Rights only protect us if we know they exist, understand what they mean, and feel confident enough to use them. When people don’t know the protections they’re entitled to, those rights become fragile promises on paper—easily ignored by institutions, employers, landlords, or authorities, and leaving communities more vulnerable to exploitation, discrimination, and unfair treatment.
This project treats “know your rights” as everyday self‑defence and collective empowerment: learning what the law and human rights standards actually say, recognising when those standards are being breached, and understanding the practical routes to challenge decisions that feel unreasonable, restrictive, or repressive. It explores how legal information, independent advocacy, and access to justice turn fear into confidence—helping people document abuses, ask better questions, make informed choices, and push back when their dignity or freedoms are at stake
Through clear guides, stories from rights struggles, and signposts to local support, Your Rights invites people to move from “I don’t think this is fair” to “I know this is wrong, and here’s how we can respond.”


