Humanism Now | Secular Ethics, Curiosity and Compassionate Change

Introducing Freedom of Thought by Humanists International

Humanise Live Season 1

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 21:37

SUBSCRIBE TO FREEDOM OF THOUGHT:

********
Sign up for the Humanists International Newsletter

Welcome to Freedom of Thought a new podcast series by Humanists International!

In this first episode hosts Gary McLellend and Leon Langdon introduce Humanists International, the global representative body at the heart of the humanist movement, how a global humanist network works inside the UN system, and why universal rights need a louder defence right now. 

We share the member‑led model, lessons from the IRF Summit, and what really happens inside the UN Human Rights Council.

In this first episode we cover:

  • The formation and ethos of Humanists International
  • Our member‑led structure and global reach
  • Lived experience informing advocacy
  • Reflections on the 2026 IRF Summit
  • Fractures in human rights spaces and how to address them
  • What happens inside the Human Rights Council 
  • Why start this podcast now and what comes next
  • Why attend the World Humanist Congress 2026
  • How to shape the conversation, support us and follow

Follow Humanist International

Freedom of Thought is produced by Humanise Live

🎶Music: Horizon by Simon Folwar

Send us Fan Mail

Support the show

Support Humanism Now & Join Our Community!

Follow @HumanismNowPod | YouTube | TikTok | Instagram | Facebook | Threads | X.com | BlueSky

Humanism Now is produced by Humanise Live a podcast production agency based in London, serving charities, companies, and individuals across the globe.

Contact us to get starting in podcasting today at humanise.live or hello@humanise.live

Music: Blossom by Light Prism

Podcast transcripts are AI-generated and may contain errors or omissions. They are provided to make our content more accessible, but should not be considered a fully accurate record of the conversation.

James Hodgson

Hello everyone, and welcome to Humanism Now. This week we're bringing you a special bonus episode of the podcast. I'm pleased to share the very first installment of Freedom of Thought, a brand new weekly podcast from Humanist International. Humanist International is the global representative body at the heart of the humanist movement, championing democracy, universal human rights, secularism, and the rule of law worldwide, with representation of the UN and other international parties. They work to build and support a global community granted in dignity, and flourishing. Each week on Freedom of Thought, co-hosts Gary McClellan and Leon Lampton explore the latest developments in free thought, human rights, and global policy, alongside interviews with leading campaigners, legislators, and humanists. You can find Freedom of Thought wherever you get your podcast. But for now, here's the first episode. I hope you enjoy it, and please do subscribe.

Intro to Gary McLelland

Leon Langdon

Welcome to Freedom of Thought, a podcast by Humanist International. I'm Leon Langdon, Senior Advocacy Officer at Humanist International. And I'm Gary McClelland, Chief Executive of Humanists International. It's a real pleasure to be speaking with you today, and we're delighted to be launching this new podcast series, which shares its name with Humanists International's flagship annual publication, the Freedom of Thought Report. Each week, we'll be discussing news, research, policy developments, and campaigns related to freedom of thought around the world. But first, we wanted to take a little time to introduce ourselves, explain the history and work of Humanists International, and why now felt like the right moment to launch this podcast. Well, it's very exciting that we're doing this since we've been talking about it for so long. I don't know, Gary, if you want to go ahead and give us a bit of an introduction into, let's just say, yourself to begin.

Intro to Leon Langdon

Gary McLelland

Sure. Yeah, so I've been the chief executive of Humanists International for almost exactly nine years. It'll be nine years next week. Before that, I worked at the Humanist Society Scotland. And before that, I had a sort of short career working in social services in Scotland. Before I joined Humanists International, I was doing a master's in human rights law, and my research was into blasphemy laws, which is obviously a very interesting topic when I came to work here at Humanists International. What about you, Leon? What's your background?

Leon Langdon

So I'm a baby compared to you, in that I've been at Humanists International two and a half years. I've been senior advocacy officer just since September last year. And I lead our advocacy at international institutions. My background is in and around those institutions, mostly at the UN. I'm now working at the UN, Human Rights Council, UNESCO, and also regional organizations working to capacity build our members, lifting up our members' voices.

Gary McLelland

Great. And before you worked at Humanists International, you were also doing work at the UN system, is that right?

History of Humanists International

Leon Langdon

Yeah, I had a brief enough stint in working for counterterrorism at the UN, which is uh a very interesting field, not one that I spend too much time in. And then I was working on humanitarian affairs at the UN Security Council for government there. So my background is very much in human rights. I study law and then a master's in international relations, all very focused on human rights. But yeah, kind of have a broader experience within the UN system. Gary, I think it's worth us explaining what Humanist International is, who we are, for those of us who are hopefully hearing about us for the first time, might be curious to know more.

