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IN THIS SECTION
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Projects Completed Initiatives
The Human Rights Center completed major projects on human rights of vulnerable populations in Southeast Asia and the United States, social reconstruction after the war in Yugoslavia, and a guidebook for journalists and aid workers on war crimes. The tsunami of December 26, 2004, devastated thousands of communities along the coastline of the Indian Ocean. More than 240,000 people were killed, tens of thousands were missing, and more than a million people were displaced. In March and April 2005, the Human Rights Center dispatched a team of researchers to five countries affected by the disaster to assess the human rights problems exacerbated by the disaster and examine the response of governments and aid agencies to reports of human rights abuses. Read more about the project or download the full report. HUMAN TRAFFICKING AND GLOBALIZATION (2002–05)
In 2002, the Human Rights Center initiated its Globalization Project, a three-year effort to strengthen protections for populations vulnerable to human rights abuses as a result of economic integration. Each year, thousands of men, women, and children enter this country seeking work and become captives of modern day slaveholders, yet little information was available about the nature and extent of this clandestine practice. In collaboration with Free the Slaves and the Center for the Advancement of Human Rights at Florida State University, we addressed the issue of forced labor and contemporary forms of slavery in the U.S.
The study, Hidden Slaves: Forced Labor in the United States, released in 2004, measured forced labor in this country as well as illuminated its human costs, the nature of the U.S. legal response, and the barriers to—and best practices supporting—eradication of forced labor. A year later we released a follow-up study: Freedom Denied: Forced Labor in California. This research continues to be cited in policy papers, conference presentations, and media stories about human trafficking. See, for example, "Human trafficking steps from the shadows" (The Berkeleyan, 12 March 2008). In April 2004 UC Berkeley’s Human Rights Center and International Human Rights Law Clinic convened an invited working group of government officials, representatives of nongovernmental organizations, academics from Mexico and the United States, as well as Mexican trafficking survivors to address the urgent and critical need to improve protection and support for Mexican forced labor survivors. Safety after Slavery: Protecting Victims of Human Trafficking summarizes the objectives of the meeting, its findings, and recommendations. COMMUNITIES IN CRISIS: RWANDA AND THE FORMER YUGOSLAVIA (2000–04)
In January 2000, the Human Rights Center launched the Communities in Crisis Project, an interdisciplinary, multi-institutional research initiative to examine the relationship between the pursuit of international justice and local approaches to social reconstruction in the aftermath of war and genocide. Working in collaboration with scholars and activists in Rwanda and the former Yugoslavia, the project established networks across a variety of fields and academic disciplines to examine how the work of the ad hoc International Criminal Tribunals for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda affects the local processes of social reconstruction, and how survivors of mass violence perceive, interpret, and relate to the work of the ad hoc tribunals.
The Project resulted in two books: Eric Stover and Harvey M. Weinstein (eds.), My Neighbor, My Enemy: Justice and Community in the Aftermath of Mass Atrocities(Cambridge University Press, 2004), and Eric Stover, The Witnesses: War Crimes and the Promise of Justice in The Hague (Pennsylvania University Press, 2005). In 1999, the Human Rights Center helped publish a guidebook on international humanitarian law for journalists and aid workers. Edited by Roy Gutman and David Rieff, Crimes of War: What the Public Must Know (W.W. Norton and Company, 1999) contains essays and photographs on specific armed conflicts and an A-Z directory of war crimes and crimes against humanity, as defined by the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and other international treaties and charters. More than 100 journalists and legal experts contributed articles to the book. A spin-off of the book has been the establishment of the Crimes of War Project. The project has created a website to assist journalists and aid workers in the field and to keep the public informed of the latest developments in international humanitarian law. For more information about the book and the Crimes of War Project visit www.crimesofwar.org
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