A Conscientious Objectors Guide to the UN Human Rights System Emily Miles Quaker United Nations Office, War Resisters Geneva International About this report This report was commissioned by QUNO, the Quaker United Nations Office in Geneva, and has been published by CONCODOC in London. Quaker United Nations Office, Geneva The Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) has had a presence in Geneva since the 1920s, and the Quaker UN Office was established there in the 1940s. Quakers have a long history of being, and working with, conscientious objectors to military service. Quakers have always supported a nonviolent approach to the management and resolution of conflict. Their pacifism is based on the religious belief that there is that of God in every person. The Quaker UN Office in Geneva has programmes on peace and disarma- ment, trade and development, and human rights and refugees. CONCODOC CONCODOC (Conscription and Conscientious Objection Documentation) is a new, multi-agency intitiative to facilitate, comission, publish and compile research on human rights and social concerns in connection to the military and militarism in society. It particularly concerns itself with the provision of data appropriate to the needs of those seeking asylum to escape military per- secution. Also currently available from CONCODOC: u Horeman, Bart. 1998. Refusing To Bear Arms : a world survey of conscription and conscientious objection to military service. CONCODOC, London. ISBN 0 903517 16 7 Copies available from War Resisters International, 5 Caledonian Road, London N1 9DX, Britain (Tel +44 20 7278 4040; Fax +44 20 7278 0444; email
[email protected]; Website http://www.gn.apc.org/warresisters).