racial y la participación plena en los ámbitos local, nacional y global, considerando los determinantes sociales de la salud y los impactos del racismo estructural y contemporáneo.

Objetivo específico: Incorporar las demandas y necesidades de las personas afrodescendientes y de la diáspora africana en la agenda política y de salud a nivel local, nacional e internacional, mediante evidencia, incidencia, fortalecimiento de capacidades y visibilización de sus experiencias, con el fin de promover la equidad, la justicia racial y el derecho a la salud integral.

Participantes: Asociación AbuntuEs, EPIsoHD Research Lab, Pan-Diáspora, Salud y Derechos Afrodiaspóricos, Aicold, Kissing Lions, y población civil.

Formato:  El evento paralelo se llevará a cabo de forma presencial, mediante moderación y participación activa de la población afrodescendientes, abordado cuestiones pertinentes entorno a la salud integral y los determinantes sociales de la salud, entre otros temas relevantes, una iniciativa liderada por personas afrodescendientes
El evento tendrá una duración de 60min

Se realizará en Español, Inglés (Un panelista) – (sujeta a los medios que disponga la sala que sea asignada).

Resultados esperados
Generación de evidencia sobre inequidades raciales y étnicas en salud de la diáspora africana y poblaciones afrodescendientes.
Fortalecimiento de capacidades de líderes comunitarios, profesionales y académicos afrodescendientes y de la diáspora africana.
Integración de demandas afrodescendientes y de la diáspora africana en la agenda de salud y derechos humanos a nivel local, nacional e internacional.
Visibilización de experiencias y desafíos, promoviendo equidad, justicia racial y participación plena.
Articulación de redes y colaboración entre organizaciones, movimientos sociales e investigadores para dar continuidad a la acción.

Panelistas:
EPIsoHD Research Lab y Pan-Diáspora Dra. Mabel Carabalí: Médica de la Universidad Libre de Colombia, Doctora en Epidemiología por la Universidad McGill (Canadá), con posdoctorado en Epidemiología Social en la Universidad de Toronto. Profesora adjunta en la Universidad de Montreal, con más de 14 años de experiencia en investigación epidemiológica y biomédica internacional.

UbuntuEs – Eidy Yerlin Mosquera Perea: Abogada. Magíster en Derechos Humanos, Interculturalidad y Desarrollo. Asesora y consultora en asuntos afrodescendientes y afrodiaspóricos. Cuenta con más de cinco años de investigación en la intersección entre el racismo, la salud y los derechos humanos, especialmente el derecho a la salud y los determinantes sociales de la salud. Miembro del Consejo Asesor Antirracista de Barcelona, del Grupo de Trabajo Internacional de la Sociedad Civil (IWG–PFPAD) y de la Coalición Global para la Salud Sexual y Reproductiva y los Derechos de Mujeres y Adolescentes Afrodescendientes (UNFPA).

Aicold- Beatriz Quesada: Docente comprometida con la preservación del patrimonio cultural inmaterial de las comunidades negras, vinculando estos saberes con el bienestar, la dignidad y los derechos afrodiásporicos. Promueve la educación intercultural, el reconocimiento de tradiciones y la participación comunitaria, contribuyendo al fortalecimiento de identidades y al empoderamiento desde los propios liderazgos afrodescendientes.
 
Kissing Lions- Kahshanna Evan: Miembro del Consejo Asesor de la Red y Centro de Recursos Informados sobre Trauma del Estado de Nueva York (NYS TINRC), y estratega senior en Kissing Lions Public Relations.
Salud y derechos Afrodiásporicos - Mabel Carabali y Eidy Yerlin Mosquera Perea

Observaciones finales 
Pastor Elias Murillo: Abogado, Miembro del foro permanente sobre los afrodescendientes, actualmente consultor independiente, miembro del Comité Directivo del Proyecto "Impacto Economista en la Inclusión en Salud" (Grupo The Economist). Fue miembro (2008 -2020) y vicepresidente (2018 -2020) del Comité para la Eliminación de la Discriminación Racial (CERD) de la ONU. Tiene más de 17 años de experiencia en el nivel directivo y asesor de los Ministerios del Interior y de Relaciones Exteriores de Colombia. Ha publicado varios ensayos y columnas de opinión sobre los derechos de los afrodescendientes. Autor y promotor de varias iniciativas internacionales a favor de los afrodescendientes, entre ellas el Año-Decenio; las Recomendaciones Generales 34 y 36 del CERD sobre el racismo y la discriminación racial contra los afrodescendientes y sobre los perfiles raciales, que también abordan el sesgo algorítmico, respectivamente; así como las contribuciones del CERD al Programa de Actividades del Decenio, que incluyen una Declaración Internacional sobre los Derechos de los Afrodescendientes, actualmente en curso.

Moderador: Agatha Miranda Mba.


Wednesday April 15, 2026 2:00pm - 3:00pm CEST
Room III - Building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

2:00pm CEST

Side event - In Times of Crisis, Why Multilateralism Still Matters: People of African Descent, Reparatory Justice and Global Governance
Wednesday April 15, 2026 2:00pm - Saturday April 18, 2026 6:00pm CEST
In Times of Crisis, Why Multilateralism Still Matters: People of African Descent, Reparatory Justice and Global Governance

Date: 15 April 2026

Time:14:00 - 15:00

Duration:60 minutes

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

Organizers
People of African Descent Stakeholder Group, in collaboration with Criola, Geledés – Black Woman Institute and UNARC - Antiracism Coalition.


Background and rationale
The international community is facing a period of profound uncertainty marked by rising geopolitical tensions, recurring armed conflicts, increasing militarization, uneven respect for international law, and growing pressures on multilateral institutions. In this context, renewed reflection is needed on the role of multilateralism as a framework for dialogue, norm-setting, accountability and international cooperation.

For people of African descent, these global dynamics carry particular significance. Contemporary crises do not unfold in a vacuum; they are shaped by longstanding structural inequalities, including racial hierarchies, patterns of exclusion, uneven access to development, and persistent barriers to the full enjoyment of human rights. These realities reinforce the importance of ensuring that multilateral spaces remain responsive to the historical experiences, contemporary demands and political agency of people of African descent.

This proposed side event seeks to contribute to that reflection by bringing together representatives of the Permanent Forum, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Member States and civil society organizations to discuss why multilateralism continues to matter in times of crisis, and how ongoing multilateral processes can be more effectively engaged in support of racial justice, reparatory justice and inclusive global governance.

The event will also provide an opportunity to present the role of the People of African Descent Stakeholder Group as a platform for articulation, participation and engagement in multilateral processes, including by sharing information on its structure, methods of work, priorities and opportunities for broader collaboration.

At a moment when many communities are questioning the effectiveness of international institutions, this dialogue aims not only to reaffirm the relevance of multilateralism, but also to emphasize the need for a multilateralism that is more democratic, more inclusive, and more attentive to the rights and aspirations of people of African descent.

Objectives
This side event has four interrelated objectives.

First, to promote reflection on the continued relevance of multilateralism in addressing contemporary global challenges, particularly in a context of conflict, fragmentation and weakened trust in international institutions.

Second, to examine the implications of current global crises for people of African descent, including the ways in which racial inequality, exclusion and historical injustice continue to shape access to rights, protection and development.

Third, to explore the relationship between multilateral processes and key agendas of concern to people of African descent, including human rights, reparatory justice, financing for development, international tax cooperation, climate justice and broader debates on global governance.

Fourth, to present the People of African Descent Stakeholder Group as a mechanism for strengthening participation, coordination and collective advocacy across relevant multilateral spaces.

Guiding questions
Why does multilateralism still matter in the current global context?

How do present-day crises affect people of African descent and related struggles for equality, justice and dignity?

How can multilateral spaces better address historical injustices, structural racism and the demands of reparatory justice?

Which ongoing international processes should receive greater attention from civil society organizations, Forum members and supportive States working on the rights of people of African descent?

How can the People of African Descent Stakeholder Group contribute to stronger coordination, meaningful participation and more strategic engagement in global governance processes?

