Promoting human rights globally is not a one-time campaign—it is an ongoing commitment to humanity, requiring courage, cooperation, and compassion from governments, organizations, and individuals alike.”
Category: Human Rights Law
Silent Victims: Children in Conflict
Children are not collateral damage—they are the silent victims whose protection must guide every response to conflict.”
Starvation, Hunger, and Famine in IHL
Starvation is not collateral damage—it is a weapon that destroys lives, violates law, and signals the need for immediate accountability.”
Haiti in Crisis
Haiti’s crisis is not only a humanitarian emergency—it is a preventable disaster demanding immediate global action.”
Syria’s Path to Justice: Transitional Mechanisms and the Challenge of Accountability
Without accountability and answers for the missing, any path to peace in Syria risks reinforcing the conditions that enabled mass atrocities.”
Israel’s War in Gaza: Starvation as a Method of Warfare
When access to food, water, and aid is systematically constrained, starvation ceases to be a byproduct of conflict and becomes part of its strategy.”
Two Years of War in Sudan: Humanitarian Collapse and International Responsibility
Sudan’s crisis is a stark reminder that inaction amid mass atrocities carries a profound cost for civilians and regional stability.”
Forced Disappearance: Coercion, Control, and the Erosion of Legal Order
Forced disappearance functions not only as a method of repression, but as a systemic tool to instill fear, dismantle dissent, and operate beyond the reach of law.”
Immigrants and Due Process
Deportation without due process is not just a legal violation; it undermines the principles of fairness and justice foundational to democratic societies.”
Sudan Conflict
The scale and pattern of abuses in Sudan raise urgent concerns under international humanitarian and human rights law, including the risk of further mass atrocity crimes.”