Gary McLelland

Humanist International is a fascinating organization, a very old and prestigious organization. We were founded in 1952 in Amsterdam. The organization, though, does have roots way back to the middle of the 19th century, but certainly, at least in Europe, the two world wars in the 20th century decimated any chances of that organization continuing. So it was reborn again in 1952, really at the kind of height of the post-war optimistic internationalist movement of human rights building, UN building, institution building. So that's kind of where the roots and the ethos of the organization lie. In fact, many of the people who were at the founding Congress of Humanists International went on to play a leading role in the United Nations and its associated bodies. So, for example, our founding chairman, Julian Huxley, went on to found UNESCO. And I think of around about five of the first UN agencies, three of them were humanists who were involved in the creation of Humanists International. So it came from a very important time in history and certainly in European history of optimism and obviously coming on from the horrors of the Second World War and what we'd seen in the genocide, a real need for international collaboration and promotion of human rights. So that was kind of the genesis of the organization. Initially, when it was set up, one of its primary missions was to build, represent, and grow the humanist movement by linking humanist organizations together, having congresses and being that international body to help form policy and do organizational development. But one of the key tasks that we were given was advocacy, was to make sure that humanists have a voice at the United Nations, which was then a flourishing new organization, and to make sure that international policy, law, and the human rights system can be shaped according to humanist values. One of the things when I started at this job almost a decade ago, I was most proud to do was to look through our policy resources. So if you go onto the Humanists International website, you can see way, way back to the 1950s, and indeed some of the policies predate the organization, the policies that we set out back then. And it's it's really a very proud history that I think that we can look back on.

Member-Led Model And Global Network

Leon Langdon

I think that's something that that when you and I are working together, we try to talk about is kind of our ability to influence international policy can be limited at times when geopolitics come into play, when when great powers are at work. But I think it's always important to remember that lineage and to really make sure that we're not just putting a statement for now, but also in sort of honor of those who have worked for 70 and like you say, even before 70 years time ago, but also for those who will hopefully be still working for this organization and for the humanist movement in another 70 years, ideally. Yeah, exactly. Do you want to tell us about our members a little bit and talk about our current membership structure and the great work they're doing around the world?

Gary McLelland

So, uh Humanists International, when it was founded back in 1952, it was founded by five organizations. At the moment, right now, in 2026, we have around 130 member organizations in about 65 countries around the world. And the members are really the heart of the entire organization. So it's the entire purpose of Humanists International existing. So our members are very much at the heart of everything that we do. We're a member-led organization. So members are attend our General Assembly, which is the ultimate decision-making body of Humanists International. It's our members that elect our board, which govern the organization. And so it's really our members that are the primary way that we work. We work in collaboration with our members to be the voice of humanists at the United Nations and other regional bodies around the world, including the European Union and hopefully soon the African Commission. And it's yeah, they're really the way that we work is through a collaboration with our members.

Leon Langdon

I know that's one of the greatest privileges of this job. And I remember talking about it in my interview a couple of years ago for this job. There's a great privilege in working for an organization with such a globally diverse network. So when we're working, like you say, at the United Nations, UNESCO, African Commission, European Union, so much of the work is about going to our members, asking what they want to talk about, and literally giving them the microphone and saying, here, go give a statement at the UN, go work on this UN report, because I think their experience, their lived experience of being humanists, of being human rights defenders, of standing up for LGBTQ rights, for reproductive rights, for the right to freedom of religion or belief and freedom of expression, that is what this organization is built on. Like you say, as it was then, the International Humanists and Ethical Union is built on a collection of members from around the world coming together to say that this is what they want to do.

Washington IRF Summit Reflections

Gary McLelland

Exactly. And I think that's what makes us different from other general human rights NGOs, is that we have members all around the world. So when we make statements about issues that are happening in India or Guatemala or whatever, it's the voices of genuine humanist organizations working in those countries that we are showcasing. It's not desk reports and research papers, it's the lived experience of humanist activists from around the world, and that's what shapes the work that we do.

Leon Langdon

And you were just in Washington, DC with one of our board members and the head of one of our members last week, weren't you?

