The team
The Human Rights Measurement Initiative (HRMI) is a unique collaborative venture between human rights practitioners, researchers, academics, and other supporters. Click here to see a collection of interviews and articles about HRMI team members.
Core HRMI team
The HRMI team includes some of the world’s most experienced experts in the field, including developers of some of the most widely used existing measures of civil and political rights, and the prize-winning authors of the best existing measures of economic, social and cultural rights.
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John (Jay) Stewart
ESR Metrics Team
John (Jay) Stewart
Jay is a researcher in the areas of sociology of science, environmental justice and human rights. Prior to becoming an emeritus professor in 2014, he taught sociology, research methods and statistics at Washington State University and at the University of Hartford. More recently he has continued to work on social justice and environmental issues, and is part of our Economic and Social Rights metrics team. He earned his Ph.D. from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
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Meridith Lavelle
Digital Rights Lead
Meridith Lavelle
Meridith is a Ph.D. candidate at the School of Political and International Affairs and the Director of the GLOBIS Human Rights Lab at the University of Georgia. Driven by her desire for the advancement of all human rights, a continued understanding of the varying challenges facing human rights advocacy, and the expansion of human rights education and awareness, she is dedicated to facilitating her contributions through empirical research and collaboration with other human rights advocates to improve outcomes by pressuring governments to do better. Her research agenda centers on human rights, contentious politics, tech/privacy, and political economy.
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Matthew Rains
CPR Metrics Lead
Matthew Rains
Matthew is dedicated to using research for advancing and improving human rights conditions globally, through the creation of data and empowerment of human rights advocates. He has served as the lead of HRMI's Civil and Political Rights team since 2021. His research agenda focuses on discrimination and oppression against marginalized people, political violence, and tackling difficult measurement problems in political science. Matthew is an Assistant Professor at Whitworth University, and was also named the inaugural President of the Consortium for Rights Analysis and Measurement.
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Anonymous
Survey Engagement and Operations
Anonymous
The Survey Engagement and Operations Lead is an experienced project manager with a diverse background across various industries. She has successfully led the expansion of HRMI survey projects into the Pacific, East Asia, and South Asia, demonstrating her expertise in managing complex, multi-regional initiatives.
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Eduardo Monteiro Burkle
Editor and Research Analyst
Eduardo Monteiro Burkle
Eduardo is a lawyer and human rights activist from Brazil. He recently completed his Master's degree in Human Rights in Democratization, focusing his research in the Transitional Justice experience in Brazil.
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K. Anne Watson
Children and Women’s Rights
K. Anne Watson
Annie received her PhD in political science and international affairs from the University of Georgia in 2020 and currently teaches classes on data science and human rights for the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. She is passionate about human rights education, collecting data that can be used to hold governments accountable for abuses, and communicating research to broad audiences so that it can be used to press for progress. Her research focuses on measuring human rights and on the incorporation of international human rights law in domestic policies, particularly for women's rights, children's rights, and economic rights.
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Stephen Bagwell
Economic and Social Rights Metrics Team
Stephen Bagwell
Stephen has a passion for understanding the economic causes and consequences of governments behaving badly. As a political scientist, he teaches courses on human rights, political economy, and politico-economic development. He has worked on several measurement projects related to human rights and well-being, including his dissertation, which focused on developing multiple metrics measuring progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals. Stephen's recent research is focused on the intersection of human security and economics. He earned his PhD in 2019 from the University of Georgia, and is currently teaching courses at the University of Missouri- St Louis.
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Aditi
Global Engagement Lead
Aditi
Our Global Engagement Lead is a lawyer and policy researcher. They have advocacy and advisory experience with NGOs and international organisations. They cannot be named publicly for safety reasons.
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Susan Randolph
Co-founder / Economic and Social Rights Metrics Lead
Susan Randolph
Susan’s life-long interest in people’s wellbeing and economic development has led her to push the frontiers of our knowledge and help develop a ground-breaking approach for measuring the fulfilment of Economic and Social Rights. Her book describing this approach, Fulfilling Social and Economic Rights with Sakiko Fukuda-Parr and Terra Lawson-Remer (Oxford University Press, 2015), won the 2016 best book of the year award from the American Political Science Association’s Human Rights Section, and the three authors were awarded the 2019 Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order. Susan is Co-Director of the Social and Economic Rights Fulfilment Index Project. She has a PhD in economics from Cornell University and is an Emerita Professor from the University of Connecticut.
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K. Chad Clay
Co-founder / Methodology Research and Design Lead
K. Chad Clay
Chad is a political scientist with a deep interest in furthering our understanding of human rights practices, political violence, organised dissent, and economic development. Chad teaches classes on human rights, international relations, and political economy in the School of Public and International Affairs (SPIA) at the University of Georgia, and has published widely in leading journals. One of the co-founders of HRMI, Chad is leading the design and development of our Civil and Political Rights metrics. He brings with him more than a decade of experience in the area of measuring human rights, including as co-director of the (now archived) CIRI Human Rights Data Project. Chad received his PhD in political science from Binghamton University in 2012.
