Your search
Results 878 resources
-
Removal of abortion-related content on social media platforms with inadequate or unclear justification can contribute to the increasing challenges in accessing abortion care and threatens the right to health and bodily autonomy, according to a new briefing from Amnesty International. In Obstacles to Autonomy: Post-Roe Removal of Abortion Information Online, Amnesty International reveals that social […]
-
The Prosecutor at the International Criminal Court (ICC) launched a campaign on Tuesday to address the unfolding crisis in the Darfur region of Sudan, amid the going war between rival military forces that erupted last April.
-
All of the 253 people indicted by UN tribunals for war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide committed decades ago in Rwanda and the Former Yugoslavia, have now been accounted for, the Security Council heard on Tuesday. |
-
The personal photos of Brazilian children are being used to create powerful artificial intelligence (AI) tools without the children’s knowledge or consent.
-
Girls and young women who escaped Boko Haram captivity in north-east Nigeria faced further suffering, including sometimes in unlawful military detention, and are now receiving inadequate support as they attempt to rebuild their lives, Amnesty International said in a new report. ‘Help us build our lives’: Girl survivors of Boko Haram and military abuses in […]
-
Many victim-survivors and scholars say ‘sex slaves’ more accurately describes the abuses the women endured, but governments have been slow to change their view.
-
The Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition (NABS) has launched the nation’s first online records repository and research tool for Indian boarding school records. The database, called The National Indian Boarding School Digital Archive (NIBSDA), was nearly five years in the making, and contains records collected from National Archives in Seattle and Kansas City, Mo. Those records contain case files, administrative records, enrollment registers, and health information about Native...
-
Official says no sign of permit in Ottoman archives, in blow to British Museum, which defends legal right to statuary
-
The National Security Ministry's legal team is reviewing existing legislation to determine whether it allows for wider sharing of information on convicted sex offenders.
-
The cleaning industry across Europe is increasingly under scrutiny for its treatment of employees and disregard for the European standard of fair labour laws. A six-month-long investigation into the European cleaning industry shed light on a complex network across Europe and exploitative business practices.
-
Tech firm earlier committed to storing less data about individuals in response to privacy concerns
-
Native Title, a legal recognition of Aboriginal rights over an area, is set to cover 60 per cent of Australia's landmass in the next 15 years.
-
Disruption has affected wider range of health providers than first thought, including GPs and community and mental health services
-
Taiwan is the target of more disinformation from abroad than any other democracy.
-
The Israel State Archives – a unit within the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO) – is for the first time revealing to the general public 10,189 population files of Jerusalem residents from 1948, which were collected by the “People’s Guard’ in Jerusalem during the War of Independence.
-
The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) released a new report that highlights alarming levels of child food poverty due to inequity, conflict, and climate crises. |
-
As communities across the planet celebrated World Environment Day on 5 June, we are taking you back to the 1950s when broadcaster extraordinaire Sir David Attenborough went from zoologist to climate activist, winning the UN’s highest environmental award. |
-
In early May 2022, Russian forces fired a munition that struck a museum complex including the final home of the 18th-century Ukrainian philosopher and poet Hryhorii Skovoroda. The attack sparked a fire that raged for nearly nine hours. By the time the blaze was extinguished, almost all that remained were scorched walls and a pockmarked statue of the national figure.
-
Archivists at the University of Houston have saved decades-worth of episodes of local LGBT radio shows that started in the 1970s. Together they tell the story of a complex, diverse community.
-
Largest printing house in Ukraine, hit by a missile strike on May 23, was the third publishing house attacked by Russia in Kharkiv, strengthening Ukrainian authorities and experts’ beliefs that Russia is intentionally trying to destroy Ukrainian cultural identity.
Explore
Resource
- SAHR Monthly Newsletters (11)
-
SAHR Newsletters items
(863)
-
2023
(3)
-
2023-11
(1)
- Events (1)
-
2023-12
(2)
- International (1)
- National (1)
-
2023-11
(1)
-
2024
(860)
-
2024-01
(85)
- Events (3)
- International (22)
- National (60)
-
2024-02
(75)
- Events (4)
- International (19)
- National (52)
-
2024-03
(83)
- Events (5)
- International (17)
- National (61)
-
2024-04
(92)
- Events (1)
- International (26)
- National (65)
-
2024-05
(46)
- Events (2)
- International (7)
- National (37)
-
2024-06
(71)
- Events (1)
- International (22)
- National (48)
-
2024-07
(54)
- Events (4)
- International (7)
- National (43)
-
2024-08
(49)
- International (4)
- National (45)
-
2024-09
(120)
- Events (3)
- International (10)
- National (107)
-
2024-10
(68)
- International (15)
- National (53)
-
2024-11
(36)
- Events (1)
- International (3)
- National (32)
-
2024-12
(86)
- Events (3)
- International (16)
- National (67)
-
2024-01
(85)
-
2023
(3)
- SAHR Submissions - Calls for Comments (1)
- SAHR Tuesday Talks (3)
Resource type
- Audio Recording (11)
- Blog Post (58)
- Book (31)
- Document (11)
- Journal Article (25)
- Magazine Article (25)
- Newspaper Article (642)
- Report (10)
- Video Recording (15)
- Web Page (50)