By using machine learning, human rights organisations can better curate large information collections
HURIDOCS is leveraging the power of machine learning to make human rights information more up-to-date and accessible.
HURIDOCS is leveraging the power of machine learning to make human rights information more up-to-date and accessible.
We’re honoured to have been selected for the Peace and Justice Strong Institutions Award—and grateful to our human rights partners who have made this work possible.
Throughout 2020, we stayed true to our mission of helping the human rights movement to document and manage key information.
With support from HURIDOCS, TJWG and their partners have launched an open archive of arbitrary detention, abduction and enforced disappearance cases since the 1950s.
Chinese human rights lawyer Yu Wensheng has won the 2021 Martin Ennals Award. A series of emotional short films illustrates his struggle, as well as the struggle of finalists Soltan Achilova and Loujain AlHathloul.
Some of the lessons learned? Get to know your data, allow more time than you think is necessary, and engage the help of partners.
¿Qué se aprendió de la experiencia? Es importante familiarizarse con los datos, ser prudente con el cronograma y conseguir el apoyo adecuado.
Soltan Achilova, Loujain AlHathloul and Yu Wensheng have undertaken tremendous human rights activism in Turkmenistan, Saudi Arabia and China at great risk to themselves.
The organization’s Cartography of Attacks Against Women Journalists is powered by a HURIDOCS-developed solution: Uwazi.
La organización ha creado la ‘Cartografía de agresiones contra mujeres periodistas’, una base de datos construida con nuestra herramienta Uwazi.