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Francesca Hart
Finance and Operations Lead
Francesca Hart
Francesca is passionate about equity issues and has dedicated her career to this, having worked in anti-doping, health, and now human rights in both the UK and Aotearoa New Zealand. Francesca has a BCom in accounting and marketing from the University of Otago and a background in HR and finance, which has equipped her well for a career in business operations.
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Elizabeth Kaletski
Children’s Rights
Elizabeth Kaletski
Liz is an Associate Professor of Economics at Ithaca College. Her expertise is at the intersection of applied labor and development economics. This has led both her teaching and research to cover a wide range of topics including economic and social rights, children's rights, inequality, and gender economics. Prior to joining the faulty at Ithaca College, she received her PhD for the University of Connecticut in 2014.
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Thalia Kehoe Rowden
Executive Director
Thalia Kehoe Rowden
Thalia Kehoe Rowden is a gifted communicator, coach, and human rights specialist. She holds a BA in Linguistics and an LLB(Hons) from Victoria University of Wellington, where she had a particular focus on international human rights law. After further study in Applied Theology at Carey Baptist College in Auckland, she worked as a Baptist minister in New Plymouth, New Zealand; with Partners Relief & Development in South East Asia; and the Wellington Community Law Centre; before joining HRMI in 2018. She is a Pākehā New Zealander with English and Scottish ancestry, and has two children.
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Melissa del Aguila
Executive Director
Melissa del Aguila
Melissa is a human rights lawyer, advocate, and evaluation specialist with extensive experience working with academics, policymakers, and NGO partners across the international human rights ecosystem, particularly in Latin America and Asia. She previously directed the Center for Human Rights & Humanitarian Law at American University, and she has held research and advisory positions with the US Committee for Refugees and Immigrants, Robert F Kennedy Human Rights, and the Arias Foundation for Peace and Human Progress. She has an AB in Comparative Politics from Princeton University, and a JD/LLM in International Comparative Law from Cornell Law School.
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Damith Chandimal
Sri Lanka Engagement Consultant
Damith Chandimal
Damith Chandimal is a human rights/ LGBTIQ+ activist and a researcher from Sri Lanka, who has been involved in activism for more than 13 years. He has a Bachelors degree in Social Work and a post graduate Diploma in Gender and Women’s studies.
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James Ibell-Roberts
Development Adviser
James Ibell-Roberts
James is Development Adviser with HRMI, supporting our funding portfoilio. He lives with his partner (and dog!) in Aotearoa New Zealand and is originally from the UK. James is also Strategic Development Coordinator with Taimahi Trust in the disability sector, and a Board Member with Refugees as Survivors New Zealand (RASNZ) and the Sandringham Project in Community Empowerment (SPiCE). James comes from an international and community development background, having lived for a decade in Vanuatu, working in the food security space with the Food & Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), as well as the education sector with Vanuatu’s Little Stars Summer School (VLSSS). Prior to his current roles he worked with Aotearoa Resettled Community Coalition (ARCC) in the resettlement (former refugee) sector. He has an undergraduate degree in Mathematics from Oxford University and a MSc Sustainable Development from the University of London. James is passionate about social and environmental justness, and is very much still learning (and unlearning), and enjoying the journey!
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Keshia Mahmood
Southeast Asia Consultant
Keshia Mahmood
Keshia brings extensive experience in women's rights advocacy across Malaysia and the Asia Pacific region. With a background in communications, she began her career as a journalist before transitioning to the non-profit sector. Most recently, she served as Senior Programme Officer at a regional feminist organisation focused on sexual and reproductive health and rights, where she led a project addressing female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) in Asia. This experience fuelled her commitment to advancing gender equality and intersectional feminism.
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Zoe Higgins
Development Adviser
Zoe Higgins
Zoe Higgins is a Development Adviser with HRMI, supporting our funding portfolio. She is part-time poet and ex-public servant with a mixed background in arts, community work, and international development. Before taking this role with HRMI, Zoe worked for the New Zealand Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade, as a mental health educator with CoLiberate, and as part of the Wellington Women’s Health Collective. She has a BA(Hons) in Geography from the University of Cambridge and an MA in Creative Writing from Te Herenga Waka. She is a Pākehā New Zealander of mixed English, Scottish, Swiss and Welsh ancestry, and hails from Horomaka Banks Peninsula. Zoe currently lives in Barcelona, where she is pursuing a diploma in mime and physical theatre alongside her HRMI work.
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Nkosi Sibanda
East and Southern Africa lead
Nkosi Sibanda
Nkosi has over 5 years of impactful leadership in business and human rights research, natural resource governance and climate justice. With a background in Environmental Engineering and Environmental Law and Policy, he is skilled in program direction and applicability of geospatial data for social justice and has led programs that track and monitor human rights abuses within the mining sector in Southern Africa. He has worked on international projects either as a consultant or a research specialist with institutions like the United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, UNCCD, the OHCHR and YOUNGO. Among other roles, he is currently an Affiliate Research Scientist with the University of Georgia’s Department of Anthropology. He believes that no action is too small to change the lives of vulnerable communities, and a firm believer of measuring what matters.
