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Additional
Protocol to the American Convention on Human Rights
in the Area of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
“Protocol of San Salvador”
Department of
International Law, Organization of American States
North and South America
Preamble
The States Parties to the American Convention on Human
Rights "Pact San José, Costa Rica,"
Reaffirming their intention to consolidate in this
hemisphere, within the framework of democratic
institutions, a system of personal liberty and social
justice based on respect for the essential rights of
man;
Recognizing that the essential rights of man are not
derived from one's being a national of a certain
State, but are based upon attributes of the human
person, for which reason they merit international
protection in the form of a convention reinforcing or
complementing the protection provided by the domestic
law of the American States;
Considering the close relationship that exists between
economic, social and cultural rights, and civil and
political rights, in that the different categories of
rights constitute an indivisible whole based on the
recognition of the dignity of the human person, for
which reason both require permanent protection and
promotion if they are to be fully realized, and the
violation of some rights in favor of the realization
of others can never be justified;
Recognizing the benefits that stem from the promotion
and development of cooperation among States and
international relations;
Recalling that, in accordance with the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights and the American
Convention on Human Rights, the ideal of free human
beings enjoying freedom from fear and want can only be
achieved if conditions are created whereby everyone
may enjoy his economic, social and cultural rights as
well as his civil and political rights;
Bearing in mind that, although fundamental economic,
social and cultural rights have been recognized in
earlier international instruments of both world and
regional scope, it is essential that those rights be
reaffirmed, developed, perfected and protected in
order to consolidate in America, on the basis of full
respect for the rights of the individual, the
democratic representative form of government as well
as the right of its peoples to development,
self-determination, and the free disposal of their
wealth and natural resources; and
Considering that the American Convention on Human
Rights provides that draft additional protocols to
that Convention may be submitted for consideration to
the States Parties, meeting together on the occasion
of the General Assembly of the Organization of
American States, for the purpose of gradually
incorporating other rights and freedoms into the
protective system thereof, Have agreed upon the
following Additional Protocol to the American
Convention on Human Rights "Protocol of San Salvador:"
Article
1
Obligation to Adopt
Measures
The States Parties to this Additional Protocol to the
American Convention on Human Rights undertake to adopt
the necessary measures, both domestically and through
international cooperation, especially economic and
technical, to the extent allowed by their available
resources, and taking into account their degree of
development, for the purpose of achieving
progressively and pursuant to their internal
legislations, the full observance of the rights
recognized in this Protocol.
Article
2
Obligation to Enact
Domestic Legislation
If the exercise of the rights set forth in this
Protocol is not already guaranteed by legislative or
other provisions, the States Parties undertake to
adopt, in accordance with their constitutional
processes and the provisions of this Protocol, such
legislative or other measures as may be necessary for
making those rights a reality.
Article
3
Obligation of
nondiscrimination
The State Parties to this Protocol undertake to
guarantee the exercise of the rights set forth herein
without discrimination of any kind for reasons related
to race, color, sex, language, religion, political or
other opinions, national or social origin, economic
status, birth or any other social condition.
Article 4
Inadmissibility of Restrictions
A right which is recognized or in effect in a State by
virtue of its internal legislation or international
conventions may not be restricted or curtailed on the
pretext that this Protocol does not recognize the
right or recognizes it to a lesser degree.
Article 5
Scope of Restrictions and Limitations
The State Parties may establish restrictions and
limitations on the enjoyment and exercise of the
rights established herein by means of laws promulgated
for the purpose of preserving the general welfare in a
democratic society only to the extent that they are
not incompatible with the purpose and reason
underlying those rights.
Article 6
Right to Work
1. Everyone has the right to work, which includes the
opportunity to secure the means for living a dignified
and decent existence by performing a freely elected or
accepted lawful activity.
2. The State Parties undertake to adopt measures that
will make the right to work fully effective,
especially with regard to the achievement of full
employment, vocational guidance, and the development
of technical and vocational training projects, in
particular those directed to the disabled. The States
Parties also undertake to implement and strengthen
programs that help to ensure suitable family care, so
that women may enjoy a real opportunity to exercise
the right to work.
