Community Work
Community Support 2020-2022
Throughout 2020 and 2021, we ran free human rights training online for people accessing (or trying to access) public services, their loved ones and those who care for them – and the organisations supporting people. These sessions aimed to build the capacity of people to use human rights law in interactions with public services and tackle social justice issues affecting them during incredibly challenging times.
In 2021-22, we also 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 advocacy tools which are available below.
After the success of this work, BIHR was granted funding from the Baring Foundation to offer free human rights support to communities from 2022-2025.
How we ran our pilot workshops
We received funding from the Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust, the Tudor Trust, the Bromley Trust, Comic Relief (Covid fund) and the Three Guineas Trust. We started by delivering 27 workshops to 16 different organisations, including:
- Disability Wales – we looked how human rights are protected in Wales and what it means when accessing care and support during Covid-19 and beyond.
- Learning Disability England – we looked at human rights and visiting policies, supporting people to raise human rights challenges.
- Scottish Autism – we supported people, loved ones and parents to know more about human rights, particularly the right to education and the right to family life.
- Reducing Restraint Network – we looked at human rights and social distancing.
- Tide – we supported Tide unpaid carers with separate sessions in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland to understand their rights, particularly in home care provision.
- Inclusion Gloucestershire – we supported people with physical disabilities and learning disabilities to know their rights and use them to create change in their lives.
- Bristol Reclaiming Independent Living – we ran a BSL interpreted session to support people to use human rights to challenge local policies, we focused on personal assistants/loved ones being able to join health care appointments during Covid19.
- Croydon Mencap – we supported people with learning disabilities and/or autism, loved ones and carers to know more about human rights, particularly the right to be free from inhuman or degrading treatment and the right to family life.
- Bromley & Croydon Women's Aid Coffee Morning - we supported a women's group to know more about the rights of people who have experienced domestic abuse, and showed them our new tool to support people with this.
Then, in May 2021, we invited community groups and organisations to apply for our 10 final workshop spaces. We were thrilled to hear from 34 groups in total, hailing from all over the UK, across the public, private and voluntary sector, and supporting people in a variety of situations, from people experiencing homelessness, to carers for people living with dementia.
We carefully selected 10 new partner organisations from across the UK:
- The Alliance for Inclusive Education
- Bristol Somali Resource Centre
- Cheshire Disabled People’s Panel
- dates-n-mates Scotland
- Friends, Families and Travellers
- HERe NI
- Northern Ireland Refugee and Asylum Seeker Women’s Association (Bomoko NI)
- Rock Trust
- Silverline Memories
- Welsh Refugee Council
These organisations support a range of different people and groups, including refugees and people seeking asylum; LGBTQ+ people; people with disabilities and their loved ones; Gypsy, Roma and Traveller communities; and young people with experience of homelessness.
Over the summer, BIHR ran 10 bespoke human rights workshops alongside these wonderful organisations. In total, 159 people attended the workshops, building their knowledge and confidence to talk about their human rights when supporting people accessing or trying to access public services. Knowledge is power!
The impact
Facts, figures and feedback from our final 10 workshops:
159
people attended workshops across 10 partner organisations working in various areas
4/5
Participants described their level of knowledge of human rights law in the UK as 4/5 after the workshop versus 2.6/5 before.
4.3/5
Participants described their confidence using human rights when talking to staff in services as 4.3/5 after the workshop versus 3.2/5 before.
How we ran the pilot co-design programme
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.
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!
Our community partners
Find out about our work with our community partners from 2021-2022.
The impact of these solutions
See below our impact reports from our pilot project:
Room To Heal Impact Report Warrington Speak Up Impact Report Hopscotch Impact Report
Our partners
Everyone at BIHR would like to say a massive thank you to our funders, the Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust, the Tudor Trust, the Bromley Trust, Comic Relief (Covid fund), and the Three Guineas Trust.
And thank you to our partner organisations for sharing your time, ideas and experiences with us, all of which helped bring these human rights workshops to life.

The future of these workshops
The aim of this project was to support people accessing, or trying to access, public services, as well as their loved ones and those who care about them, to know about and use human rights in their conversations with public officials.
The data gathered across all the groups we worked with evidences that the knowledge and confidence of attendees in using human rights increased significantly. Our pilot workshops in particular were delivered at a time when the aftershocks of the pandemic were still being keenly felt. Having lived through this period where we have seen human rights put at risk, supporting people to recognise where human rights are relevant, and use them to create positive change in their lives and the lives of their loved ones, has never been more important.
We are committed to continuing to support people and their communities to know about their human rights and have the confidence to talk about and advocate for their rights in everyday situations where they interact with public bodies.
Related topics
Read more about human rights and our work in this area.
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