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Evelynne Gomez
Communications Lead
Evelynne Gomez
Evelynne (Evie) has almost a decade of experience in strategic communications and project management within the human rights sector across Malaysia and the Asia-Pacific region. With a strong background on the issues of gender justice, sexual and reproductive health and rights, and SOGIESC, her professional journey has been shaped by a commitment to social justice and a dedication to advancing gender equity. Evie holds a BA in Sociology from the University of Wisconsin Eau-Claire and a MSc in Gender, Media and Culture Studies from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE).
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Patrick Poon
East Asia Consultant
Patrick Poon
Patrick Poon is previously a Visiting Researcher of the University of Tokyo and previously a Visiting Researcher at the Institute for Comparative Law of Meiji University in Tokyo, Japan, and a Visiting Scholar at the University of St Andrews in Scotland. In his years in Hong Kong, Patrick was a court reporter at the South China Morning Post, an English website editor of China Labour Bulletin, executive secretary and board member of China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, executive secretary and board member of Independent Chinese PEN Center, and a China researcher of Amnesty International. He is currently a board member and consultant of Tokyo-based Asian Lawyers Network and a member of Lady Liberty Hong Kong. His opinion articles on Hong Kong and China were published in South China Morning Post, Hong Kong Free Press, Radio Taiwan International, Nikkei Asia and Japan News, among other publications.
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Anonymous
Executive Assistant
Anonymous
Our Executive Assistant comes from a healthcare startup background, where she managed communications and coordinated logistics for nursing education initiatives. She works across multiple time zones and is currently finishing her International Relations degree. Her startup experience has given her the adaptability needed for nonprofit leadership support.
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Anonymous
Security Lead
Anonymous
Our Security Lead is a cyber security specialist with experience in data protection, risk, governance and compliance.
HRMI Ambassadors
HRMI Ambassadors are our local partners – people who are part of the local human rights community, and whose values are aligned with ours. These people play an important role in connecting HRMI to the local human rights community and help us identify potential survey respondents in their country. HRMI Ambassadors for some countries wish to remain anonymous and are not listed here.
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Ajit Sahi
India
Ajit Sahi
Ajit Sahi is an Indian-American civil rights activist and journalist with over 35 years of experience in the fields of human rights, civil and political liberties, religious freedom and investigative journalism. He serves as the Advocacy Director of the Indian American Muslim Council. He also leads and coordinates a large coalition of civil rights organizations, which include faith-based organisations, including Christian, Hindu and Muslim organizations, as well as non-faith based organizations. He has been at the forefront of building an overarching narrative about the situation of minorities in India. He is a recipient of the Voice of Courage Award from Muslim Public Affairs Council in 2022, the inaugural Swami Agnivesh Award from Hindus for Human Rights in 2021, and the Pluralist Award from Center for Pluralism at the IRF Summit in June 2022.
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Firzana Redzuan
Malaysia
Firzana Redzuan
Fir (She/Her) is an independent consultant that specialises in children's rights and protection against sexual violence. She applies intersectionality in the advocacy of children's issues to safeguard the needs of children who have be systemically excluded and disinvested in. She founded Malaysia's first youth-led child sexual abuse prevention NGO, Monsters Among Us (MAU). Currently, she serves as the interim President of Protect and Save the Children, a child rights NGO providing educational tools and capacity building for adults to combat sexual violence involving children. Previously, she was a Programme Officer with ARROW's Information and Communications team for almost two years working on projects on gender equality and the harmful practice of female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C). She is legally trained in civil law (LLB) and Syariah Practice (DLSA) and has been called to the Bar in 2021. Apart from her children's right work, she is also an alumni of the YSEALI Academic Fellowship and participated in Indonesia's Women Ulama Congress as an observer in 2022.
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Amanda Klasing
United States
Amanda Klasing
Amanda Klasing is the National Director of Government Relations and Advocacy at Amnesty International USA. She leads a team of advocacy directors and fellows and engages with the US government on global human rights issues and to advance a human rights policy agenda. Prior to joining Amnesty International USA, she launched and lead the US Democracy Initiative in 2022 and co-led the Women's Rights Division from 2018-2021 at Human rights Watch, where she was also a fellow, and senior researcher. This role was focused on economic and social rights, sexual and domestic violence, reproductive rights and the impact of structural racism on women's health outcomes, and the rights of Indigenous Peoples. She is also a co-founder of the Human Rights Methodology Lab, a collaboration that fosters innovation to improve human rights research methodologies across disciplines.
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Adama K. Dempster
Liberia
Adama K. Dempster
Adama is a Liberian human rights and justice campaigner with over 15 years of experience in the field of human rights and transitional justice nationally and internationally. He is the founding national director of the Independent Human Rights Investigators (IHRI), Lead Campaigner of The Coalition for the Establishment of War and Economic Crimes Court in Liberia (CEWAECCL), and the Secretary General at the Civil Society Human Rights Advocacy Platform of Liberia.
