Search

Search results

    2018 Oct 26

    Conference: The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court at 20 - Looking Back and Looking Forward

    Registration Closed 11:30am to 4:30pm

    Location: 

    Malkin Penthouse, Harvard Kennedy School, Littauer Building, 79 JFK Street, Cambridge, MA

    iccThe Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court at 20: Looking Back and Looking Forward


    A conference hosted by the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy
    Harvard Kennedy School

    The adoption of the Rome Statute 20 years ago was a historic achievement in the global quest for justice and peace...

    Read more about Conference: The Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court at 20 - Looking Back and Looking Forward
    2018 Apr 02

    Contentious Narratives: Digital Technology and the Attack on Liberal Democratic Norms

    (All day)

    Location: 

    The George Washington University, Washington, District Of Columbia 20052

    contentiousnarratives

    The conference focuses on the effects of disinformation on peacebuilding and on efforts to document human rights abuse and war crimes. Trolls, bots — bits of computer code designed to augment social media activities — have emerged as disruptive elements...

    Read more about Contentious Narratives: Digital Technology and the Attack on Liberal Democratic Norms
    Corruption and Human Rights: The Linkages, the Challenges and Paths for Progress Symposium Report
    Sushma Raman and Mathias Risse. 5/30/2018. “Corruption and Human Rights: The Linkages, the Challenges and Paths for Progress Symposium Report.” In Corruption and Human Rights - The Linkages, the Challenges, and Paths for Progress. Cambridge, MA: Carr Center for Human Rights Policy. See full report. Abstract
    Corruption and Human Rights: The Linkages, the Challenges and Paths for Progress Symposium Report 

    This symposium was conceived as a way for us to convene leaders and academics from the human rights and anti-corruption movements, which have traditionally operated as separate communities of practice, to explore the linkages between the issues we work on and consider approaches to advance our work together. We hope that this symposium will not only help to inform and shape a deeper involvement of the Carr Center into the issue of corruption, but will also be the start of an ongoing collaboration between the human rights and anti-corruption communities.

Pages