Format
The event is conceived as a 60-minute high-level strategic dialogue, intended to bring together institutional reflection, political analysis and practical orientation.A possible structure could be as follows:

Opening remarks
The event will begin with introductory remarks by the moderator, who will briefly frame the discussion in light of the current international context and recall the broader considerations informing the exchange. These include the continued relevance of multilateralism in a period marked by crisis and fragmentation, the implications of contemporary global dynamics for people of African descent, and the relationship between multilateral processes, reparatory justice and global governance.

Round of interventions
The discussion will then proceed to a first round of concise interventions by invited speakers. This segment will provide space for institutional and political reflections on the role of multilateral institutions and international cooperation in responding to contemporary crises, as well as on the ways in which ongoing international processes may more effectively address structural racism, historical injustice and the demand for reparatory approaches across political, economic, social, cultural and environmental dimensions.

Moderated dialogue / focused strategic exchange
Building on the initial interventions, the moderator will guide a focused exchange around one central question: Which multilateral processes require more immediate coordination? This part of the discussion will seek to identify relevant institutional spaces, negotiations, mechanisms and advocacy tracks that call for stronger and more immediate articulation among Forum members, United Nations actors, Member States and civil society.

Closing

The event will conclude with brief closing remarks by the moderator, highlighting key points emerging from the discussion, expressing appreciation to participants and encouraging continued coordination and engagement beyond the panel.

Proposed speakers and participants
Permanent Forum and United Nations representatives
● H.E. Martin Kimani, Chairperson of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent
● Ms. Isabelle Mamadou, Member of the Working Group of Specialists on People of African Descent
● Representative of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights

Stakeholder Group and civil society representatives
● Representative of the People of African Descent Stakeholder Group
● Representative of Coalizão Negra por Direitos

Member States and other institutional invitees
● Kenya
● Brazil
● Colombia

All members of the Permanent Forum may also be invited to attend.

Expected outcomes


The event is expected to contribute to:
A stronger shared understanding of the importance of multilateral engagement in advancing the rights of people of African descent in a period of global instability.

Greater visibility for the connections between racial justice, reparatory justice and broader questions of global governance.

Enhanced dialogue among Forum members, United Nations representatives, Member States and civil society organizations on key multilateral processes requiring coordinated attention.
Wednesday April 15, 2026 2:00pm - Saturday April 18, 2026 6:00pm CEST
Room XI, building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

4:30pm CEST

Side event - Reparatory justice within the context of decolonisation: Harvesting the low-hangingfruits
Wednesday April 15, 2026 4:30pm - 7:00pm CEST
Reparatory Justice within the context of Decolonisation: Harvesting the Low-Hanging Fruits
Date and time: 15th of April 2026 / 16:30-19:00 (CET Geneva time)

Venue
Université Ouvrière de Genève3, place des Grottes - 1201 Geneva
Behind Geneva Main Train station (Gare Cornavin) www.uog.ch

Format:
 The Side Event is composed of a Keynote, Inputs, followed by a panel discussion

Participation level: Swiss and Global African Diaspora, Delegates of the 5th Session of the UN PFPAD, Representatives of UN institutions and mechanisms (OHCHR, HRC), Ambassadors-Permanent Representatives, High-level Experts (Academia and Thinktanks), Reporting Committees and other relevant UN mechanisms, civil society and media organizations.Around 100 participants are expected to attend

Organizer(s) and stakeholders: African Diaspora Council of Switzerland, African Foundation for Migration and Development, Espace Afrique International.

1. Background and Rationale

A. Background
25.03.2026: On this International Day of Remembrance of Victims of Slavery and Trans Atlantic Slave Trade, the UN General Assembly adopted a resolution declaring the trafficking of enslaved Africans "the gravest Crime against Humanity" and calling for reparations "as a concrete step towards remedying historical wrongs." The resolution also urges “the prompt and unhindered restitution” of cultural items — including artworks, monuments, museum pieces, documents and national archives — to their countries of origin without charge.

In approving the resolution, the General Assembly affirms the importance of addressing the historical wrongs of slavery that promotes "justice, human rights, dignity and healing." The resolution calls on U.N. member nations to engage in talks “on reparatory justice, including a full and formal apology, measures of restitution, compensation, rehabilitation, satisfaction, guarantees of non-repetition and changes to laws, programs and services to address racism and systemic discrimination.”

17.11.2025: According to a recent publication on Reparatory Justice issued by the Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights2, over 30 million people were violently uprooted from Africa for enslavement. No country with a legacy of enslavement, the trade in enslaved Africans and colonialism has fully confronted this past, accounted for the harms suffered and repaired its continuing negative impacts on Africans and people of African descent.

It further notes that global calls for reparatory justice have been growing. Some States, universities, religious groups and businesses that profited —or continue to profit— from legacies of enslavement and colonialism have suddenly started to act. Delivering reparatory justice is more urgent than ever. And human rights offer a powerful framework to move forward.

13.12.2024: This publication underscores the position of its earlier publication in December 2024 which also focuses on reparatory justice for people of African descent. It acknowledges increased acceptance of the need to address the continuing impacts of enslavement and colonialism, including through reparatory justice. It reviews existing frameworks and initiatives and identifies areas for further consideration. It contains recommendations for States to take a comprehensive approach, grounded in international human rights law, that seeks to address legacies of the past in order to build societies that are free from systemic racism and racial discrimination. To achieve these objectives effectively, the approach should be participatory, gender-sensitive and inclusive, and should combine a plurality of measures, including, where appropriate, restitution, rehabilitation, satisfaction and guarantees of non-repetition.

Before the aforementioned UN interventions, Reparatory Justice has been a subject of public discourse in various international and regional fora.

21.08.2019: In 2019, the Special Rapporteur on contemporary forms of racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance described the issue of reparative justice as an "urgent project" to which the community of states must respond absolutely.

407.08.2024: UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent5 emphasize the need for due recognition of the suffering inflicted on the victims of slavery, deportation and colonization as well as the need for structural reparation for the intergenerational damage caused by such acts.

08.09.2001: The Durban Declaration and Programme of Action (DDPA)6 recognised that racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia and related intolerance, and that Africans and people of African descent, and people of Asian descent and indigenous peoples were victims of colonialism and continue to be victims of its consequences. Furthermore, the effects and persistence of these structures and practices have been among the factors contributing to lasting social and economic inequalities in many parts of the world today.

17.11.2023: In 2023, at a conference co-organized by the Republic of Ghana and the African Union, African states adopted the Accra Proclamation on Reparations, which called for a united front for justice and reparations, including "the exploration of legal and judicial options for reparations"

16.02.2025: In line with this logic of obtaining reparations through the law, the 38th Ordinary Session of the Assembly of Heads of State and Government of the African Union, upon a proposal by the Republic of Togo, adopted on 16 February 2025 a historic decision on the "Qualification of slavery, deportation and colonization as crimes against humanity and genocide against the peoples of Africa".

14.11.2024 / 18.12.2025: This major decision is in line with the relevant resolution of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights (ACHPR) on reparations for Africans and people of African descent, adopted in 2024 and the African Union's 2025 theme: "Justice for people of African descent through reparations", and the declaration of 2026–2036 as the Decade of Reparations on December 18, 2025.

09.09.2025: Last year, the African Union and the Caribbean Community (CARICOM) held the 2nd Africa-CARICOM Summit in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, from September 7 to 9, 2025, to strengthen integration and cooperation between the two regions, particularly in the context of seeking reparations for historical wrongs. This common front tries to consolidate the shared commitment of both regions, drawing in particular on relevant initiatives within CARICOM such as the CARICOM 10-point plan for reparatory justice developed by the CARICOM Reparations Commission (CRC).

These initiatives are urgent appeals for a more committed and decisive international law, for the international recognition of the cruelty of these crimes and their fair legal qualification, and for the consolidation of the legitimate right to reparations.

23.10.2025: A High Level Event Organised on 23rd of October 2025 at the UN Office in Geneva by the Permanent Missions of the Republics of Togo, Ghana and South Africa in collaboration with Permanent Delegation of the African Union, and CARICOM coordination Office in Geneva centred on the theme Consolidating the normative framework in the struggle for justice for the victims of slavery, deportation and colonization: Contribution of international law and UN mechanisms for just and lasting reparations" also addressed the Reparatory Justice from the angle of the International Law and UN mechanisms.

