Published October 22nd, 2009 by Future Atlas

Fighting for Human Rights with Technology

The Center for American Progress has released a new report on using technology to fight human rights abuses.

Sarah K. Dreier and William F. Schulz write about how mobile phones, social networks, satellite imagery, and DNA forensics can all be deployed to enhance and protect people’s rights.

Cell phones with photo capabilities convey images of human rights violations at a moment’s notice. Internet social networking tools enable activists to connect with one another and with sympathetic audiences to build worldwide networks for change. Electronic data analysis tools allow for vast amounts of information about human rights crimes to be collected and analyzed.

Among other measures, they call for Congress and the Obama administration to

  • “Increase funding for scientific research and technology development that link to human rights.”
  • “Increase the effectiveness of satellite imagery to document abuses by updating publicly available mapping databases” and increase “NGO access to commercial satellite imagery.”
  • Develop “an ongoing, comprehensive effort to facilitate community monitoring. The U.S. government should commit to making satellite imagery of high-risk locations publicly available on a weekly basis.”
  • “Support international prohibition of restrictions on cryptography.”

The authors also suggest that predictive modeling could provide early warning: “Scientists can … use advanced sensing technologies in tandem with predictive studies to identify regions at risk before they explode into conflict.”

Technology does not have to be cutting-edge to be highly useful:

Even a recycled, dated cell phone can be a significant boon to human rights and development. Every voter who believes that she or he has been inappropriately turned away from the polls can report that experience to the groups monitoring election violations.

It is clear from the report that creating more tools that support distributed human rights monitoring will be crucial, so that ordinary people can safely, secretly, and readily send calls, text, and images from mobile phones, which will shortly be truly ubiquitous.

To increase affordability, the report suggests that mobile networks in developing countries should provide “text messaging services to social change projects for little or no cost.”

Beyond the material in this report, use of technology for human rights might also be enhanced by:

  • crowdsourced monitoring and research — enlisting remote volunteers to go through documents, monitor visual databases or live feeds, and other tasks (building on some early efforts by Amnesty International and others)
  • crowdsourced geolocation tools to fill in more of the holes in global mapping they identify
  • use of small, inexpensive UAVs in human rights work and related journalism
  • deploying a dedicated NGO satellite — expensive but well within the budgets of, for instance, the Gates Foundation

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