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‘Ofa Guttenbeil-Likiliki
Tonga
‘Ofa Guttenbeil-Likiliki
‘Ofa works to empower Tongan women. She tells survivors’ stories of violence against women and girls, drawing attention to this pressing issue in Tonga. ‘Ofa founded and served as the director of Tonga’s Women & Children Crisis Center. She has twice been nominated for the USA Secretary of State International Women of Courage Award for her work in the area of women and children’s rights in Tonga.
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Simão Hossi
Angola
Simão Hossi
Simão is a journalist, an advocate for women's rights and gender equality, and a civic activist in Angola. He is also a poet, photographer and news blogger. He has written for Clube K and Revista Pueblo and now writes regularly for Radio Angola and Global Voices. He is currently completing the 3rd year of the Communication Sciences Course at the Independent University of Angola and has participated in debates and conferences on human rights at the national and international level.
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Carlos Zazueta
Mexico
Carlos Zazueta
Carlos is a human rights lawyer and researcher based in Mexico. He has extensive experience in human rights issues in Mexico and Central America, especially in matters related to torture, enforced disappearances and extrajudicial executions. Carlos previously worked as a researcher at Amnesty International and as a lawyer at the Center for Justice and International Law representing cases before the Inter-American Human Rights System. He brings to HRMI his expertise as a human rights lawyer and activist in the Americas.
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Julia Legner
Saudi Arabia
Julia Legner
Julia Legner is a political scientist and human rights professional. She is the co-founder of Geneva based legal advocacy NGO MENA Rights Group and Head of Advocacy at London based Saudi focused NGO ALQST for Human Rights. She has over seven years of work experience providing legal assistance and advocating on behalf of victims of human and labour rights violations in the MENA region. She holds a BA in Arabic and International Relations from Westminster University and an MA in Middle Eastern Politics from the School of African and Oriental Studies at the University of London.
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Jen Ang
Scotland
Jen Ang
Jen Ang is Founding Director of Lawmanity, a project that aims to tackle inequalities in the law by working with people-led movements to secure positive change. She is an experienced human rights lawyer qualified to practice in Scotland, England and Wales, and New York State. Jen is a legal expert on migrants’ rights, women’s rights and children’s rights, and on the rights of survivors of trafficking and torture. She is also a Professor in Practice at the University of Glasgow’s School of Law, and believes in making legal education open and accessible to all.
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Yibee Huang
Taiwan
Yibee Huang
Yibee is the Chief Executive Officer of the Covenants Watch, a coalition comprising human rights groups and organizations of persons with disabilities based in Taipei, Taiwan. She has a PhD degree from the National Yang Ming University on human rights indicator development. Yibee has extensive experience in the “Taiwan model” of reviews of state party reports on human rights covenants (ICCPR and ICESCR) and conventions (CRPD, CEDAW and CRC). Together with other civil society groups, they draft quality parallel reports to supplement the state reports on human rights. Yibee is also one of the few Taiwanese that have had the experiences with UN human rights mechanisms, by filing urgent appeals and submitting reports. Apart from advocacy activities, Yibee’s research interests include the development of human rights indicators and impact assessment, as well as application of human rights treaties in domestic courts.
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Sharon Wangechi Muriuki
Kenya
Sharon Wangechi Muriuki
Sharon is a lawyer. She is interested in advancing agricultural governance, food safety, land rights and indigenous people’s rights in Kenya. She hopes to reinforce her human rights litigation skills and on agro-economic access to and for minority communities in Kenya.
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Nalini Singh
Fiji
Nalini Singh
Nalini Singh, from Fiji, is a feminist and a social development specialist with over 18 years’ experience in design, implementation, management, monitoring and evaluation of women’s rights and development programmes in Asia Pacific. After working in regional NGOs for 12 years, she returned home over 4 years ago to head the Fiji Women’s Rights Movement- a position she holds today. She is passionate about many issues that affect women and strives to do her best to ensure that women are at the centre stage when it comes to equality, rights and development.
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Savita Ali
India
Savita Ali
Savita Ali is a feminist advocate and human right activist with 15 years of experience working at the ground level on the issues such as Dalit rights, minority rights, and women's rights and empowerment and such identity-based multiple marginalisation. Presently, she is the Managing Trustee of Eva Foundation and a core team member of 'Dalit Women Fight', where she leads and directs management of programmes, communications, and community mobilization activities. She is a practicing advocate in the Patna High Court, in the state of Bihar.
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Aina Shormanbayeva
Kazakhstan
Aina Shormanbayeva
Aina Shormanbayeva is a human rights defender in Kazakhstan. She began her work as a human rights lawyer in 2002. Since 2010 she organised and headed the International Legal Initiative Public Foundation, one of the leading human rights organizations in Kazakhstan. Aina is engaged in the promotion and protection of civil and political rights, including legal assistance to vulnerable groups, such as victims of torture, human trafficking, refugees, and people without housing and documents. An important part of her work is the promotion of human rights in the legislation of Kazakhstan.