(More information on the attached concept note)

Wednesday April 15, 2026 4:30pm - 7:00pm CEST
Université Ouvrière de Genève 3, place des Grottes - 1201 Geneva

5:00pm CEST

Side event - Switzerland questioning neutrality through urban colonial past
Wednesday April 15, 2026 5:00pm - Saturday April 18, 2026 6:00pm CEST
Side event 
Switzerland questioning neutrality through urban colonial past

Date, time and time zone of side event

Date event 1: A Decolonial sight seeing in Geneva April 15th 2026, Time: 17.00 PM visit starting at 17:30pm of the Decolonial sightseeing in Geneva.

Date event 2: April 18 - visit of the new exhibition at Chateau Prangins " “Colonialisme. Une Suisse impliquée” at the Château Prangins

Main Organizers
People of African Descent Belgium Observatory - (PAD Belgium Observatory) - CRAN and UPAF.CH

Co-Sponsored by
* EPAF-PAD Belgium* Tiye International
* MRAX
*Women for Peace in the World

Language(s) in which the side event will be held
English and French. On the basis of the registrations

Description of the side event
The Context
Join us for 2 powerful and thought-provoking journeys through Geneva hidden colonial histories. On April 15 a decolonial walking sightseeing tour, organized by PAD Belgium Observatory, the guidance of UPAF.CH and Collectif Afro Suisse, will shed light on the traces of colonialism in buildings and monuments in urban Geneva.

On April 18th -afternoon join this visit at Chateau Prangin where the National Museum is showing after Zürich a sampler version of the exhibition that uncovers the country's colonial past and its current ramification.

Location of the side event
Point of meeting
15th April & 18th April Maison Internationale des Associations front of the visitors entry

Email address of the lead organizer: [email protected]


Registration link https:https://forms.gle/8mcpynQTmbwwT1d69 



Wednesday April 15, 2026 5:00pm - Saturday April 18, 2026 6:00pm CEST
Maison Internationale des Associations Rue des Savoises 15 - 1205 Genève

6:00pm CEST

Side event - From Task Force to Implementation: Lessons from California’s Reparations Process
Wednesday April 15, 2026 6:00pm - 7:00pm CEST
From Task Force to Implementation: Lessons from California’s Reparations Process

Date, Time, and Time Zone:
April 15, 2026, 10:00 AM – 11:00 AM (Pacific Time, UTC−7)


Sponsoring Organization(s):
Kamilah Moore (Independent Expert; Former Chair, California Reparations Task Force)


Language(s):
English


Description of the Side Event:
Situated within global efforts marking 25 years since the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action, this side event will examine California’s Reparations Task Force as a contemporary case study in the design and implementation of reparatory justice frameworks for people of African descent. The discussion will address institutional architecture, eligibility criteria, constitutional and legal viability, and intergenerational impacts, including for youth as rights-holders and agents of change. Drawing on both achievements and limitations, the session will generate implementation-oriented recommendations and identify replicable practices to inform States, international mechanisms, and the ongoing work of the Permanent Forum.


Location of the Side Event:

Virtual event. Registration required.


Register here:
https://gforms.app/r/Oz74Xzn


Join Zoom Meeting:

https://us06web.zoom.us/j/83288300790?pwd=SbzlSW1zvK9qUYBOj3ElHUNkkobjVT.1
Meeting ID: 832 8830 0790
Passcode: 892286


Email Address of Lead Organizer:
[email protected]



Wednesday April 15, 2026 6:00pm - 7:00pm CEST
Online

6:00pm CEST

Side event - Durban+25: Women and Youth of African Descent for Climate Justice and Global Solidarity
Wednesday April 15, 2026 6:00pm - 7:30pm CEST
Durban+25: Women and Youth of African Descent for Climate Justice and Global Solidarity

Date, Time and Time Zone: 15 April 2026, 6:00 PM - 7:30 PM (CET)

Location of the Side Event:
Maison Internationale des Associations, Geneva, Switzerland
Address : Rue des Savoises 151205 Genève

Sponsoring Organization(s) or Entity/ies:

- AstroNoir Ltd. (UK)
-Integrated Policy Research Institute (USA)
-CMCC Foundation (Italy)
-Jamaican Association of Switzerland (Switzerland) - tbc

Language(s) in Which the Side Event Will Be Held: English

Description of the Side Event

In the context of the 25th anniversary of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action, this side event will explore how education and ancestral knowledge systems can facilitate the transfer of climate-relevant knowledge, skills, and agency to women and youth of African descent. The discussion will highlight the intersections of racial inequality, gender disparities, and climate vulnerability, while showcasing youth leadership and community-based initiatives that integrate traditional knowledge with innovative solutions. It will also examine policy approaches and partnerships that strengthen local capacity, amplify agency, and advance inclusive climate action, environmental justice, and sustainable development.

Regitration link: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/durban25-women-and-youth-of-african-descent-for-climate-justice-tickets-1987036004178?aff=oddtdtcreator

Name and Email Address of the Lead Organiser (and Moderator) Name: Chaneil James, MSc.
Organisation: AstroNoir Ltd.
Email: [email protected]
Wednesday April 15, 2026 6:00pm - 7:30pm CEST

6:30pm CEST

Side event - Prophetic resistances: the advocacy of black christianities in the expansion of racial justice in african and afro-diasporic nations
Event Title: Prophetic resistances: the advocacy of black christianities in the expansion of racial justice in african and afro-diasporic nations.
Date and Time: Wednesday, April 15th | 6:30pm — 8pm
Sponsoring Organizations: Movimento Negro Evangélico do Brasil
Language(s): English and Portuguese
Location: Evangelical Lutheran Church of Geneva (ELCG)
Address: Rue Verdaine 20, 1204 Genève, Switzerland
Registration: https://forms.gle/se1Na7XphSBJMMR17
Format: Hybrid (The link will be sent by email up to one hour before the event to registered participants)
Event Description: 
Faith is also a field of struggle. This event hopes to explore the transformative role of Black Christianities as a catalyst for global racial justice. By working on the intersection of faith and political activism, we'll analyze how prophetic resistance serves as a vital tool in dismantling systemic inequality across Africa and the Afro-diaspora. Attendees will engage with the historical and contemporary advocacy strategies that continue to shape the fight for liberation.
More information: www.mnebrasil.org

 
Contact: 
Gabriela Leite
[email protected]
+55 24 988429962

Wednesday April 15, 2026 6:30pm - 8:00pm CEST
Evangelical Lutheran Church of Geneva (ELCG) Rue Verdaine 20, 1204 Genève, Switzerland

6:30pm CEST

Side event - Colonial Impunity on Trial: The Patrice Lumumba Case and the Quest for Justice for African Independence Leaders
Colonial Impunity on Trial: The Patrice Lumumba Case and the Quest for Justice for African Independence Leaders

Background
On 17 March 2026, the Pre-Trial Chamber of the Brussels Court of First Instance decided to refer Étienne Davignon to the criminal court in connection with the assassination of Patrice Lumumba, alongside Joseph Okito (President of the Senate) and Maurice Mpolo (Minister of Youth and Sports). This decision follows more than fifteen years of legal efforts led by the children and grandchildren of Patrice Lumumba in their pursuit of justice.

Patrice Lumumba, the first democratically elected Prime Minister of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), was executed in Katanga on 17 January 1961, a few months after the country’s independence from Belgium in June 1960. Following political tensions and international interferences, Lumumba was arrested, detained, and transferred to the secessionist province of Katanga, where he was assassinated alongside his companions.

For the first time in over six decades, individual criminal responsibility for this assassination may be examined before a court of law. This historic development challenges long-standing assumptions that colonial crimes cannot be prosecuted and signals a potential shift in addressing impunity for political crimes linked to colonization.

More than 60 years after his assassination, the Lumumba case remains of profound relevance not only for the Democratic Republic of Congo, but for broader discussions on justice, accountability, and the legacy of colonial violence across Africa. The targeted elimination of political leaders during and after independence has had lasting consequences on governance, stability, and development across the continent.

