Skip to main content Skip to footer

Community work

Co-Design a Human Rights Solution with BIHR

In 2021-22, we ran a pilot programme where we worked with different communities to come up with a human rights solution to an issue they face everyday. Together with four partner organisations from different sectors and locations across the UK, we created four final resources which are available below.

Following the success of the pilot, BIHR has received funding from the Baring Foundation to continue providing co-design support to community groups across the UK. In 2023, we partnered with six organisations. Applications to work with BIHR to co-design a human rights solution in 2024 will be open soon - register for our launch event on 22 May to be the first to hear about it!

Event - 22 May: Supporting Community Groups to use a Human Rights-Based Approach

BIHR is inviting community groups across the UK to join us at an interactive online workshop, as part of our Community Programme 2022-2025.

At this event, you will have the opportunity to:

  • Learn about BIHR’s previous work to co-design support solutions with 10 vibrant and varied organisations;
  • Hear directly from community groups about how they are taking a human rights-based approach to tackling specific issues affecting migrants, disabled people, people experiencing poverty, minoritized communities, and more.
  • Be the first to find out about BIHR’s 2024 cycle of co-designing a support solution! We have 4 spaces on this year’s co-design programme. On this event, we’ll tell you how the programme will work and how you can apply on behalf of your community group.

How we made the solutions

In 2021, BIHR began a new approach to working with communities with the launch of the  "Co-design a human rights support “solution” with BIHR" programme.

This programme seeks to support community groups and voluntary groups to find human rights “solutions” to problems or issues they face. We worked with a small number of partners as a pilot project and are now developing our long-term offer to community groups. Our support is intended to enable groups to address the day-to-day issues where rights are risked, creating positive change within imperfect systems.

Co-design is at the core of this project. Our approach to co-design used a four-stage process to ensure that the views and opinions of our partners and the eventual end “users” of the solution were central to the development.

Stage 1: Discover

We host a workshop with community, campaigning and advocacy organisations across the UK who are interested in working with BIHR longer-term to support their human rights advocacy.

Previous sessions have been so valuable for BIHR as a human rights charity, and feedback told us the attendees also found it very helpful to have these conversations and build relationships.

Following the workshop, we open applications and then use criteria to score each application and choose the top-scoring organisations to partner with. We have heard from so many fantastic organisations who wanted to work with us on this project.

Stage 2: Define 

Selected partners are then invited to a "Define" workshop to further define their ideas for human rights support "solutions".

Each organisation then works with a staff member to co-develop plans about what the "solution" will be and how we will work together.

Stage 3: Develop

We then work with the partner organisations to map, develop and test their human rights "solutions", ensuring that this will effectively support them with the issue they are facing.

Stage 4: Deliver

The final step is to publish and share the finished tools! Previously this has taken place on Human Rights Day at an event in the House of Lords.

Want to find out more about our co-design project for working with community groups? Contact the project lead, Annie Smith on anniesmith@bihr.org.uk.

Our partners

Everyone at BIHR would like to say a massive thank you to our core funders, the Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust, the Tudor Trust and the Bromley Trust, for making it possible for us to explore our work with communities and co-design support solutions that mean we can all make change through human rights, together.

Following the success of our pilot programme, our work with communities continues through our 2022-2025 programme, kindly funded through the Baring Foundation.

And thank you to the ten partner organisations we have worked with since 2021!

Stay up-to-date

Get our newsletter

Get monthly updates on UK human rights law and our work, resources and events sent straight to your inbox.