Article 7
Just, Equitable, and Satisfactory Conditions of Work
The States Parties to this Protocol recognize that the
right to work to which the foregoing article refers
presupposes that everyone shall enjoy that right under
just, equitable, and satisfactory conditions, which
the States Parties undertake to guarantee in their
internal legislation, particularly with respect to:
a. Remuneration which guarantees,
as a minimum, to all workers dignified and decent
living conditions for them and their families and fair
and equal wages for equal work, without distinction;
b. The right of every worker to
follow his vocation and to devote himself to the
activity that best fulfills his expectations and to
change employment in accordance with the pertinent
national regulations;
c. The right of every worker to
promotion or upward mobility in his employment, for
which purpose account shall be taken of his
qualifications, competence, integrity and seniority;
d. Stability of employment, subject
to the nature of each industry and occupation and the
causes for just separation. In cases of unjustified
dismissal, the worker shall have the right to
indemnity or to reinstatement on the job or any other
benefits provided by domestic legislation;
e. Safety and hygiene at work;
f. The prohibition of night work or
unhealthy or dangerous working conditions and, in
general, of all work which jeopardizes health, safety,
or morals, for persons under 18 years of age. As
regards minors under the age of 16, the work day shall
be subordinated to the provisions regarding compulsory
education and in no case shall work constitute an
impediment to school attendance or a limitation on
benefiting from education received;
g. A reasonable limitation of
working hours, both daily and weekly. The days shall
be shorter in the case of dangerous or unhealthy work
or of night work;
h. Rest, leisure and paid vacations
as well as remuneration for national holidays.
Article 8
Trade Union Rights
1. The States Parties shall ensure:
a. The
right of workers to organize trade unions and to join
the union of their choice for the purpose of
protecting and promoting their interests. As an
extension of that right, the States Parties shall
permit trade unions to establish national federations
or confederations, or to affiliate with those that
already exist, as well as to form international trade
union organizations and to affiliate with that of
their choice. The States Parties shall also permit
trade unions, federations and confederations to
function freely;
b. The
right to strike.
2. The exercise of the rights set forth above may be
subject only to restrictions established by law,
provided that such restrictions are characteristic of
a democratic society and necessary for safeguarding
public order or for protecting public health or morals
or the rights and freedoms of others. Members of the
armed forces and the police and of other essential
public services shall be subject to limitations and
restrictions established by law.
3. No one may be compelled to belong to a trade union.
Article
9
Right to Social Security
1. Everyone shall have the right to social security
protecting him from the consequences of old age and of
disability which prevents him, physically or mentally,
from securing the means for a dignified and decent
existence. In the event of the death of a beneficiary,
social security benefits shall be applied to his
dependents.
2. In the case of persons who are employed, the right
to social security shall cover at least medical care
and an allowance or retirement benefit in the case of
work accidents or occupational disease and, in the
case of women, paid maternity leave before and after
childbirth.
Article 10
Right to Health
1. Everyone shall have the right to health, understood
to mean the enjoyment of the highest level of
physical, mental and social well-being.
2. In order to ensure the exercise of the right to
health, the States Parties agree to recognize health
as a public good and, particularly, to adopt the
following measures to ensure that right:
a. Primary
health care, that is, essential health care made
available to all individuals and families in the
community;
b.
Extension of the benefits of health services to all
individuals subject to the State's jurisdiction;
c.
Universal immunization against the principal
infectious diseases;
d.
Prevention and treatment of endemic, occupational and
other diseases;
e.
Education of the population on the prevention and
treatment of health problems, and
f.
Satisfaction of the health needs of the highest risk
groups and of those whose poverty makes them the most
vulnerable.
Article 11
Right to a Healthy Environment
1. Everyone shall have the right to live in a healthy
environment and to have access to basic public
services.
2. The States Parties shall promote the protection,
preservation, and improvement of the
environment.
Article 12
Right to Food
1. Everyone has the right to adequate nutrition which
guarantees the possibility of enjoying the highest
level of physical, emotional and intellectual
development.
2. In order to promote the exercise of this right and
eradicate malnutrition, the States Parties undertake
to improve methods of production, supply and
distribution of food, and to this end, agree to
promote greater international cooperation in support
of the relevant national policies.