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Anne Pakoa
Vanuatu
Anne Pakoa
Anne Pakoa is the founder and CEO of the Vanuatu Human Rights Coalition, training human rights defenders to advocate for the rights of indigenous Ni – Vanuatu to ensure equitable access to social and economic goods for all. Anne is a registered nurse and nurse educator by profession, and she has worked in the NGO sector for 22 years, setting up a few NGOs such as Anne’s Christian Community Health School and Nursing Services, and the Vanuatu Young Women for Change. She is also chair and vice-chair on a number of other boards. Anne has been recognised by the US Secretary of State and the Commonwealth Fellow for her extraordinary commitment to fighting for social justice and was awarded the 2015 US Ambassador Women of Courage Award.
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Trinh Huu Long
Vietnam
Trinh Huu Long
Trinh Huu Long is the Co-Director of Legal Initiatives for Vietnam (liv.ngo) that aims to promote human rights, democracy, and the rule of law in Vietnam through independent journalism, research, and civic education. LIV's two main projects are Luat Khoa Magazine (luatkhoa.org) and The Vietnamese Magazine (thevietnamese.org). Long is based in Taipei, Taiwan as the head of LIV's Representative Office and Editor-in-Chief of Luat Khoa Magazine. He has studied law and Asia-Pacific studies, and has published intensively on legal and political matters of Vietnam concerning free speech, criminal justice, and constitutionalism.
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Ben Lomai
Nauru
Ben Lomai
Ben has worked as a litigation lawyer for 27 years since his admission to the Papua New Guinea Bar. He’s also admitted to the Victorian Bar in Melbourne. Ben operates a law firm under Lomai & Lomai Attorneys for over 20 years now. He has assisted over 1,000 asylum seekers and refugees under the Australian Offshore Program.
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Ben Bilua
Solomon Islands
Ben Bilua
Ben Bilua is an award-winning journalist from the Solomon Islands. He’s been uncovering human rights violations towards indigenous people and people with disability since 2009. As a journalist, Bilua uses his knowledge to advocate and protest on behalf of indigenous people from socio-economic imbalances. He is a member of Pacific Human Right Defender and the founder of Indigenous Human Right Solomon Islands (IHRSI) with specific focus on documenting loss of biodiversity due to logging and mining.
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Tebeio Tamton
Kiribati
Tebeio Tamton
Tebeio hails from the islands of Beru and Tarawa in the small island state of Kiribati. He is a food technologist by profession and LGBT advocate by passion. Tebeio is the found member of BIMBA (Boutokaan Inaomataia ao Mauriia Binabinaine Association), an LGBTQ+ civil society organization (CSO) in Kiribati. It focuses on eradicating all forms of discrimination, stigma and violence against the LGBTQ communities especially binabinaine.
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Seyeong Hanlim
South Korea
Seyeong Hanlim
Seyeong Hanlim holds a BA in Political Science from Denison University and currently serves as a Program Manager at MINBYUN-Lawyers for a Democratic Society in Seoul, South Korea. In this role, she combines activism and research on international human rights, primarily focusing on international covenants and critical issues in Palestine and Myanmar. Fields of interest include human rights advocacy, social equity, the experiences of marginalized communities, and the intersection of gender, security, and development. Committed to informing policy and promoting justice, Seyeong is dedicated to amplifying voices and addressing urgent human rights challenges globally.
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Shefa’a Al Qudah
Jordan
Shefa’a Al Qudah
Shefa’a is an independent journalist from Jordan covering human rights, politics, gender, and climate issues. She is a member of the Marie Colvin Network of Women Journalists. Since 2018, she has covered protests in Jordan and works with Arab and international journalistic institutions. She has won local and regional awards for her human rights reporting. She is interested in staying connected with defenders of rights and freedoms around the world.
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Patrick Poon
Hong Kong
Patrick Poon
Patrick Poon is previously a Visiting Researcher of the University of Tokyo and previously a Visiting Researcher at the Institute for Comparative Law of Meiji University in Tokyo, Japan, and a Visiting Scholar at the University of St Andrews in Scotland. In his years in Hong Kong, Patrick was a court reporter at the South China Morning Post, an English website editor of China Labour Bulletin, executive secretary and board member of China Human Rights Lawyers Concern Group, executive secretary and board member of Independent Chinese PEN Center, and a China researcher of Amnesty International. He is currently a board member and consultant of Tokyo-based Asian Lawyers Network and a member of Lady Liberty Hong Kong. His opinion articles on Hong Kong and China were published in South China Morning Post, Hong Kong Free Press, Nikkei Asia and Japan News.
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Velaphi Mamba
Eswatini
Velaphi Mamba
Velaphi Mamba is a Development and Public Administration expert as well as a Human Rights Defender from Eswatini. Velaphi has over 18 years of experience working in the civic society, philanthropy, and human rights sectors in Africa. His most recent role before pursuing his studies at the Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government was that of Team Leader for the Economic and Social Justice Cluster at the regional level (Southern Africa) for the Open Society Initiative for Southern Africa (OSISA).
