RADAR: Putting Asian states’ Human Rights Council records on the map
RADAR is a platform for analysis and a tool for research on Asian states’ performance at the UN Human Rights Council.
RADAR is a platform for analysis and a tool for research on Asian states’ performance at the UN Human Rights Council.
Human rights organisations are using Uwazi to add layers of context to raw documents in order to make their collections more understandable. With machine learning, we want to further exploit Uwazi’s potential.
The process of documenting the disappearances can support individual families in establishing what happened to their loved ones.
One big lesson? With interest and a little bit of help, we can all learn to use new tools – no matter how scary and non-intuitive they look at first sight.
The conversation ranged from how tools can inspire human rights advocacy to the importance of turning raw data into compelling fact-based stories.
RightDocs is the complete, searchable, and filterable collection of UN Human Rights Council resolutions, amendments, presidential statements, decisions and reports.
FreeThe5KH, Karla Avelar and Mohamed Zaree have all made extraordinary contributions to human rights.
ICAAD is analysing sexual and gender-based violence, and Uwazi is supporting their work.
Holistic security attempts to synthesise best practices from security management protection, self-care, digital security, including gender justice, and with an intersectional approach.
We’ll be sharing our work using machine learning to help human rights advocates sift through large document collections.