Events

Older Persons’ Human Rights

Forging a path towards new international legal protections
Futuristic globe overlaying blurred background image of parliamentary roundtable convening
A United Nations resolution has formally launched the process for negotiating a new international treaty protecting the human rights of older persons.

This HPOD event, co-organized with the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law, Biotechnology, and Bioethics at Harvard Law School (PFC) and the Center for Law, Brain & Behavior (CLBB), will explore how participants in the incipient older persons treaty negotiations can both build on the notable innovation.

Check out our event summary on the Petrie-Flom Center’s blog Bill of Health.

On April 3, 2025, the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Council adopted a resolution jumpstarting the multilateral process for negotiating a new international treaty on the rights of older persons. The landmark resolution marks the culmination of three decades of governmental and civil society progress, as the world races to meet the far-reaching challenges posed by its rapidly aging population amid the UN Decade of Healthy Ageing (2021-2030). Like the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) before it, this treaty will aim to close critical gaps in international human rights legal protections for a population that disproportionately experiences discrimination, marginalization, and exclusion. Indeed, as demonstrated by the 14 years of deliberations by the UN Open-Ended Working Group on Ageing, the many overlapping human rights challenges faced by both persons with disabilities and older persons make lessons learned from the CRPD negotiations especially relevant to forging new protections for older persons.

This HPOD event, co-organized with the Petrie-Flom Center for Health Law, Biotechnology, and Bioethics at Harvard Law School (PFC) and the Center for Law, Brain & Behavior (CLBB), will explore how participants in the incipient older persons treaty negotiations can both build on the notable innovations of the CRPD and also avoid certain pitfalls that have manifested during the first two decades of CRPD implementation.

Welcome

•    Susannah Baruch, Executive Director, PFC

Introductory Remarks

•    H.E. Luis Gallegos, Senior Advisor, HPOD

Moderator

•    Professor Michael Stein, Executive Director, HPOD

Panelists

•    Professor Jody Heymann, Founding Director, WORLD Policy Analysis Center, UCLA
•    Dr. Alejandro Bonilla García, Chair, NGO Committee on Ageing (Geneva)
•    Ms. Silvia Perel-Levin, Independent consultant on ageing, health and human rights of older persons

Audience Q&A

Concluding Remarks

•    Robert Kinscherff, Executive Director, CLBB

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