- Molly K. Land & Jay D. Aronson, The Promise and Peril of Human Rights Technology
- Lea Shaver, Safeguarding Human Rights from Problematic Technologies
- Dalindyebo Shabalala, Climate Change, Human Rights, and Technology Transfer: Normative Challenges and Technical Opportunities
- Thérèse Murphy, Judging Bioethics and Human Rights
- Laura A. Dickinson, Drones, Automated Weapons, and Private Military Contractors: Challenges to Domestic and International Legal Regimes Governing Armed Conflict
- Jay D. Aronson, The Utility of User-Generated Content in Human Rights Investigations
- Mark Latonero, Big Data Analytics and Human Rights: Privacy Considerations in Context
- John Emerson, Margaret L. Satterthwaite, and Anshul Vikram Pandey, The Challenging Power of Data Visualization for Human Rights Advocacy
- Ella McPherson, Risk and the Pluralism of Digital Human Rights Fact-Finding and Advocacy
- Lisl Brunner, Digital Communications and the Evolving Right to Privacy
- Rikke Frank Jørgensen, Human Rights and Private Actors in the Online Domain
- G. Alex Sinha, Technology, Self-Inflicted Vulnerability, and Human Rights
- Enrique Piracés, The Future of Human Rights Technology: A Practitioner’s View
Tuesday, May 15, 2018
Land & Aronson: New Technologies for Human Rights Law and Practice
Molly K. Land (Univ. of Connecticut - Law) & Jay D. Aronson (Carnegie Mellon Univ.) have published New Technologies for Human Rights Law and Practice (Cambridge Univ. Press 2018). Contents include: