Your search
Results 98 resources
-
A major retrospective of Coco Chanel has unearthed evidence that the fashion designer was a documented member of the French resistance. The previously unseen documents will go on display, along with contradictory evidence that she operated as a Nazi agent.
-
Terrible conditions at Western Australia’s missions led to devastating loss and trauma. Calls are growing to investigate hundreds of graves and burial sites
-
Vice’s coverage on Saudi Arabia changed after investment deals with the repressive kingdom. A deleted documentary is not completely gone. However it can be seen thanks to the videoplayback link displayed in the article.
-
Responding to the news that Saudi Arabia has already executed 100 people this year, Heba Morayef, Amnesty International’s Middle East and North Africa Director, said: “In clear contrast to Saudi Arabia’s repeated promises to limit its use of the death penalty, the Saudi authorities have already executed 100 people this year, revealing their chilling disregard for the right to life.
-
Prosecutors say an employee of Germany’s foreign intelligence service and an acquaintance have been charged with treason for allegedly passing secret documents to Russia.
-
ICA SAHR commends the preparation of a comprehensive report by the Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and the Environment on ‘Promoting Environmental Democracy: procedural elements of the human right to a clean, health and sustainable environment’
-
Mexico’s Supreme Court ruled this week that Congress must eliminate federal criminal penalties for abortion, which means all federal health facilities should provide abortion care, a massive victory for human rights.
-
The company, formerly known as Twitter, argued an assembly bill violates its free speech rights under the first amendment.
-
How do you handle racist language in your archives? This is, unfortunately, a perennial issue. The Archives for Black Lives group in 2019 published Anti-Racist Description Resources. While you should read the whole thing (especially if you have materials pertaining to slavery), the blog author pulled out some practical bits.
-
Israeli history comes alive today like never before as the Israel State Archives releases thousands of documents related to the 1973 Yom Kippur War, including materials from the months leading up to and following the conflict. Most of these materials, previously confidential, have been examined, scanned, and made accessible in a new smart digital format that uses Google’s search technology.
-
China is seeking not merely to resist but to dismantle a foundational idea of the post-Cold War international order – the universality of human rights.
-
Following concessions on the UK’s Online Safety Bill, the government has conceded that their controversial wish for platforms to scan messages for harmful content, is not “technically feasible”, leaving tech companies hopeful it will not be enforced.
-
Dozens of shelves preserve an archive that gives account of a painful episode in Chile’s history: 47,000 instances of human rights violations during the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet.
-
The ongoing disputes among Kurdish languages and their lack of standardization create obstacles to accessing online information, impedes the flow of information, and curtails active participation in the digital realm.
-
In a Netflix documentary, survivors of sexual abuse and the whistleblower who spoke out share harrowing testimonies
-
The case studies in this report show the many ways community truth-telling initiatives in Australia are being realised and how these efforts contribute to reconciliation.
-
The UN human rights office (OHCHR) on Wednesday emphasized the pressing need for Sri Lanka to address its accountability deficit, ranging from war crimes to rights violations, corruption and abuse of power.
-
Remains pillaged in colonial era for ‘scientific’ experiments are DNA matched to Tanzanian descendants
-
Amnesty International strongly condemns the arrest and detention of human rights lawyers simply for discharging their functions.
-
Records from the Department of Homeland Security show it sought to expand undercover operations online despite pushback from Facebook.
Explore
Resource
-
SAHR Newsletters items
-
2023
-
2023-09
- Events (2)
- International (20)
- National (76)
-
2023-08
(1)
- National News (1)
-
2023-09
-
2023
Resource type
- Audio Recording (1)
- Blog Post (5)
- Book (4)
- Journal Article (1)
- Newspaper Article (83)
- Video Recording (2)
- Web Page (2)
Publication year
-
Between 2000 and 2025
(98)
-
Between 2020 and 2025
(98)
- 2023 (98)
-
Between 2020 and 2025
(98)
Resource language
Online resource
- yes (98)