Fractures In Human Rights Spaces

Gary McLelland

That's right. Yeah, I was in Washington last week attending the IRF Summit, the International Religious Freedom Summit, which was an interesting experience. This IRF Summit is a very well, very slick, well-produced conference sponsored by a lot of organizations like NGOs, but also Meta and some big corporate sponsors, held in Washington. And it has its origin really a way back during the first Trump presidency. There was a series of international meetings called International Ministerials for the Advancement of International Religious Freedom. And we attended those back in that would have been 2018-19 with some reservations because, as people will know, the full uh title of that human right is Freedom of Religion or Belief. Indeed, it's actually freedom of conscience, religion, belief. But the focus on religious freedom seems a particularly American thing. And so we attended these international ministerials with some scepticism, but we wanted to be in the room to shape policy, to be part of the conversations, to make sure that the humanist voice was represented. But I think having been at that summit last week, I'm now starting to reflect on some of the big differences that I noticed. So even during the first Trump presidency back in 2018-19, there was still quite a big discussion of the intersection of LGBTQ rights and religious freedom or Forb, as well as women's rights and other minority human rights and how they intersect with each other, which is obviously how it should be done. And having reflected on the summit last week, one of the things that seems obvious to me now was there was no critical engagement with the difficult intersection of human rights. There was no even critical assessment of the US government's current policies and foreign policy. And I think that was quite a surprising shift to notice. And it's not a surprise given prevailing trends at the moment, but nonetheless, it's something that's worth paying attention to and noticing. So that was interesting.

Inside The UN Human Rights Council

Leon Langdon

I think it's important for listeners to know that when we talk about this sort of human rights world, it is fracturing to some extent. And I think that's why it's important for us as well as keeping up our presence at the United Nations. We also have to reckon with the reality that the US has just left a lot of the United Nations bodies, Human Rights Council, they're no longer engaging with their universal periodic review. They've left UNESCO. And I think with that in mind, unfortunately, whether countries are engaged with the UN or not, they still matter, especially a country as big and as classically powerful as the US. And so I think it's important for us to, like you say, make sure that the humanist voice is at the table, that the rights of non-religious are sort of stood up for and are represented. And also that we know what's going on, that we know what conversations are going on, that we know what our allies are are talking about, but also those that we're less aligned with, what they're talking about. I'll be in in Geneva in a couple of weeks for the 61st session of the Human Rights Council. And I think that's going to be a particularly interesting moment on freedom of religion or belief and countering religious hatred or hatred based on religion or belief. That's an area that has seen fracturing at the UN in the last couple of years with incidences of blasphemy and things like that. The general feeling is it's going to be a bit better and that there are maybe bigger issues that separate from this. But I think the issue of religion or belief, recognition of the non-religious freedom of expression is something we're constantly trying to deal with and against this backdrop of a difficult time, let's say.

Gary McLelland

Very much so. And it may be just interesting for our listeners to hear a bit more about what goes on at these human rights council sessions. Obviously, our members will know that you one of the jobs you do there is deliver statements and make statements at the council and encourage our members and support them to make statements. But what else is going on behind the scenes in the corridors and so on?

Why Launch The Podcast Now

Leon Langdon

My sort of two weeks there will be pretty chock full of meetings with either other NGO colleagues. As a humanist organization, we sit in an interesting intersection. We've obviously been talking about religion already. In a lot of ways, we're considered sort of a religious and life stance organization. We're sort of put in that sort of cleavage where we're talking about, yeah, religion or belief and advocating for nights and non-religious, but we're also very much a broader human rights organization, like you say, looking at the intersection of freedom of religion or belief and LGBTI plus rights or sexual orientation, gender identity, reproductive rights, women's rights, children's rights. I'm thinking about witchcraft in Africa, other harmful traditional practices. These are all things that we work on, of course, civil society space, democratic backsliding, all of all things which we're really trying to meet the moment with. And so we'll be working not just with colleagues on freedom of religion or belief, but also colleagues on these broader issues. So it'll be a lot of meetings. There'll be meetings with those NGO colleagues, it'll be meetings with states trying to move our priorities along to make sure that we're known, to make sure that we're invited to the right rooms at the right times and sitting at the right tables, like we say. But also in Geneva at the Human Rights Council sessions, because we're an accredited NGO, we also have the right to not just deliver statements publicly, but also engage in what they call informal consultations, which are basically negotiations of UN resolutions. And so once upon a time, they were able to be hybrid as well, but amidst this sort of funding crisis that the UN is going through. We don't have the luxury of that sort of hybrid for most of those anymore. So I'll be in the room and I'll be engaging in those conversations. I'll be literally putting my hand up and asking for the right to speak and to do the same as what states do, which is go through these pieces of international law line by line and asking for changes or recommendations. And we do sometimes get listened to, which is an important thing to know. But it's very much about being in the right room and trying to catch the right people at the right time.