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Nkosikhona Sibanda
Zimbabwe
Nkosikhona Sibanda
Nkosi has over 5 years of impactful leadership in business and human rights research, natural resource governance and climate justice. With a background in Environmental Engineering and Environmental Law and Policy, he is skilled in program direction and applicability of geospatial data for social justice and has led programs that track and monitor human rights abuses within the mining sector in Zimbabwe. He has worked on international projects either as a consultant or a research specialist with institutions like the United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, UNCCD, the OHCHR and YOUNGO. Among other roles, he is currently an Affiliate Research Scientist with the University of Georgia's Department of Anthropology. He believes that no action is too small to change the lives of vulnerable communities, and a firm believer of measuring what matters.
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Rachel Albinson
England
Rachel Albinson
Rachel Albinson is Head of Human Rights Monitoring at one of the UK’s national human rights institutions. She is responsible for reporting to the United Nations and Council of Europe on government compliance with human rights treaty obligations in England and Wales, and managing their local Human Rights Tracker. Rachel has a background in equality and human rights policy development and international relations, and has previously worked in the UK civil service and the European External Action Service.
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Kehinde Adegboyega
Nigeria
Kehinde Adegboyega
Kehinde Adegboyega is the Executive Director of the Human Rights Journalists Network Nigeria, a leading organisation dedicated to promoting human rights, freedom of expression, and digital resilience in Nigeria. With extensive experience in advocacy, media, and policy development, Kehinde spearheads initiatives that amplify marginalized voices, enhance journalistic practices, and foster accountability through strategic partnerships. Under his leadership, the Network has championed groundbreaking projects, including digital rights collaborations, community outreach programs, and the Africa International Human Rights Film Festival, which highlights critical human rights issues through impactful storytelling. Kehinde is deeply committed to empowering communities, advancing gender equity, and leveraging media to drive social change.
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Dilovar Arabjonova
Uzbekistan
Dilovar Arabjonova
Dilovar Arabjonova is a researcher and project coordinator specializing in human rights and democratization. With a Master’s in Human Rights and Democratization and a Bachelor’s in Financial Management, she has worked on international projects addressing gender-based violence and community development. Her experience with USAID, OSCE, and ECOM highlights her expertise in data analysis and stakeholder engagement. Passionate about social justice, Dilovar holds multiple certifications in peace and conflict studies.
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Lira Ismailova
Kyrgyzstan
Lira Ismailova
Lira Ismailova (Asylbek) is a gender expert and trainer currently working at Bir Duino Kyrgyzstan (https://birduino.kg/en/), an organization dedicated to promoting human rights and freedoms in line with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Lira Ismailova actively works to improve access to justice for women and girls and to prevent sexualized violence against girls and women with disabilities in Kyrgyzstan. From August 2019 to November 2023, she served as the National Focal Point of UPR-Info in Kyrgyzstan, leading efforts to consolidate civil society’s role in promoting the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) mechanism. From 2022 to 2024, she was the сoordinator of the Coalition for Equality, an alliance established in 2013 that brings together 30 NGOs in Kyrgyzstan to promote anti-discrimination initiatives, monitor public discourse for discriminatory narratives, and respond to discriminatory policies. The Coalition plays a key role in fostering an equal and inclusive society free from all forms of discrimination.
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Siya Hegde
United States
Siya Hegde
Siya Hegde is a human rights lawyer in New York City, where she currently works with the National Homelessness Law Center on advancing the right to housing and decriminalizing homelessness and poverty. She was previously a civil public defender at The Bronx Defenders, where she engaged in client facing advocacy and litigation that centered on the civil consequences of individuals’ contact with legal systems. Her expertise in eviction defense and housing justice has grown in partnership with local grassroots coalitions, directly impacted tenants, advocates, and defender organizations across the City. Her work and commentary have been featured in various outlets, including the New York Times, New York Daily News, Times Union, City Limits, the New York Law Journal, Bloomberg CityLab, the Georgetown Journal of Poverty Law and Policy, and the Indiana Health Law Review. As part of a national task force of civil society advocates, she has engaged with U.N. human rights mechanisms in Geneva around the criminalization of homelessness and poverty and is also a Board Member of the newly reviving U.S. Human Rights Network.
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Dr. Debendra Prasad Adhikari
Nepal
Dr. Debendra Prasad Adhikari
Dr. Debendra Prasad Adhikari is a human rights and peace-building expert with over 30 years of experience working with the UN, INGOs, governments, and research institutions, with a primary focus on fundamental freedoms and civic space. He specialises on human rights in South Asia as well as in conflict management, disarmament and reintegration, advocacy, and women’s rights. He has led numerous capacity-building initiatives for civil society organisations and has extensive experience supporting and empowering marginalised communities. Dr. Debendra also holds a PhD on the reintegration of female ex-combatants.
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Aminath Lamha Aslam
The Maldives
Aminath Lamha Aslam
Aminath Lamha Aslam is the co-founder of RiseUp Maldives, an NGO dedicated to protecting human rights and raising awareness about critical social issues. She is a passionate advocate for women's rights. Through RiseUp, Lamha plays a key role in guiding survivors through the legal system, advocating for their rights, and driving a meaningful change in the Maldives.
