Human Rights Day: turning rights on paper into real orders for African suppliers

Women and youth-led cooperative discussing rights and markets

In a town in northern Ghana, Mariama joins a six-month programme for women entrepreneurs. She learns to make gentle skincare products using local oils and plants. Volunteers help her design labels. At the final event, donors take photos with shelves full of creams and soaps.

Everyone claps. Mariama is proud.

Six months later, most of those products are gone and sold in tiny quantities to neighbours, given as gifts, or left unsold. There is no steady buyer, no supermarket order, no clinic partnership.

The programme talked about “women’s economic rights” and “financial inclusion”. On paper, it was a success. For Mariama, the right that matters, the right to earn a decent living from her work, still feels far away.

Rights are also about markets

Human rights instruments talk about the rights to health, to work, to an adequate standard of living and to be free from discrimination. In our sectors, these rights are shaped by simple market questions:

When these things fail, rights start fraying long before any court ever hears a case.

Three quiet ways rights are undermined

How OpenMarket Global can help close the gap

OpenMarket Global cannot rewrite constitutions, but it can help answer one human rights question: “If I do the work to create a safe, useful product, can I realistically reach buyers?”

On the platform:

Verification partnerships with labs and field programmes help ensure that what is visible is also safe, protecting the right to health while supporting the right to work.

From rights language to concrete steps

Turning rights from slogans into daily practice requires a few shifts:

Call to action

For Mariama, rights will feel real not on the day she receives a training certificate, but on the day her cooperative receives a steady order from a hotel, supplies a clinic because her products are verified and visible, and hires another woman at a fair wage.

Human Rights Day is a design question: are we building programmes and platforms that stop at training, or that carry people into real markets? Every time a programme lists its “beneficiaries” as suppliers, every time a clinic chooses a verified local product, and every time a marketplace like OpenMarket Global makes a small cooperative visible, that gap between rights on paper and rights in practice gets smaller.