Increasingly viewed as a commodity, housing is most importantly a human right. Under international law, to be adequately housed means having secure tenure—not having to worry about being evicted or having your home or lands taken away. It means living somewhere that is in keeping with your culture, and having access to appropriate services, schools, and employment.
Too often violations of the right to housing occur with impunity. In part, this is because, at the domestic level, housing is rarely treated as a human right. The key to ensuring adequate housing is the implementation of this human right through appropriate government policy and programmes, including national housing strategies.
The true reunification of the right to life and the right to adequate
housing, however, can only be accomplished by a global response, led by States,
including their legislatures and courts, by human rights institutions and by
civil society.
States must address issues of inadequate housing and homelessness and
name them as core human rights issues linked to the right to life — in domestic
law and policy and in international initiatives, including the 2030 Agenda for
Sustainable Development and the New Urban Agenda. States must also conduct
a thorough examination of legislation, court practice and public policies to
ensure that the right to life is not restricted to a negative rights framework.
States must formally recognize that the right to life includes the right to a place
to live in dignity and security, free of violence, and ensure access to justice for
all victims of violations of the right to life, including those linked to
homelessness and inadequate housing. Governments must ensure the effective
integration of housing policy and social protection with human rights
frameworks, mechanisms and institutions, so that housing policy is properly
framed around the implementation of core human rights obligations, and
access to effective remedies is incorporated in programme design and
implementation.