Your search
Results 1,130 resources
-
Thousands of ancient artefacts have been taken out of the country. These Nepalese citizens are determined to get them back.
-
Police around the US say they're justified to run DNA-generated 3D models of faces through facial recognition tools to help crack cold cases. Everyone but the cops thinks that’s a bad idea, a privacy breach. Without oversight, law enforcement is now able to mix and match technologies in unintended ways, using untested algorithms to predict what a person could look given genetic attributes found in the DNA sample and single out suspects based on unknowable criteria.
-
Le Haut Conseil à l'Égalité entre les femmes et les hommes (HCE) que vient de faire paraître son rapport annuel 2024. 86 % des femmes déclarent « avoir déjà personnellement vécu une situation sexiste ». « C’est aux racines du sexisme qu’il faut s’attaquer », et « de toute urgence », peut-on lire dans le rapport. « Le sexisme commence à la maison, continue à l’école et explose en ligne. »
-
El presidente de Guatemala, Bernardo Arévalo, informó este viernes que convocó a la fiscal general, Consuelo Porras, a una reunión para rendir un informe sobre temas que calificó como “de preocupación para esta Presidencia: derechos humanos, libertad de expresión, proceso de compras de vacunas contra el covid-19 y protocolos de actuación del Ministerio Público de Guatemala
-
The Patawomeck Indian Tribe has been fighting to gain federal recognition from the US government for more than a decade. The tribe says the designation is critical to preserving its cultural traditions.
-
On January 14, unknown assailants attempted to break into the Kyiv apartment of Ukrainian journalist Yurii Nikolov, co-founder and editor of anti-corruption media investigative project Nashi Groshi (Our Money).
-
Lawsuit alleges that office of Jefferson parish district attorney is violating state public records laws by setting such a high price.
-
The evidence shows a far more intensive investigation was under way inside the government about Israel’s compliance with international law than suggested by the foreign secretary.
-
No Justice for Suspicious Death; Detainee journalist Dieudonné Niyonsenga Denounces Torture in Court
-
Absence de justice pour une mort suspecte ; le journaliste Dieudonné Niyonsenga détenu dénonce des actes de torture devant un tribunal
-
Tech giant said it would delete entries for locations deemed ‘personal’ or sensitive, but 18 months later, it’s still retaining data in some cases.
-
The Spanish government agreed on Tuesday to release secret documents on the tapping of the mobile phone of Catalan President and leader of the separatist party ERC Pere Aragonés by agents of the state-run National Intelligence Centre (CNI) using the Israeli spying software Pegasus, a scandal known as “Catalan Gate”.
-
The Supreme Court has ruled that Barita Investments Limited must comply with an Integrity Commission (IC) request for financial information on 151 current and former public officials.
-
Tras siete años encarcelada por una emergencia obstétrica, la jueza anula la sentencia por la vulneración de garantías procesales. Desde 2014, 73 mujeres fueron puestas en libertad, pero 11 procesos penales siguen abiertos por aborto
-
Minister with responsibility for Information, Robert Morgan, says the Government sees internet access as a human right that should be available to citizens wherever they reside.
-
Lebanese authorities should immediately release Hannibal Gaddafi, a son of Libya’s former leader, who has been held in pre-trial detention on spurious charges since his arrest in December 2015.
-
In the aftermath of a disappointing Voice referendum, Indigenous politicians are looking to the United Nations Declaration for the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as a potential way forward.
-
The Canadian Liberal government led efforts to weaken the original draft United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, working secretly with Australia to develop a watered-down, state-friendly substitute in the early 2000s, newly released documents show.
-
The Canadian Liberal government led efforts to weaken the original draft United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, working secretly with Australia to develop a watered-down, state-friendly substitute in the early 2000s, newly released documents show.
-
Le Canada a dirigé des manœuvres pour réduire la portée de la Déclaration des Nations unies sur les droits des peuples autochtones (DNUDPA). Ottawa a travaillé en secret avec l’Australie pour produire un texte alternatif édulcoré au début des années 2000, démontrent des documents du gouvernement australien.
Explore
Resource
-
SAHR Newsletters items
-
2024
-
2024-01
(114)
- Events (3)
- International (26)
- National (85)
-
2024-02
(103)
- Events (5)
- International (24)
- National (74)
-
2024-03
(119)
- Events (6)
- International (22)
- National (91)
-
2024-04
(127)
- Events (2)
- International (34)
- National (91)
-
2024-05
(89)
- Events (4)
- International (19)
- National (66)
-
2024-06
(100)
- Events (1)
- International (31)
- National (68)
-
2024-07
(68)
- Events (5)
- International (8)
- National (55)
-
2024-08
(59)
- International (4)
- National (55)
-
2024-09
(129)
- Events (4)
- International (11)
- National (114)
-
2024-10
(77)
- International (17)
- National (60)
-
2024-11
(50)
- Events (1)
- International (4)
- National (45)
-
2024-12
(100)
- Events (3)
- International (16)
- National (81)
-
2024-01
(114)
- 2023 (1)
- 2025 (1)
-
2024
Resource type
- Audio Recording (24)
- Blog Post (65)
- Book (35)
- Journal Article (35)
- Magazine Article (26)
- Newspaper Article (843)
- Report (15)
- Video Recording (25)
- Web Page (62)
Publication year
Resource language
- English (859)
- Español (71)
- Français (196)
- Portuguese (2)
- Spanish (2)