The Lab plans to provide up-to-date resources, information guides, and toolkits for people involved in activism, organizing, and dissent to help them protect their digital networks, accounts, and platforms
The Crowd Counting Consortium (CCC) turns publicly available information on protests, marches, demonstrations, rallies, strikes, and other political crowds in the United States into structured data.
The CCC emerged from a collaborative effort between Lab founder Erica Chenoweth and the University of Connecticut’s Jeremy Pressman to produce an accurate estimate of the number of people who participated in the Women's March on Washington and its affiliated Sister Marchers worldwide on January 21, 2017. Several of their colleagues expressed an interest in...
The Charlie Clements International Human Rights Practitioner Fellowship is awarded each year to an applicant with a demonstrated interest in, and commitment to, issues related to human rights at the international level. The recipient should demonstrate a strong interest in and commitment to engagement with the work of the Carr Center and its affiliated faculty. The recipient is expected to participate in Carr Center co-curricular activities. Both domestic and international applicants are welcome to apply.
Established with the generous support of the Schooner...
The Carr Center welcomes applications from individuals seeking to affiliate for a semester or a year as Fellows. Fellows can be post-docs, scholars, academics on sabbatical, human rights defenders, senior leaders in international organizations, or heads of human rights organizations. We welcome both emerging and established scholars and practitioners whose research and practice are aligned with the Center’s priorities. Fellows can focus on research and writing, auditing classes, meeting faculty and other experts, leading study groups for students, and participating...