Article 13
Right to Education
1. Everyone has the right to education.
2. The States Parties to this Protocol agree that
education should be directed towards the full
development of the human personality and human dignity
and should strengthen respect for human rights,
ideological pluralism, fundamental freedoms, justice
and peace. They further agree that education ought to
enable everyone to participate effectively in a
democratic and pluralistic society and achieve a
decent existence and should foster understanding,
tolerance and friendship among all nations and all
racial, ethnic or religious groups and promote
activities for the maintenance of peace.
3. The States Parties to this Protocol recognize that
in order to achieve the full exercise of the right to
education:
a. Primary
education should be compulsory and accessible to all
without cost;
b.
Secondary education in its different forms, including
technical and vocational secondary education, should
be made generally available and accessible to all by
every appropriate means, and in particular, by the
progressive introduction of free education;
c. Higher
education should be made equally accessible to all, on
the basis of individual capacity, by every appropriate
means, and in particular, by the progressive
introduction of free education;
d. Basic
education should be encouraged or intensified as far
as possible for those persons who have not received or
completed the whole cycle of primary instruction;
e. Programs
of special education should be established for the
handicapped, so as to provide special instruction and
training to persons with physical disabilities or
mental deficiencies.
4. In conformity with the domestic legislation of the
States Parties, parents should have the right to
select the type of education to be given to their
children, provided that it conforms to the principles
set forth above.
5. Nothing in this Protocol shall be interpreted as a
restriction of the freedom of individuals and entities
to establish and direct educational institutions in
accordance with the domestic legislation of the States
Parties.
Article
14
Right to the Benefits
of Culture
1. The States Parties to this Protocol recognize the
right of everyone:
a. To take
part in the cultural and artistic life of the
community;
b. To enjoy the benefits of scientific and
technological progress;
c. To
benefit from the protection of moral and material
interests deriving from any scientific, literary or
artistic production of which he is the author.
2. The steps to be taken by the States Parties to this
Protocol to ensure the full exercise of this right
shall include those necessary for the conservation,
development and dissemination of science, culture and
art.
3. The States Parties to this Protocol undertake to
respect the freedom indispensable for scientific
research and creative activity.
4. The States Parties to this Protocol recognize the
benefits to be derived from the encouragement and
development of international cooperation and relations
in the fields of science, arts and culture, and
accordingly agree to foster greater international
cooperation in these fields.
Article 15
Right to the Formation and the Protection of Families
1. The family is the natural and fundamental element
of society and ought to be protected by the State,
which should see to the improvement of its spiritual
and material conditions.
2. Everyone has the right to form a family, which
shall be exercised in accordance with the provisions
of the pertinent domestic legislation.
3. The States Parties hereby undertake to accord
adequate protection to the family unit and in
particular:
a. To
provide special care and assistance to mothers during
a reasonable period before and after childbirth;
b. To
guarantee adequate nutrition for children at the
nursing stage and during school attendance years;
c. To adopt
special measures for the protection of adolescents in
order to ensure the full development of their
physical, intellectual and moral capacities;
d. To
undertake special programs of family training so as to
help create a stable and positive environment in which
children will receive and develop the values of
understanding, solidarity, respect and responsibility.
Article 16
Rights of Children
Every child, whatever his parentage, has the right to
the protection that his status as a minor requires
from his family, society and the State. Every child
has the right to grow under the protection and
responsibility of his parents; save in exceptional,
judicially-recognized circumstances, a child of young
age ought not to be separated from his mother. Every
child has the right to free and compulsory education,
at least in the elementary phase, and to continue his
training at higher levels of the educational system.
Article 17
Protection of the Elderly
Everyone has the right to special protection in old
age. With this in view the States Parties agree to
take progressively the necessary steps to make this
right a reality and, particularly, to:
a. Provide suitable facilities, as
well as food and specialized medical care, for elderly
individuals who lack them and are unable to provide
them for themselves;
b. Undertake work programs
specifically designed to give the elderly the
opportunity to engage in a productive activity suited
to their abilities and consistent with their vocations
or desires;
c. Foster the establishment of
social organizations aimed at improving the quality of
life for the elderly.