About the Event
Organized in the framework of the UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, this in-person side event seeks to bring the Lumumba case into an international space of discussion.

While the case has primarily unfolded within the Belgian political and judicial sphere, its implications extend far beyond national borders. By situating the Lumumba case within broader debates on political colonial crimes, accountability, and reparations, the event aims to contribute to its internationalization and to strengthen global engagement around the pursuit of justice.

The discussion will bring together members of the Lumumba family, legal representatives, international experts, and civil society actors to explore both the legal and political dimensions of this historic case.

Speakers
Panel discussion (120 min) followed by Q&A:

•Yema Lumumba, Granddaughter of Patrice Lumumba
•Jehosheba Bennett, Legal counsel to the Lumumba family (Jus Cogens)•Makmid Kamara, Founder & Director, Reforms Initiative
•Dr. Ibrahima Guissé, Expert, UN Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination (CERD) & African Union Committee of Experts on Reparations (AUCER)
•Geneviève Kaninda, Advocacy & Policy Officer, African Futures Lab (Moderator)

Practical Info
Date: 15 April 2026
Time: 6.30PM - 20.30 CEST
Location: The Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights - Rue de Lausanne 120B, Geneva
Link to register (mandatory) : https://forms.cloud.microsoft/e/Q7VWkkMx4p

Wednesday April 15, 2026 6:30pm - 8:30pm CEST
The Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Rue de Lausanne 120B, Geneva

6:30pm CEST

Side event - REPARATIONS IN A WORLD IN CRISIS: PERSPECTIVES FROM THE VOICES OF BLACK WOMEN
REPARATIONS IN A WORLD IN CRISIS: PERSPECTIVES FROM THE VOICES OF BLACK WOMEN

Date: Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Time: 6:30 pm - 8:30 pm Geneva time zone

Location: Geneva Centre for Security Policy. 5th Floor Conference Room
Maison de la paix, Chemin Eugene-Rigot 2D, P.O. Box 1295, 1211 Geneva 1, Switzerland

Organizing Organizations
-Association of Afro-Colombian Women - AMUAFROC (Colombia)
-Institute of Peoples, Territories and Pedagogies for Peace - IPTP (Canada/Colombia)
-Ife Cultural Library (Colombia)
-Dalhousie University (Canada)

Languages: English and Spanish

Objective:
-To strengthen the voices of Afro-descendant and African women in the global discourse and agenda on reparations.
-To provide recommendations led by Afro-descendant and African women on reparations processes that respond to the realities faced by our peoples in the context of the global crisis

Contact organization:
Shari Garcia (Association of Afro-Colombian Women AMUAFROC) [email protected] ; [email protected]



Wednesday April 15, 2026 6:30pm - 8:30pm CEST
Geneva Centre for Security Policy, 5th Floor Conference Room Maison de la paix, Chemin Eugene-Rigot 2D, P.O. Box 1295, 1211 Geneva 1, Switzerland

7:00pm CEST

Side event - Reparations as Personhood; From the DDPA to Baltimore City
Wednesday April 15, 2026 7:00pm - 9:00pm CEST
Side Event


Reparations as Personhood; From the DDPA to Baltimore City

Date: Wednesday, April 15, 2026 7:00-9:00pm

Co-Sponsors: Solitude International Consortium, Aging People in Prison Human Rights Campaign, Malcolm X Center for Self Determination, Women's Council, Geneva Graduate Institute Afrique and Feminist Collective, TAI (Teaching Artist Collective) SHEROES

Language: English

Description: This event brings together a film screening and panel discussion to examine the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action as a living framework for reparatory justice. The session will revisit the DDPA’s core principles, obligations, instruments, and its relevance today. Linking global commitments to local struggle through a screening of the documentary short, Pay Up, Get Out of the Way, the event will highlight evidence of government-sanctioned harm in Baltimore, a US city heavily targeted for racial repression. Panelists will discuss the idea of reparations as personhood and its implementation in reparative action and local, national, and international accountability.

Location: Geneva Graduate Institute (IHEID), Chem. Eugène-Rigot 2, 1202
Maison de la Paix, S12

 Lead Organizer: Tomiko Shine, [email protected]


Wednesday April 15, 2026 7:00pm - 9:00pm CEST
Geneva Graduate Institute (IHEID) Chem. Eugène-Rigot 2, 1202
 
Thursday, April 16
 

9:00am CEST

Side event - Anti-Racist Education on the Reparation Agenda: Transatlantic Dialogues
Title: Anti-Racist Education on the Reparation Agenda: Transatlantic Dialogues

Date: 16/04/2026 from 09:00 to 10:00 (CET)

Location: Palais des Nations, Room XI, building A

Organizer:
Action Aid Brazil (SETA project)

Language: english and portuguese

Description:
The panel aims to discuss different approaches to implementing anti-racist education in countries of the Global South and Africa. We understand education as a fundamental tool for the reparation of historically marginalized groups. However, anti-racist education must be contextualized and adapted to the specificities of these groups. Furthermore, it is necessary to consider appropriate methodologies with the intent of intervening in public policies for the effective implementation of an inclusive and egalitarian education. Thus, the panel proposes various debates on the theme to exchange successful experiences and problematize the possibilities for consolidating anti-racist education in the Global South and Africa.

Name and email address of the lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead
organizer’s contact details): Ana Paula Brandão - [email protected]
Thursday April 16, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CEST
Room XI, building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

9:00am CEST

Side event - Leveraging New Data to Understand Progress and Ongoing Barriers for Black Communities Globally: Education, Employment, Leadership, and Entrepreneurship
Title of the side event: Leveraging New Data to Understand Progress and Ongoing Barriers for Black Communities Globally: Education, Employment, Leadership, and Entrepreneurship


Date, time and time zone: April 16, 2026, 9:00-10:00 AM CET (if possible to do 9:00AM to 10:15AM we would be grateful)


Sponsoring organization/entity: The Diversity Institute and co-sponsored by the Government of Canada


Language in which the side event will be held: English


Location: Palais des Nations, room III, building A


Name and email address of the lead organizer (and permission to publish the lead organizer’s contact details): Nancy Mitchell, Diversity Institute, [email protected]


Description of the side event (100 words): 
The Diversity Institute, with Gaynel Curry and PFPAD, analyzed the intersectional representation of Black people in leadership roles across several countries in corporate and government sectors. Alongside this is the State of Black Economics Report 2026, exploring recent data on education, employment, leadership, and entrepreneurship for Black communities in Canada, with globally replicable models. Grounded in the ecological model, the session presents progress, gaps, and strategies for change.


Featuring:
  • Gaynel Curry, Vice Chair and Elected Chair - PFPAD 
  • Tamara Thermitus, Lawyer Emeritus 
  • Dr. Mohamed Elmi, Executive Director - DI
  • Nancy Mitchell, Director of Consulting - DI





Thursday April 16, 2026 9:00am - 10:00am CEST
Room III - Building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

12:45pm CEST

Side event - "Representation Matters: Afro-Swiss Communities Advancing the Durban Declaration"
Representation Matters: Afro-Swiss Communities Advancing the Durban Declaration 
The Durban Declaration and Plan of Action (DDPA) provides a global framework to combat racism, racial discrimination, xenophobia, and related intolerance. In Switzerland, awareness of UN anti-racism mechanisms and the DDPA remains limited. At the same time, a slowly growing number of Afro-Swiss individuals are entering political office and economic spaces, signaling progress but also highlighting the need for stronger representation.

Background 
Organizations including Phenomenal Women Global (PWG), the Fédération des Associations d'Afrodescendant.e.x.s et de Noir.e.x.s de Genève- FAANG (Federation of Afro-descendant and Black Associations of Geneva) and the Africa Professionals Network Switzerland are at the forefront of mobilizing communities. Together, they aim to build capacity among Afro-Swiss communities to transform local challenges—such as discrimination and employment inequalities—into global priorities through engagement with UN mechanisms and diplomatic channels.

This dialogue will also look at the critical dimension of women of African descent in general face compounded forms of discrimination, both racial and gender-based, in employment, leadership, and representation. Addressing these dynamics ensures that advocacy is inclusive and that women’s voices are central in shaping anti-racism and equality agendas.

