Working Groups ENNHRI has established numerous forms of cooperation, including working groups or thematic clusters. These are composed and led by ENNHRI members, and partially supported by ENNHRI Secretariat.
Legal Working Group The Legal WG gathers ENNHRI members' legal experts and officers which are presided by a chair. The Group has worked on issues of enhancing European fundamental and
human rights regimes. This included the implementation of the
European Convention on Human Rights and execution of judgments from the
European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), the
EU accession to the European Convention of Human Rights and implementation of the
EU Charter of Fundamental Rights. Through the Legal WG, ENNHRI enjoys observer status at the Steering Committee for Human Rights (CDDH)
Council of Europe and its subordinate bodies.
Asylum and Migration Working Group The Asylum and Migration Working Group (A&M WG) was officially set up in January 2007. The issue of detention of the asylum seekers and irregular
migrants in
Europe was discussed during its resurrection meeting in December 2013. The statement produced during this meeting was presented in September 2014 during the first
Council of Europe,
European Union Agency for Fundamental Rights and
Equinet Platform meeting on Asylum and Migration. The group has been carefully following the situation of migrants and refugees in Mediterranean Sea since the
Lampedusa tragedy and addressed this issue through statements including latest from April 2015. Other topics addressed by the A&M WG include calling upon the EU Institutions to take urgent action regarding the Syrian refugee crisis, in particular the immediate application of the EU Directive on Temporary Protection and a statement on statelessness to the Human Rights Commissioner of Council of Europe during the Global Forum on Statelessness in September 2014.
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) Working Group The CRPD Working Group (CRPD WG) was set up in 2010 and it is composed of European NHRIs that act as an independent mechanism under article 33.2 of the
UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD). CRPD WG has been engaging with other relevant stakeholders in the field of rights of disabilities such as the UN Committee on Rights of Persons with Disabilities which wish to include NHRIs into development of General Comment on article 33.2. Moreover, CRPD WG participated in the annual
European Commission Work Forum on UNCRPD in 2014. The CRPD WG met twice in 2014 and discussed article 33.2 monitoring activities of the members, updates on situation in the field of rights of persons with disabilities in
EU,
Council of Europe and
UN and reviewed disability
case law of the
ECtHR and
Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU). The CRPD WG focuses on issues of forced treatment and deprivation of liberty in respect of person with psycho-social disabilities and in 2014 submitted comments on the Additional Protocol to the Oviedo Convention relating to the 'protection of the human rights and dignity of persons with mental disorders with regard to involuntary placement and treatment'.
Projects NHRI Academy The NHRI Academy is a joint project between ENNHRI and
OSCE-
ODIHR. The inaugural Academy took place in 2014 in
Budapest,
Hungary in cooperation with
Central European University and the second NHRI Academy took place in Warsaw, Poland. The NHRI Academy brings together mid-level and senior staff from NHRIs from across the wider European region. The NHRI Academy addresses aspects of NHRI characteristics and methodologies, such as gender mainstreaming, cooperation and independence of NHRIs, Human Rights Monitoring and engaging with
Council of Europe. The NHRI Academy also constitutes a platform for capacity building of NHRIs' staff members, for sharing good practices and provides possibilities for networking.
Older Persons Project ENNHRI is supported by the
European Commission (Directorate-General Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion - Social Protection Unit) to embed a human rights-based approach in the care of older persons in Europe through the project "Human Rights of Older Persons and Long-term Care". This project started in January 2015 and aims to improve the human rights protection of older persons in long-term care, with particular emphasis on residential care. The project will run for 2.5 years and will involve the monitoring of the human rights situation of older persons in long-term care in the jurisdictions of six ENNHRI members (
Belgium,
Croatia,
Germany,
Hungary,
Lithuania and
Romania). Preparation for the project included an ENNHRI member survey on activities conducted with regard to rights of older persons, planning meetings and a major stakeholder conference which took place in Brussels in October 2014. ==See also==