A year of exciting collaboration, innovation and human rights advocacy: Our 2019 Annual Report
How did HURIDOCS spend 2019? Helping our partners to document important human rights information and make it accessible.
How did HURIDOCS spend 2019? Helping our partners to document important human rights information and make it accessible.
HURIDOCS staff have also been asked to work from home in light of the COVID-19 public health emergency.
Huda Al-Sarari, Norma Ledezma and Sizani Ngubane are human rights defenders who have risked their lives to promote justice and dignity in their local communities.
With Executive Director Friedhelm Weinberg on parental leave, Director of Programmes Kristin Antin is stepping up in the interim.
Together with some of our partner organizations and Google.org Fellows, we’re exploring how machine learning can support access to human rights law.
As our senior documentalist retires, we celebrate his unrivalled commitment, skill and kindness after more than three decades at HURIDOCS.
International human rights recommendations, commitments and precedents can be powerful tools, but are hard to find. HURIDOCS and Advocacy Assembly have launched a free course to help activists get started.
An integration between Digital Evidence Vault and Uwazi allows users to capture, organize and analyze online content in a streamlined way.
Justice Project Pakistan and HURIDOCS partnered to create a database that shows who exactly is sitting on one of the world’s largest death rows—individuals with disabilities, juveniles and other vulnerable people.
This project aims to digitise court proceedings in Nigeria, thus improving access to key documents that can be used in the fight against corruption.