Article 18
Protection of the Handicapped
Everyone affected by a diminution of his physical or
mental capacities is entitled to receive special
attention designed to help him achieve the greatest
possible development of his personality. The States
Parties agree to adopt such measures as may be
necessary for this purpose and, especially, to:
a. Undertake programs specifically
aimed at providing the handicapped with the resources
and environment needed for attaining this goal,
including work programs consistent with their
possibilities and freely accepted by them or their
legal representatives, as the case may be;
b. Provide special training to the
families of the handicapped in order to help them
solve the problems of coexistence and convert them
into active agents in the physical, mental and
emotional development of the latter;
c. Include the consideration of
solutions to specific requirements arising from needs
of this group as a priority component of their urban
development plans;
d. Encourage the establishment of
social groups in which the handicapped can be helped
to enjoy a fuller life.
Article
19
Means of Protection
1. Pursuant to the provisions of this article and the
corresponding rules to be formulated for this purpose
by the General Assembly of the Organization of
American States, the States Parties to this Protocol
undertake to submit periodic reports on the
progressive measures they have taken to ensure due
respect for the rights set forth in this Protocol.
2. All reports shall be submitted to the Secretary
General of the OAS, who shall transmit them to the
Inter-American Economic and Social Council and the
Inter-American Council for Education, Science and
Culture so that they may examine them in accordance
with the provisions of this article. The Secretary
General shall send a copy of such reports to the
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights.
3. The Secretary General of the Organization of
American States shall also transmit to the specialized
organizations of the inter-American system of which
the States Parties to the present Protocol are
members, copies or pertinent portions of the reports
submitted, insofar as they relate to matters within
the purview of those organizations, as established by
their constituent instruments.
4. The specialized organizations of the inter-American
system may submit reports to the Inter-American
Economic and Social Council and the Inter-American
Council for Education, Science and Culture relative to
compliance with the provisions of the present Protocol
in their fields of activity.
5. The annual reports submitted to the General
Assembly by the Inter-American Economic and Social
Council and the Inter-American Council for Education,
Science and Culture shall contain a summary of the
information received from the States Parties to the
present Protocol and the specialized organizations
concerning the progressive measures adopted in order
to ensure respect for the rights acknowledged in the
Protocol itself and the general recommendations they
consider to be appropriate in this respect.
6. Any instance in which the rights established in
paragraph a) of Article 8 and in Article 13 are
violated by action directly attributable to a State
Party to this Protocol may give rise, through
participation of the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights and, when applicable, of the
Inter-American Court of Human Rights, to application
of the system of individual petitions governed by
Article 44 through 51 and 61 through 69 of the
American Convention on Human Rights.
7. Without prejudice to the provisions of the
preceding paragraph, the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights may formulate such observations and
recommendations as it deems pertinent concerning the
status of the economic, social and cultural rights
established in the present Protocol in all or some of
the States Parties, which it may include in its Annual
Report to the General Assembly or in a special report,
whichever it considers more appropriate.
8. The Councils and the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights, in discharging the functions conferred
upon them in this article, shall take into account the
progressive nature of the observance of the rights
subject to protection by this Protocol.
Article
20
Reservations
The States Parties may, at the time of approval,
signature, ratification or accession, make
reservations to one or more specific provisions of
this Protocol, provided that such reservations are not
incompatible with the object and purpose of the
Protocol.
Article
21
Signature,
Ratification or Accession
Entry into Effect
1. This Protocol shall remain open to signature and
ratification or accession by any State Party to the
American Convention on Human Rights.
2. Ratification of or accession to this Protocol shall
be effected by depositing an instrument of
ratification or accession with the General Secretariat
of the Organization of American States.
3. The Protocol shall enter into effect when eleven
States have deposited their respective instruments of
ratification or accession.
4. The Secretary General shall notify all the member
states of the Organization of American States of the
entry of the Protocol into effect.
Article
22
Inclusion of other
Rights and Expansion of those Recognized
1. Any State Party and the Inter-American Commission
on Human Rights may submit for the consideration of
the States Parties meeting on the occasion of the
General Assembly proposed amendments to include the
recognition of other rights or freedoms or to extend
or expand rights or freedoms recognized in this
Protocol.
2. Such amendments shall enter into effect for the
States that ratify them on the date of deposit of the
instrument of ratification corresponding to the number
representing two thirds of the States Parties to this
Protocol. For all other States Parties they shall
enter into effect on the date on which they deposit
their respective instrument of ratification.
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