Objectives
  • Awareness: Increase knowledge of UN mechanisms and the DDPA among Afro-Swiss communities. Learn how to use UN mechanisms and diplomatic engagement to transform local issues into global priorities.
  • Advocacy: Equip communities with tools to elevate national issues into global advocacy agendas.
  • Representation: Support and highlight Afro-Swiss participation in political , economic spaces, with attention to gender balance.
  • Dialogue: Foster collaboration between Afro-Swiss organizations, youth, women leaders, and international actors to advance anti-racism commitments.
  • Gender Inclusion: Ensure women’s perspectives and leadership are integrated into all discussions and outcomes.

Date and time: Thursday 16 April from 12:45 to 13:45

Location: Room XI, building A, Palais des Nations

Key Participants
  • Afro-Swiss community leaders
  • Youth representatives
  • Women leaders and advocates
  • Diplomatic missions in Switzerland
  • UN experts and representatives
  • Local Swiss leaders and policymakers

Organizers
  • Phenomenal Women Global (PWG)
  • African professionals Network Switzerland (APNS)
  • FAANG (Federation of Afro-descendant and Black Associations of Geneva) (FAANG)

Expected Outcomes
  • Enhanced awareness of UN anti-racism mechanisms and the DDPA.
  • A shared Outcome document on how to use to UN mechanisms and forums to address discrimination, employment inequalities, and gender dynamics.
  • Strengthened partnerships between Afro-Swiss communities, diplomatic missions, and UN experts.
  • Greater visibility of Afro-Swiss voices—especially women and youth—in global anti-racism dialogues.

Programme
Representation Matters: Afro-Swiss Communities Advancing the Durban Declaration
12:45- 12:50: Welcome and Opening
The moderator, H.E. Ambassador of Gambia, Prof. Muhammadou M.O. Kah, welcomes participants
-Brief overview of the webinar theme and objectives
-Introduction of organizers and speakers
-Introduction of the event and its objectives
12:50 to 1:00 United Nations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent, Martin Kimani
Overview of the Durban Declaration and Plan of Action (DDPA) and how to engage with UN racism mechanisms
13:00- 13:25 Panelist Discussion
-Liza Sekaggya Human Rights Officer, OHCHR, President of PWG 5 min
Ahmed Jama Municipal Councillor 5 min
-Laurent Jimaja Administrative Councillor (Mayor) 5 min
-Maître Ndaté DIENG  Lawyer, Advocate 5 min
-Candace Nkoth Bisseckn President, African Professionals Network Switzerland (APNS) 5 min
13:25- 13:40: Interactive Question & Answer Session
Participants engage with speakers and panelists through chat or live participation
13:40- 13:45: Closing Remarks by H.E. Ambassador of Gambia, Prof. Muhammadou M.O. Kah
Moderator summarizes major insights from the keynote and panel discussion
Final reflections and appreciation of speakers and participants
13:45-14:45
Food and Cocktail hour

Thursday April 16, 2026 12:45pm - 1:45pm CEST
Room XI, building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

12:45pm CEST

Side event - Discussing the Recognition of African Descent Communities as Peoples of African Descent
Discussing the Recognition of African Descent Communities as Peoples of African Descent

Date: 16 April 2026

Time: 12:45 - 13:45

Duration: 1 hour


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

OrganizersCONAQ (Coordenação Nacional de Articulação das Comunidades Negras Rurais Quilombolas)

Proposed institutional invitees and partnersMembers of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent; Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR); interested Member States engaged in the negotiations toward the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of People of African Descent; representatives of academia; civil society organizations and community leaders.

Background and rationaleAcross the Americas and in other regions, many communities of African descent continue to preserve collective ways of life, territorial bonds, cultural practices, systems of knowledge, and forms of social and political organization that are central to their identity and survival. Yet, despite their historical continuity and collective existence, these communities have not always been adequately recognized within international normative and political frameworks in ways that fully reflect their rights, agency, and specific realities.

The ongoing negotiations toward a future United Nations Declaration on the Rights of People of African Descent offer a timely opportunity to reflect more deeply on the recognition of African descent communities as peoples of African descent. This discussion is not merely terminological. It has important implications for how international law, multilateral institutions, and public policies understand collective identity, land rights, traditional knowledge, cultural heritage, consultation, participation, and self-organization.

This proposed side event seeks to create a space for dialogue among Member States, civil society representatives, community leadership and academia on the importance of recognizing African descent communities as peoples of African descent. In doing so, it aims to contribute to ongoing multilateral discussions by highlighting the political, legal, historical and practical significance of such recognition.

The discussion will be particularly relevant in light of international standards that affirm that people of African descent, whether dispersed among the broader population or living in communities, are entitled to exercise specific rights without discrimination, including rights related to lands traditionally occupied by them, natural resources where their ways of life are linked to such resources, cultural identity, forms of organization, traditional knowledge, cultural and artistic heritage, and prior consultation in decisions that may affect their rights.

At a time when global debates on equality, reparatory justice, and collective rights are gaining renewed relevance, this event intends to help advance a more nuanced and substantive understanding of the place of African descent communities within the broader international agenda concerning the rights of people of African descent.

ObjectivesThis side event has four interrelated objectives.

-First, to promote reflection on the importance of recognizing African descent communities as peoples of African descent within ongoing multilateral and normative discussions.

-Second, to examine the legal, political and historical implications of such recognition, particularly in relation to collective rights, identity, territory, cultural heritage, traditional knowledge and consultation.

-Third, to contribute to the ongoing negotiations toward the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of People of African Descent by fostering exchange among States, civil society and academia.

-Fourth, to strengthen dialogue on how international standards and multilateral spaces can more effectively reflect the lived realities, historical experiences and collective rights of African descent communities.

Guiding questionsWhat is at stake in recognizing African descent communities as peoples of African descent?

How does this recognition relate to existing international standards on collective rights, cultural identity, land, consultation and traditional knowledge?

What are the legal and political implications of this discussion in the context of the negotiations toward the future United Nations Declaration on the Rights of People of African Descent?

How can Member States, civil society and academic actors contribute to a more robust and inclusive understanding of the rights of African descent communities?

What would a more meaningful international recognition of African descent communities require in normative and institutional terms?

Proposed formatThe event is envisioned as a 60-minute strategic dialogue, combining normative reflection, community-based perspectives and multilateral exchange.

A possible structure could be as follows:

Opening remarks
Introductory reflections on the significance of the topic and its relevance to the current work of the Permanent Forum and to the ongoing negotiations on the draft Declaration.

Panel discussion
A moderated conversation among representatives of Member States, civil society, community leadership and academia on the importance of recognizing African descent communities as peoples of African descent, with attention to legal implications, collective rights, and current political debates.

Interactive exchange
Questions, comments and contributions from participants.

Closing remarks
Summary of key reflections and possible pathways for continued engagement in the negotiations and related multilateral discussions.

Expected outcomesThe event is expected to contribute to:

A stronger shared understanding of the importance of recognizing African descent communities as peoples of African descent within international normative and political processes.

Greater visibility for the connections between collective rights, racial justice, cultural identity, land, traditional knowledge and consultation in the context of African descent communities.

Enhanced dialogue among Member States, United Nations representatives, civil society, academia and community leadership on this issue within the framework of the ongoing draft Declaration negotiations.

A more grounded and substantive contribution to international discussions on the rights of people of African descent, particularly with respect to communities whose collective existence and historical experience require more explicit recognition.

Relevance to the Permanent ForumThis event is aligned with the mandate and broader objectives of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent insofar as it promotes dialogue, strengthens participation and advances reflection on the international protection of the rights of people of African descent. It also directly relates to ongoing efforts to deepen the normative content of international standards applicable to people of African descent and to ensure that such standards adequately reflect the realities of communities organized around shared history, territory, culture and collective forms of life.

By focusing on the recognition of African descent communities as peoples of African descent, the event seeks to contribute to a more robust conversation on rights, dignity, historical justice and international recognition within contemporary multilateral processes.