People At The Centre Of Reform

Gary McLelland

And I think for me, that's a really important part of why we've decided to launch this podcast now. You've mentioned about the US withdrawal from these international treaties. I think most of our listeners will see just from the national politics of their country and the news that there's a really big challenge to even some of the fundamental principles of human rights and international cooperation right now. In fact, this morning when we're recording this, there's a news article that the UN is months away from ceasing to function because some states are not paying their fees on time. So there's a whole lot of pressure against this international system. And I think we ourselves have said in the past that there are problems with the international system of diplomacy as we have it now. It's very bureaucratic, it's too slow, and so on and so forth. But it is also the best system that we have ever invented. And it took a lot of time and effort to get here. And the future must be about engaging and reforming rather than retreating and backing away from. I think that's part of what I hope we can get out of this podcast is to share with our members and supporters a bit of an insight into what actually goes on behind these rooms and these meetings, and hopefully try and demystify a bit of this system and the work that we do. But what about you, Leon?

World Humanist Congress Invitation

Leon Langdon

I think just to pick up on what you said about meeting the moment and about the maybe the flaws with the international system at the moment, one of the things I've consistently taken issue with is as much as countries pay lip service to human rights, that it's that the UN can be, you know, focuses on great powers and a focus on very much state-to-state relations. And I think one of the things we do at the UN, like I mentioned, is raising the voice of our members, but there is a flaw in the system in that individuals' experiences are often relegated within that. And so I think in launching this podcast, I think there's a great opportunity for our listeners to hear individual experiences as well as just about the kind of broad stuff. And I mean that both in terms of hearing about our work at the UN, hearing about that work with our members and national governments, but also the individual stories behind that. And I think when you look at all these challenges, authoritarianism, religious nationalism of all stripes, the declining civil society space challenges to multilateralism. I think when we talk about reform, when we talk about fixing the system that exists, I think the key to that is putting people back at the center rather than states, rather than trade, rather than tech, whatever it might be. I think all of those things need to serve people rather than the other way around.

Upcoming Freedom Of Thought Report 2026 Launch

Gary McLelland

Very good. And of course, we should mention as well, one of the best ways that people can get involved in this if they haven't already is to sign up for a ticket to the World Humanist Congress, which will take place in Ottawa this August. At the time of recording, you've got about a few weeks left to secure an early bird discount ticket before they run out at the end of February. So if you want to join in the resistance to this backsliding, this challenge to human rights, then one of the best ways that you can do that is to join the World Humanist Congress in Ottawa and secure your ticket as soon as possible so that you get the early bird discount. So, Leon, next week we will both be in Brussels for the launch of the Freedom of Thought Report. We're also hoping to interview Mabarak Bala, who many people will remember, the president of the Humanist Association of Nigeria, who spent five years in prison on charges amounting to blasphemy. So that should be a really exciting episode.

Leon Langdon

Yeah, I think over the next couple of episodes after that, I think we want to get into the history of Humanist International, talking more about the international human rights priorities, talking to national members and national legislators who are pushing for human rights or other policies based on humanist values at whatever institutions they might be involved in.

Closing Thoughts & Support Humanists International

Gary McLelland

That's going to be very good. Thanks very much, Leon, for explaining to us a bit more about your role and what you do at the United Nations. I think it's going to be really important for us to be able to unpack some of this important work for our members and hopefully try and explain why it's more important than ever that they lean into this international cooperation, this work at the United Nations, this diplomatic work. I think it's it's it's just an interesting thing to reflect, I think, even in my career with Humanists International, we've gone from a position of being generally very popular and politically acceptable to a situation where now we find ourselves almost having to defend the principle of universal human rights from first principles as somehow a kind of strange view or a radical position, uh, which is kind of an interesting one. So I'm very grateful that you've had the time to explain to us what your role is, and I look forward to unpacking that more over the next few weeks.

Leon Langdon

I think the idea that humanism is radical is one that I'm increasingly buying into. And I of course, I guess humanism is resistance to all the things we're talking about. So yeah, very excited to get into this, to yeah, be a partner in this and to bring our listeners some hopefully interesting conversations, both with us, but more importantly, with the people at the center of it, like we say.

Gary McLelland

And we want this to be useful to our members and supporters. So please do let us know if there's anything in particular you'd like us to cover. You can get in touch with us. Also, please do download the episode, subscribe and engage with the content. And we very much look forward to hearing from you.

Leon Langdon

If you find this episode useful, please share it with others. Subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts and turn on notifications so you don't miss future episodes. Early reviews really help. So if you can leave a five-star rating, it makes a big difference in helping new listeners find the show. We'll be bringing you conversations with activists, campaigners, and leaders working on freedom of thought around the world. If there's a topic you'd like us to cover, or someone you'd like to suggest as a guest, you can get in touch with us. And to support this work, find out how to join Humanist International and subscribe to our newsletter, please visit humanist. Thanks so much for listening to this first episode of Freedom of Thought. We're really glad you're here.

Podcasts we love

Check out these other fine podcasts recommended by us, not an algorithm.