- Bård A. Andreassen, Hans-Otto Sano & Siobhán McInerney-Lankford, Human rights research method
- Martin Scheinin, The art and science of interpretation in human rights law
- Siobhán McInerney-Lankford, Legal methodologies and human rights research: Challenges and opportunities
- Hilde Bondevik & Inga Bostad, Core principles in argumentation and understanding: Hermeneutics and human rights
- Edward Anderson, Economics and human rights
- Steven L. B. Jensen & Roland Burke, From the normative to the transnational: Methods in the study of human rights history
- Sally Engle Merry, The potential of ethnographic methods for human rights research
- Malcolm Langford, Interdisciplinarity and multimethod research
- George Ulrich, Research ethics for human rights researchers
- Bård A. Andreassen, Comparative analyses of human rights performance
- Hans-Otto Sano & Tomas Max Martin, Inside the organization. Methods of researching human rights and organizational dynamics
- Margaret Satterthwaite & Daniel Kacinski, Quantitative methods in advocacy oriented human rights research
- Simon Walker, Challenges of Human Rights Measurement
- Kirsteen Shields, Methods of monitoring the right to food
- Anna-Luise Chané & Arjun Sharma, Social network analysis in human rights research
- Dimitrina Petrova, Researching discrimination
- Laura Ferguson, Assessing work at the intersection of health and human rights: why? how? and who?
- Anne Hellum, Studying how to study human rights in plural legal contexts: An exploration of plural water laws in Zimbabwe
Monday, July 3, 2017
Andreassen, Sano, & McInerney-Lankford: Research Methods in Human Rights: A Handbook
Bård A. Andreassen (Univ. of Oslo - Norwegian Centre for Human Rights), Hans-Otto Sano (Danish Institute for Human Rights), & Siobhán McInerney-Lankford (World Bank) have published Research Methods in Human Rights: A Handbook (Edward Elgar Publishing 2017). Contents include: