HUMAN Online Learning Platform Now Widely Available Across Europe

The HUMAN Online Learning Platform is now widely available, offering open-access tools, modules and youth-led media to support Digital Hate Interrupter Activism across Europe. Co-created by the HUMAN consortium, the platform hosts capacity-building webinars, podcasts and resources with strong transferability to both formal and non-formal learning settings. The platform, designed, developed and managed by Rinova (ES), hosts the complete, co-created curriculum for Digital Hate Interrupter Activism, developed collectively by the nine HUMAN partner organisations.

Key Features

  • Co-created curriculum: Developed through transnational collaboration among youth workers, educators, civil society and local authorities, aligned with HUMAN’s intersectional and youth-centred framework.
  • Capacity-building webinars: Hosted on the platform, enabling cross-border knowledge exchange and professional development.
  • Transferability: Evaluations show strong applicability of the modules across formal education (schools, VET, higher education) and non-formal settings (youth work, community programmes).
  • Media Hub: Includes the HUMAN podcast and forthcoming audiovisual content co-produced with the Youth Panels for Diversity, amplifying youth voices on discrimination, identity and digital participation.
  • Open-access approach: In line with the Digital Education Action Plan 2021–2027, the European Education Area, and EU Youth Strategy 2019–2027, supporting inclusive, flexible learning pathways and wider civic participation.

Relevance for CERV-EQUAL Priorities

The platform directly contributes to CERV objectives by:

  • Building competences to prevent and counter online hate speech against diaspora and minority communities.
  • Supporting intersectional, evidence-based learning that addresses race, ethnicity, gender and identity.
  • Enabling youth participation, empowering young people (14–21) as active digital citizens and community actors.
  • Strengthening local and municipal capacity to integrate youth digital activism into strategic planning.

Opportunities for Policy Uptake

Integrate HUMAN learning modules into local youth action plans, school curricula and municipal strategies.

Use the platform as a capacity-building instrument for public authorities and youth professionals.

Promote the Media Hub as a tool for youth consultation and digital civic engagement.

Support scaling and sustainability through cross-sector cooperation and national-level. The HUMAN consortium invites CERV stakeholders to engage with the platform and embed its resources into policy, practice and community-based approaches to equality, human rights and digital wellbeing across Europe.

The HUMAN platform is built on open and accessible online learning methodologies, reflecting EU-wide recognition that such models broaden participation, drive innovation and strengthen capacity across sectors.

This approach is supported by:

The Digital Education Action Plan (2021–2027), which highlights open digital learning ecosystems and open educational resources (OER) as crucial for digital transformation, innovation and equity; the European Education Area, promoting flexible, open learning pathways and cross-border cooperation; the EU Open Knowledge and Open Science principles, encouraging re-use, adaptation and translation of educational materials to maximise societal impact; the EU Youth Strategy (2019–2027), which stresses the importance of accessible digital platforms for youth empowerment, participation and cooperation.

By embedding these principles, the HUMAN platform becomes a European driver of knowledge sharing, supporting organisations to learn from one another, replicate good practice and upscale youth-led digital activism models.

Explore and use the HUMAN platform

Educators, youth workers, civil society actors and policy stakeholders are invited to access the HUMAN platform and integrate its open educational resources in their learning environments.

👉 https://humanactivists.eu

Together, we can support young people in building more inclusive, resilient and rights-based digital communities across Europe.

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