Situations vacant
We have Ambassador vacancies for Wales, Brazil, Venezuela, Australia, New Zealand, Thailand, Indonesia. Could you be a HRMI Ambassador for one of these countries? Please apply for this role by sending your CV to HRMI at admin@humanrightsmeasurement.org.
Board of Trustees
HRMI is a Charitable Trust in New Zealand. Here are our Trustees:
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Anne-Marie Brook
HRMI Co-founder
Anne-Marie Brook
Anne-Marie is a visionary leader driven by a passion for innovation to support systemic change. As one of HRMI’s co-founders and inaugural Executive Director, she has played a key role in building the foundations for HRMI’s work. Anne-Marie has also played a critical role in the development of the ground-breaking Rights Intelligence dataset. Prior to making the jump into human rights, Anne-Marie worked as a senior economist for the OECD and in the New Zealand public sector. She is an Edmund Hillary Fellow and has degrees in Psychology and Economics from the University of Otago and an MPA in Economics from the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs (SPIA), which she attended on a Fulbright Scholarship.
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Tracey Hook
Tracey Hook
Tracey descends from Ngā Wairiki, Te Āti Haunui a Pāpārangi tribes in Aotearoa (New Zealand). A Fellow Chartered Accountant, and member of the Institute of Directors, Tracey has spent over two decades working for māori organisations. Her previous roles include CEO of Ngāti Awa Group Holdings, Executive Director of Finance for Te Wānanga o Aotearoa, and Chief Financial Officer for Tainui Group Holdings Limited. Tracey is also the Chair of her iwi commercial board, Ngā Wairiki Ngāti Apa Developments Limited, and a member of the investment committee for Te Pūia Tāpapa – a $115 million fund owned by 28 māori entities. Prior governance roles included commercial investment, forestry, an early-stage membership-based investment network, and land management sectors.
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Santiago Fiorio
Santiago Fiorio
Santiago is a human rights and international cooperation expert, with a specialisation in international humanitarian law, multidimensional poverty eradication, and sustainability. He currently serves as an Independent Expert to the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (2023–2026), and as the Human Rights and Labour Standards Coordinator for the UN Global Compact Network in Paraguay, where he works to strengthen corporate sustainability and social responsibility. He has advised state and non-state actors—including governments, companies, and NGOs—on strategies to comply with international human rights law, and also, measure and address multidimensional poverty across diverse national contexts. His background includes academic and professional experience in armed conflict analysis, the rule of law, and international human rights standards. A university lecturer in International Relations and Protocol, Santiago has more than a decade of experience in higher education and advocacy. He holds an MSc in Human Rights from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), as well as degrees in Law and International Relations, and is a Chevening Scholar.
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Ryan Brown
Ryan Brown
Ryan is a transformation and governance specialist with a background in strategy consulting, digital delivery, and executive stakeholder engagement across public and private sectors in New Zealand, the UK, and Southeast Asia. He is currently a Director of Consulting at PwC New Zealand, where he leads complex transformation programmes with a focus on enterprise-wide technology implementation and accompanying organisational change. Prior to PwC, Ryan held senior roles at Capgemini Invent in London and Ernst & Young in Singapore and Auckland, overseeing large-scale transformation programmes and driving strategic delivery in utilities, higher education, and infrastructure sectors. He holds a Bachelor of Commerce in Finance and Marketing, and a Bachelor of Science in Statistics and Psychology, both from the University of Auckland.
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Mausi Segun
Mausi Segun
Mausi Segun is the Executive Director, Africa division at Human Rights Watch. With a law degree from Obafemi Awolowo University, Nigeria, and an LLM human rights law from University of London’s School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), as a British Chevening scholar, Mausi has over 30 years of experience in legal and human rights practice. She leads a team of 23 staff working on human rights issues in 25 African countries including terrorism and counterterrorism, conflicts, cycles of communal violence, humanitarian and refugee crises, sexual violence against women and girls, repression of journalists, activists, and political opposition as well as on natural resource exploitation and environmental rights. A keen writer and researcher, Mausi has published reports, articles and opinion pieces for major African and international news media and is a much sought-after analyst and conference speaker. She serves on the board of several human rights organizations and associations across Africa and beyond.
Development Advisory Committee
The HRMI Development Advisory Committee (DAC) is a voluntary advisory group made up of individuals experienced in non-profit development, engagement, and outreach. The DAC plays an important role in supporting HRMI’s development efforts by engaging in fundraising strategy, refining HRMI’s engagement and development processes, and helping foster connections with their established networks of contacts.
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Julie Verhaar
Julie Verhaar
Julie Verhaar is a global executive nonprofit advisor with over 20 years experience driving successful business and fundraising operations within International Non-Governmental Organizations (INGOs). She supports and facilitates the leadership of organisations and UN agencies in their organizational development and journey to sustainability, transformational change, and global expansion. Most recently she was the Acting Secretary General for the International Secretariat of Amnesty International, leading the organization and the implementation of a cultural change initiative which included the creation of a Racial Equality, Diversity & Inclusion initiative. A comprehensive mental health and wellbeing program for all staff was implemented and enhanced because of the Covid pandemic. Other roles she held with Amnesty International were Deputy Secretary General and Senior Director Global Fundraising & Engagement. Before joining Amnesty International she was in senior leadership positions with UNICEF, Greenpeace International and the Netherlands Red Cross. Julie is a member of the supervisory board of the Dr. Dennis Mukwege Foundation and the Global Survivor Fund.