Draft short description for circulationThis side event will bring together Member States, civil society representatives, community leaders and academia to discuss the importance of
Thursday April 16, 2026 12:45pm - 1:45pm CEST
Room III - Building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

2:00pm CEST

Side event - Advancing Reparatory Justice: From the Ghana Resolution to Global Action


SIDE EVENT PROPOSAL
Advancing Reparatory Justice: From the Ghana Resolution to Global Action

Date and time:
16 April 2026, from 14:00 to 15:00 Geneva time

Sponsoring Organizations or entities:
Peregum Black Reference Institute, General Coordination of Memory and Truth on Slavery and the Transatlantic Trafficking of Enslaved People of the Ministry of Human Rights and Citizenship (Brazil) and UN Anti-Racism Coalition (UNARC)

Moderator: Sara Branco, International Advocacy Coordinator at Peregum Black Reference Institute

Panelists:
● Bell Ribeiro-Addy, Labour Member of UK Parliament for Clapham and Brixton Hill
● Claudia Trindade, Special Advisor for Diversity and Inclusion at the Office of the Attorney General of Brazil (AGU)
● Shari García, International Project Manager at Afro Colombian Women Association (AMUAFROC)
● Gabriella Nuru, cofounder of the Collective Uhuru Valência

Simultaneous translation to English, Portuguese and Spanish will be provided(*)* Those who need translation, please make sure to bring your ownc cellphone and headphones.

Language in which the side event will be held: Portuguese and English 
*simultaneous translation will be provided 

Description:
This side event will examine growing global momentum for reparatory justice following the Ghana-led UN General Assembly resolution recognizing transatlantic enslavement as a crime against humanity and calling for reparations. Grounded in the International Decade for People of African Descent, the AU Decade of Reparations, and the Permanent Forum’s mandate, it will explore pathways such as restitution, institutional reform, and guarantees of non-repetition. Bringing together civil society, policymakers, and experts from Africa and the diaspora, the session aims to generate actionable recommendations, strengthen accountability, and center Afro-descendant voices in global decision-making.

Registration link: https://forms.gle/3VcevoUuQkbbJRjPA

Location:
Conference room at ISHR (International Service for Human Rights), Geneva
Address: Rue de Varembé 1, 5th floor, Geneva, Switzerland

Name and email of the person responsible for organizing the event:
Sara Branco
[email protected]



Thursday April 16, 2026 2:00pm - 3:00pm CEST
International Service for Human Rights (ISHR) Rue de Varembé 1, 5th floor, Geneva, Switzerland

2:00pm CEST

Side event - Fiscal Policy, Law and Restorative Justice: Lessons 25 Years after the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action
Thursday April 16, 2026 2:00pm - 3:00pm CEST
Title: Fiscal Policy, Law and Restorative Justice: Lessons 25 Years after the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action


Date: Thursday, April 16, 2026 at 14:00 p.m. – 15:00 p.m. (Geneva Time – CET)


Organizers/Sponsors: Instituto Luiz Gama


Language: Brazilian Portuguese, English


Description: The event will discuss lessons accumulated 25 years after the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action, focusing on the role of fiscal policies in promoting rights and restorative justice. State strategies for addressing structural inequalities affecting people of African descent will be analyzed, including public financing, economic inclusion, and the valorization of cultural heritage. The debate will also address the role of youth as agents of transformation and the institutional challenges to consolidating effective policies for the promotion of equality and human rights.

Modality: Online

Link to online event: https://us06web.zoom.us/j/88994054745


Keynote Speakers: Renato Aparecido Gomes – President, Luiz Gama Institute; Waleska Miguel Baptista – PUCCAMP; Camilo Onoda Caldas - EPD/Universidade São Judas Tadeu (USJT).


Name and email of organizer: Camilo Onoda Caldas – [email protected]
Organizers/Sponsors: Instituto Luiz Gama
Language: Brazilian Portuguese, English

Thursday April 16, 2026 2:00pm - 3:00pm CEST
Online

2:00pm CEST

Side event - Policy Commitments, Accountability Gaps, and the Future of Global Solidarity with People of African Descent: 25 Years After the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action
Side event 

Policy Commitments, Accountability Gaps, and the Future of Global Solidarity with People of African Descent: 25 Years After the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action

Sponsoring OrganizationBlack Canadian Civil Society Coalition (BCCSC) and Amnesty International Canada

Date, time and time zone:Thu 16 April, 2026 ~2:00 - 3:00 pm~, CET  

Language:  English and French Translation

Location: Room III, building A, Palais des Nations 

BackgroundTwenty-five years after the adoption of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action (DDPA), this side event brings together civil society leaders, academics, policymakers, and UN stakeholders to assess progress, identify accountability gaps, and shape the future of global anti-racism efforts. Discussion will examine what states have implemented, why key commitments remain unfulfilled, and what monitoring mechanisms are needed. With a focus on civil society and Black diaspora perspectives, the event will contribute policy recommendations to the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent and explore pathways for international solidarity under the Second International Decade for People of African Descent (2025–2034).

Objectives
- Assess progress made by states in implementing the DDPA.
- Identify accountability gaps in implementation.
- Highlight the role of civil society in advancing the rights of people of African descent.
- Develop policy recommendations for the UN Permanent Forum.

Panel Speakers
- Dr. June Soomer, UN Human Rights expert and member of the Permanent Forum on People of African Descent
- Hodan Ahmed, Co-Founder and Chairwoman BCCSC: African diaspora civil society leader
- TBC,  Academic expert on Durban Declaration implementation
- Ketty Nivyanbandi,  Secretary General, Amnesty International Canada: Representative from a national human rights institution
- TBC, Youth or community advocate from the diaspora

Panel Moderator 
Lerato Chondoma, Director BCCSC 

Contact person: Hodan Ahmed
Email: [email protected]





Thursday April 16, 2026 2:00pm - 3:00pm CEST
Room III - Building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

2:00pm CEST

Side event - Strengthening the Rights of Afro-Descendant Youth: Innovation in Public Policies and South–South Cooperation

Strengthening the Rights of Afro-Descendant Youth: Innovation in Public Policies and South–South Cooperation


The Black Youth Alive Plan and the Amefrican Pathways Program


Context
Populations of African descent in different regions of the world continue to be deeply impacted by structural inequalities rooted in the historical legacies of slavery and colonialism, continuously reproduced by structural and systemic racism. Although peoples of African descent are diverse in their histories, identities, and cultural expressions, common challenges persist related to socioeconomic inequality, racial violence, discrimination, and barriers to the full exercise of human rights.

It is estimated that approximately 200 million people of African descent live in the Americas, in addition to millions in other regions of the world. In many countries, ethnic-racial diversity has historically been addressed through discriminatory structures that have produced deep inequalities and asymmetric power relations. In this context, recognizing racism as a global challenge requires strengthening international cooperation initiatives and exchange among countries and communities of the African diaspora.

Promoting the rights of people of African descent also requires recognizing and valuing their histories, cultures, and memories, as well as confronting discriminatory narratives that have historically marginalized these populations. It also implies advancing agendas of reparatory justice in relation to the legacies of slavery, the transatlantic trafficking of enslaved Africans, colonialism, apartheid, and racial violence.

Brazil’s Public Policies for Afro-Descendant Youth

In Brazil, a country that hosts the largest Afro-descendant population outside the African continent, confronting structural racism and promoting racial equality are central priorities of public policy. The Ministry of Racial Equality (MIR) was established by Decree No. 11,346 of January 1, 2023, with the mission of promoting policies aimed at overcoming racial inequalities and confronting racism.

Among its responsibilities is the formulation and coordination of cross-cutting public policies focused on promoting the rights and dignity of the Black population, quilombola communities, traditional peoples and communities of African descent, and the Roma people.

In this context, the Federal Government instituted the Black Youth Alive Plan, the most comprehensive Brazilian public policy specifically aimed at protecting Afro-Descendent youth. The plan was coordinated by the Ministry of Racial Equality and the General Secretariat of the Presidency of the Republic, in articulation with 16 other ministries, and was established by Decree No. 11,956 of March 21, 2024.

The Black Youth Alive Plan aims to reduce lethal violence and address the structural vulnerabilities that affect Afro-Descendent youth in Brazil through the implementation of intersectoral public policies. Its formulation resulted from a national participatory process that included consultations with approximately 6,000 Black young people, carried out through Participatory Caravans in all Brazilian states and in the Federal District.

The Plan is structured around 11 strategic axes, brings together 217 governmental actions, establishes 43 specific goals, and has a 12-year implementation horizon. The initiative represents a political commitment by the Brazilian State to protect life, expand opportunities, and promote citizenship for Afro-Descendant youth.

Amefrican Pathways: International Cooperation and Anti-Racist Education
Among the initiatives foreseen within the Black Youth Alive Plan, the Amefrican Pathways Program stands out. This action is aimed at strengthening anti-racist education and promoting international cooperation among countries of the African diaspora.

The program was established by Interministerial Ordinance No. 233 of July 31, 2023, and is implemented through a partnership among:

• Ministry of Racial Equality• Ministry of Education• Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Education Personnel (CAPES)
• Brazilian Service of Support for Micro and Small Enterprises (SEBRAE)
• Federal University of Maranhão (UFMA)
• Latin American Council of Social Sciences (CLACSO)

The Amefrican Pathways Program promotes short-term international academic exchanges, focusing on cooperation between Brazil and countries in Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. The initiative directly contributes to the implementation of Law No. 10,639/2003, which made the teaching of African and Afro-Brazilian history and culture mandatory in Brazilian schools.

Through academic exchanges and knowledge circulation, the program strengthens international research, education, and public policy networks aimed at confronting racism.

The program carries out four annual editions:

• tree international editions held in partner countries
• one edition held in Brazil

Each international edition brings together 50 Brazilian participants, including Black students from teacher training courses at public higher education institutions and basic education teachers. The edition held in Brazil brings together 13 participants from each partner country, including students, professors, public managers, and representatives of social movements.

To date, the program has carried out eight editions in countries such as Mozambique, Colombia, Cape Verde, Peru, Angola, and the Dominican Republic, in addition to two editions held in Brazil.

Relevance for the United Nations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent
This side event takes place at a strategic moment for the international racial equality agenda, marked by two important global milestones:

• the 25th anniversary of the Durban Declaration and Programme of Action
• the beginning of the Second International Decade for People of African Descent (2025–2034)

In this context, the event seeks to share concrete experiences developed by Brazil to promote the rights of Afro-descendant populations, especially youth. The articulation between the Black Youth Alive Plan and the Amefrican Pathways Program demonstrates how national public policies and international cooperation initiatives can act complementarily in confronting structural racism and promoting opportunities for Afro-descendant youth.

Event Objective
To present and discuss Brazilian initiatives aimed at promoting the rights of Afro-descendant youth, highlighting the Black Youth Alive Plan and the Amefrican Pathways Program as examples of public policies and international cooperation focused on confronting structural racism.

Expected Outcomes
The event seeks to:
• share the Brazilian experience in formulating public policies aimed at Afro-Descendant youth;
• strengthen dialogue among countries of the African diaspora;
• promote the exchange of good practices and innovations in public policies;
• expand international cooperation aimed at confronting racism;
• contribute to advancing the global agenda for racial justice and sustainable development.
Thursday April 16, 2026 2:00pm - 3:00pm CEST
Room XI, building A, Palais des Nations 8, Av. de la Paix 14, 1202 Genève

6:00pm CEST

Side event - RootsSynergy UbuntuConnected Roundtable: “From Declarations On Reparatory Justice to Actions & Accountability: The role of the Pan African Diaspora in Europe involvement.”
ROOTSSYNERGY UBUNTUCONNECTED ROUNDTABLE
From Declarations to Actions & Accountability

Side Event to the 5th Session of the UN Permanent Forum on People of African Descent

📅 DATE: 16 April 2026

TIME: Doors open 6pm

📍 PLACE: Maison des associations, Geneva

Organized by: Europe Pan-African Forum for People of African Descent (EPAF-PAD) and the AUADS African Union African Diaspora Sixth Region High CouncilCo-organized with: Platform of the Dutch Slavery Past / NARECO (NL) · Tiye International · People of African Descent Belgium Observatory · PARCOE · Stop the Maangamizi Campaign · The African Diaspora Union · The Kingdom of Kush · DurbanPlus 25 Coalition · CRAN · UPAF.CH

CONTEXT
On 25 March 2026, the United Nations General Assembly adopted Resolution A/80/L.48 — Declaration of the Trafficking of Enslaved Africans and Racialized Chattel Enslavement of Africans as the Gravest Crime Against Humanity — spearheaded by Ghana on behalf of the 54-member African Group. The Resolution passed by 123 votes in favour, 3 against, and 52 abstentions. It is a significant political and declaratory advance: it names the trafficking of enslaved Africans and racialized chattel enslavement as the gravest crime against humanity, invokes existing international legal frameworks including the principle that these crimes are not subject to statutory limitations, and creates a formal political record that States can be held to in subsequent advocacy, diplomatic and legal processes.

However, every major European perpetrating State abstained. The effective implementation of this Resolution in Europe requires the full recognition of African Diaspora communities already organizing within the perpetrating States — constitutionally recognized as Africa’s Sixth Region under the AU Constitutive Act (Article 3(q), 2003), present in the communities, grassroots organizations, civil society networks, social movements and scholar-activist spaces, as well as the parliaments, courts and media of the States that bear the greatest obligation for reparatory justice, and uniquely positioned to conduct the organizing, advocacy and conscientization work within the perpetrating States that cannot be done from outside their borders. That role cannot be assumed, substituted or overlooked in any process that follows this Resolution.

This Roundtable convenes African Diaspora organizations and their partners in Europe to move beyond recognition and into strategy — to examine what the Resolution opens, what it leaves unaddressed, and what the organized African Diaspora in Europe must now build and consolidate to ensure that declarations become actions and accountability.

OBJECTIVES
•To assess the impact and implications of Resolution A/80/L.48 from the specific standpoint of African Diaspora communities in Europe, as part of Africa's Sixth Region organizing within the perpetrating States.
•To examine the concrete strategies available to the organized African Diaspora in Europe for the period following the Resolution’s adoption — in parliaments, courts, media, institutions, and community spaces.
•To advance the operationalization of the African Union’s Sixth Region architecture, insisting that every process following this Resolution centres African Diaspora communities as genuine agents and co-architects of reparatory frameworks.
• To strengthen partnerships, align programmes, and build shared capacity among African Diaspora organizations and their allies across Europe for the sustained advocacy ahead.

DIALOGUE TOPICS
1. The importance of the involvement of the African Union Sixth Region Diaspora in Europe — asserting rights already enshrined in AU law, demanding the operationalization of the Sixth Region Diaspora Advisory Board, and ensuring that the African Diaspora in Europe is recognized not as a peripheral constituency but as the vanguard political force already present and organizing within the perpetrating States.
2. Impact of Resolution A/80/L.48: where do we go from here in Europe? — examining what the Resolution’s legal architecture opens, what its gaps and silences require of us, and what the concrete advocacy, legal and political strategies are for African Diaspora organizations in Europe in the period ahead.
3. Strengthening voices and building partnerships for reparatory justice — deepening collaboration across European African Diaspora organizations, aligning on shared frameworks and demands, and building the political infrastructure required to hold perpetrating States accountable.

