Wittingly or unwittingly, civil society actors have long been faced with the task of documenting serious human rights violations. Thirty years ago, such efforts were largely organised by grassroots movements, often with little support or funding from international actors. Sharing information and best practices was difficult. Today that situation has significantly changed. The purpose of this article is to explore the changing landscape of civil society documentation of serious human rights violations, and what that means for standardising and professionalising documentation efforts. Using the recent Hisséne Habré case as an example, this article begins by looking at how civil society documentation can successfully influence an accountabilit...
Why and how can records serve as evidence of human rights violations, in particular crimes against h...
Founded in 2014, the Syrian Archive is a collective of human rights activists dedicated to curating ...
In this chapter, we first describe the settled practices of human rights fact-finding that open sour...
Wittingly or unwittingly, civil society actors have long been faced with the task of documenting ser...
Serious human rights violations, particularly against ethnic minorities, have been a stark reality i...
This paper evaluates the ongoing effort to document human rights violations in Syria from a transiti...
In armed conflicts across the globe, it is imperative that war crimes, crimes against humanity, geno...
The article presents the various points of view regarding the definitions and uses of records and ar...
The paper focuses on recent developments in human rights advocacy, while it draws on visual document...
Documentation of human rights violations is a difficult and dangerous practice. The capacity of huma...
From videos of rights violations, to satellite images of environmental degradation, to eyewitness ac...
Over the past twenty to twenty-five years international human rights has become a major force in wor...
Archiving and disseminating records of past atrocities is crucial in societies emerging from periods...
Human rights documentation is undergoing a transition from paper to digital formats. The paper trac...
This article examines the preservation of digital images and video (and the social media or Internet...
Why and how can records serve as evidence of human rights violations, in particular crimes against h...
Founded in 2014, the Syrian Archive is a collective of human rights activists dedicated to curating ...
In this chapter, we first describe the settled practices of human rights fact-finding that open sour...
Wittingly or unwittingly, civil society actors have long been faced with the task of documenting ser...
Serious human rights violations, particularly against ethnic minorities, have been a stark reality i...
This paper evaluates the ongoing effort to document human rights violations in Syria from a transiti...
In armed conflicts across the globe, it is imperative that war crimes, crimes against humanity, geno...
The article presents the various points of view regarding the definitions and uses of records and ar...
The paper focuses on recent developments in human rights advocacy, while it draws on visual document...
Documentation of human rights violations is a difficult and dangerous practice. The capacity of huma...
From videos of rights violations, to satellite images of environmental degradation, to eyewitness ac...
Over the past twenty to twenty-five years international human rights has become a major force in wor...
Archiving and disseminating records of past atrocities is crucial in societies emerging from periods...
Human rights documentation is undergoing a transition from paper to digital formats. The paper trac...
This article examines the preservation of digital images and video (and the social media or Internet...
Why and how can records serve as evidence of human rights violations, in particular crimes against h...
Founded in 2014, the Syrian Archive is a collective of human rights activists dedicated to curating ...
In this chapter, we first describe the settled practices of human rights fact-finding that open sour...