Thursday April 16, 2026 6:00pm - 7:30pm CEST
Maison Internationale des Associations Rue des Savoises 15 - 1205 Genève

6:30pm CEST

Side event - Durban 25 años después: desafíos para la reparación y propuestas de acción / Durban 25 years later: challenges for reparations and proposals for action
Thursday April 16, 2026 6:30pm - 7:30pm CEST
Título: “Durban 25 años después: desafíos para la reparación y propuestas de acción”

“Durban 25 years later: challenges for reparations and proposals for action”
o Fecha, hora: Jueves 16 de abril, 18:30 hrs (Hora de Ginebra)

o Organización(es) o entidad(es) patrocinadora(s):
  • Asociación Cubana de Naciones Unidas (Cuban United Nations Association)
  • Unión de Escritores y Artistas de Cuba
  • National Union of Jurists of Cuba, The
(all organizations in consultative status to Ecosoc)

With the co-sponsorship of the NGOs: Afrodescendents Neighborhood Network, Coordinación Afrofeminista, afrolatina y de la diáspora, Centro Memorial Marthin Luther King Jr, & Karibuni

o Idioma(s): Español e inglés

o Descripción del evento paralelo:
La visión de representantes de ONGs, actores sociales y defensores de Derechos Humanos, de América Latina, Europa y EE.UU. (quienes serán los panelistas) sobre la significación histórica y la vigencia del Programa y la Declaración de Durban en la lucha contra el racismo y la discriminación racial en todo el mundo, los avances alcanzados y principalmente los desafíos que aun se enfrentan para la reparación desde el punto de vista social. Se enfatizará en propuestas para la acción, la concertación y la creación de sinergias a nivel internacional. (88 palabras)
o Lugar del evento paralelo: Universidad de Ginebra (local exacto por definir en los próximos días)

o Nombre y dirección de correo electrónico de la persona organizadora principal:  Ms. Norma Goicochea Estenoz, Presidenta de la Asociación Cubana de las Naciones Unidas, [email protected]

Thursday April 16, 2026 6:30pm - 7:30pm CEST
Universidad de Ginebra

6:30pm CEST

Side event - Birth Justice for Women of African Descent: Listen to Me Film & Panel
Thursday April 16, 2026 6:30pm - 8:30pm CEST
Side event title: Birth Justice for Women of African Descent: Listen to Me Film & Panel

Date, time and time zone: Thursday, April 16th at 6:30PM CET

Location: Geneva Graduate Institute (IHEID), Chem. Eugène-Rigot 2, 1202

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies: Solitude International Consortium, Aging People in Prison Human Rights Campaign, Geneva Graduate Institute Afrique Students Association and Feminist Collective, Women’s Council, Teaching Artist Institute / TAI-SHEROES

Language: English

Description: Listen to Me is a documentary co-directed by Stephanie Etienne and Kanika Harris. Listen to Me is the story of three women who stand on the front lines of the maternal health struggle while walking the delicate tightrope of racism and birth in the United States. The film explores the realities of birth, care and community through the lived experiences of Black women.

Listen to Me is a powerful call to break generational silence and center the voices of Black women. Through a lifecourse lens, the film reveals that true maternal health begins with how we protect, listen to and honor Black women and girls long before they ever become pregnant. Listen to Me challenges us to shift the narrative from crisis response to generational care and to reimagine maternal health as a continuum of justice, healing and radical listening.

Lead Organizer: Tomiko Shine, [email protected]

Weblink: www. listentomedoc.com



Thursday April 16, 2026 6:30pm - 8:30pm CEST

6:30pm CEST

Side event - Centering Healing Across Global Africa
Side event

Centering Healing Across Global Africa

Date, time and time zone of side event: April 16 6:30-8:30 (GMT)

Sponsoring organization(s) or entity/ies: The Global Circle for Reparations and Healingo

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

Description of the side event: The Global Circle for Reparations and Healing (GCRH) will host a side event during the 5th Annual United Nations Permanent Forum on People of African Descent (PFPAD) to convene Global African leaders participating in the Forum and advance our collective healing and collective repair. Rooted in the 2025 Accra Summit II theme, Centering Healing Across Global Africa, this event strengthens the Global Circle’s focus on internal repair and building sustainable healing infrastructure across Global Africa.o Location of the side event (or website for registration, for events held online).

Location: Geneva International Conference Center
Rue de Varembé 17, 1211 Genève, Switzerland

Name and email address of the lead organizer
● Elisa Walker – Partner, FirstRepair [email protected]
● Dr. Joy DeGruy – Co-Convenor, Healing Working Group
● Robin Rue Simmons – Co-Convenor, Partnerships & Movement Building Working Group

Weblink for any further information: The Global Circle for Reparations and Healing (GCRH): Centering Healing Across Global Africa
Thursday April 16, 2026 6:30pm - 8:30pm CEST
Geneva International Conference Center Rue de Varembé 17, 1211 Genève, Switzerland

7:00pm CEST

Side event - Tomorrow’s Trailblazers: Youth Leadership Across the UK’s African Diaspora
Thursday April 16, 2026 7:00pm - 8:00pm CEST
Side event
Tomorrow’s Trailblazers: Youth Leadership Across the UK’s African Diaspora


Details: Thursday 16 April, 6-7PM BST

Sponsoring Organisation: The Africa Centre, London, United Kingdom

Language(s): English

Description of the side event: 
Inspired by the Young Africa Centre’s (YAC) programme Generation 54: Tomorrow’s Trailblazers, this webinar showcases how youth of African descent in the UK’s capital are emerging as active drivers of social change and innovation. Featuring collaborators of YAC, including Bounce Black, Blacklisted Bookclub, Yendy Skin, Voicing Voices, and Congolese Connect, the event will explore how youth-led, community-rooted platforms foster social mobility, leadership, and wealth creation. Attendees will gain insight into scalable, youth-led approaches that address structural barriers in education and civic participation while advancing inclusive development and global solidarity.

Location of side event: Zoom Meeting https://us06web.zoom.us/j/83516945341

Name and email address of lead organiser: Catherine Nyaumwe Munyarari <[email protected]>

Links: 

https://www.africacentre.org.uk

https://www.africacentre.org.uk/young-africa-centre

https://bounceblack.org

https://www.instagram.com/blacklistedbookclub/

https://yendyskin.com/

https://www.voicingvoices.com

https://www.instagram.com/congoleseroots/


Thursday April 16, 2026 7:00pm - 8:00pm CEST
Online

7:00pm CEST

Side event - Justice réparatrice, restitution et jeunesse haïtienne : repenser les héritages historiques et les transformations contemporaines
Thursday April 16, 2026 7:00pm - 9:00pm CEST
Evénement parallèle

Justice réparatrice, restitution et jeunesse haïtienne : repenser les héritages historiques et les transformations contemporaines

Date : Jeudi 16 avril 2026

Heure : 19h00 (Genève, CEST) | 13h00 (New York, Montréal, Port-au-Prince)

Co-organisateurs : GRAHN-Monde (Groupe de Réflexion et d’Action pour une Haïti Nouvelle), Kolektif Ayisyen AfwoDesandan (KAAD)

Langue : Français (avec possibilité d’échanges en anglais)

Description : Cet événement parallèle explorera les liens entre justice réparatrice, restitution historique et dynamiques contemporaines en Haïti. Il examinera la restitution de la rançon de l’indépendance imposée à Haïti en 1825, ainsi que les effets durables des injustices historiques et des inégalités structurelles. Une attention particulière sera accordée à la jeunesse haïtienne, en Haïti et dans la diaspora, en tant qu’actrice clé de transformation. La discussion contribuera aux réflexions internationales sur la justice réparatrice, la gouvernance inclusive et la promotion des droits des personnes d’ascendance africaine.

Lieu :
Université de Genève, UNI MAIL (Salle MS 160), 40 Boulevard du Pont-d’Arve, 1205 Genève, Suisse
Participation en ligne (Zoom) : https://us06web.zoom.us/j/81705565772?pwd=SY8Z678ZezcOu6geJUdgSpDDEvpBZ5.1
ID de réunion : 817 0556 5772 Code secret : 503053

Intervenants:

- Dr Jacques Nési
Docteur en science politique, membre du Conseil national haïtien pour la restitution et la réparation
Sujet : Restitution de la rançon de l’indépendance imposée à Haïti en 1825 à travers le financement de projets structurants au profit de la nation haïtienne

-Monique Clesca
Ancienne fonctionnaire des Nations Unies, porte-parole du Kolektif Ayisyen AfwoDesandan (KAAD)
Sujet : Crise haïtienne : injustices historiques, inégalités structurelles et rôle transformateur de la jeunesse dans une perspective de justice réparatrice

Durée : 2 heures
Admission : Libre

Organisateur principal : Dodly Alexandre, [email protected]

Sites web : www.grahn-monde.org, www.grahn-swiss.org, www.kaadayiti.org
Thursday April 16, 2026 7:00pm - 9:00pm CEST
Université de Genève, UNI MAIL 40 Boulevard du Pont-d’Arve
 
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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