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Cyrille Koolhaas
Cyrille Koolhaas
Cyrille Koolhaas is an NGO executive with campaigning, fundraising, and communications experience across three continents. He was part of leadership teams for Amnesty International in New Zealand, Argentina, and Germany, professionalising campaigning and growing financial support and grassroots activism. Most recently, he joined the Netherlands Refugee Foundation's team as their Head of Fundraising. Previously, he also worked for Amnesty International in the Netherlands, Oxfam New Zealand, the New Zealand Ministry of Justice, and Kantar Group. Cyrille started his career as a research consultant and analyst. He has a Master's Degree in Political Science and a Bachelor's Degree in Business and is fluent in four languages.
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Alison Miranda
Alison Miranda
As the Director of Learning and Assessment at the Fund for Global Human Rights, Alison leads the L&A team and works with Fund staff to enable values-driven assessment and reflection to learn from and improve our human rights work. She has nearly 20 years of experience as a global democracy, human rights, and governance professional in the social change sector. Immediately prior to joining the Fund, Alison served as head of learning and impact with the donor collaborative, Transparency and Accountability Initiative (now Trust, Accountability, and Inclusion). Before that, she managed a portfolio of democracy and governance impact evaluations and research at Social Impact, Inc. She began her career at the National Democratic Institute, where she held several roles, supporting and leading institutional programmatic and learning efforts in the Latin America and Asia regions.
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Jack Hardinges
Jack Hardinges
Jack Hardinges is an independent consultant helping to build new data products, platforms and organisations. He often focuses on responsible governance, working at the intersection of data, technology and society. He is currently the Head of Data Access and Ethics at Foresight and in 2023, Jack established the Data Empowerment Fund, which supports a diverse set of initiatives that enable greater individual agency or community control over data. Prior to this, Jack has worked at the Open Data Institute and served on Open Supply Hub's Board of Directors. Jack also holds a BSc in Economics from the University of Southampton.
Wider HRMI team
A range of other human rights researchers and academics are contributing to the development of our methodologies and practices. Some of these include:
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Shaan Badenhorst
ESR Metrics Team
Shaan Badenhorst
Working as a research analyst at Motu Economic & Public Policy Research in New Zealand, Shaan is working towards gaining the knowledge and experience to undertake a PhD in Health Economics. He completed his honours year in economics at the University of Auckland in 2018. Born in South Africa, he speaks English and Afrikaans. He is passionate about investigating the relationship between the health and education outcomes of children.
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Ryan Bakker
CPR Metrics Team
Ryan Bakker
Ryan is a political scientist who has has dedicated himself to understanding and remedying the causes of social inequality through social scientific methods. His research and teaching interests include survey research and measurement, politics, and terrorism/international conflict. Ryan teaches in the Department of Political Science at the University of Georgia, is Director of the Center for the Study of Global Issues, and is contributing his expertise to the development of our Civil and Political Rights metrics. He received his PhD in political science from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 2007.
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Scott Edwards
Adviser
Scott Edwards
Scott is Senior Crisis Adviser for Amnesty International. His current work focuses on the practical use of information and communications technologies for human rights compliance monitoring and research. Scott brings to HRMI a wealth of knowledge about human rights crises across the globe, and is helping to connect us to potential survey respondents. Scott previously served in the U.S. as Amnesty’s Advocacy Director for Africa, and Director of the Crisis Prevention and Response Unit, and is a Professorial Lecturer at George Washington University’s Elliot School of International Affairs. He completed his doctoral work in Political Science from the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
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Danny Hill
CPR Metrics Team
Danny Hill
Danny is a political scientist who strongly believes in the use of social scientific methods for advancing our knowledge of human rights conditions, as well as the efficacy of efforts to improve those conditions on the ground. His research agenda focuses on human rights law and practices, violent political conflict, repression, and dissent. Danny teaches classes on conflict, international organizations, international relations, and quantitative research methods in the School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Georgia. Danny received his PhD from Florida State University in 2012.
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Amanda Murdie
CPR Metrics Team
Amanda Murdie
Amanda is a political scientist who is passionate about using research to help civil society actors work to improve human rights in repressive countries. She teaches classes on terrorism, war and human security, and international interventions at the School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Georgia. She has published dozens of articles on her research and is the incoming editor-in-chief of International Studies Review. She is contributing to the design and development of HRMI’s Civil and Political Rights metrics. Amanda received her PhD from Emory University in 2009.
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Brian Root
Adviser
Brian Root
Brian is the Senior Quantitative Analyst at Human Rights Watch. He is responsible for data analysis in Human Rights Watch reports as well as providing guidance on quantitative data collection and training on statistics and research methodology. Brian’s extensive experience with quantitative human rights data has been invaluable to the development of our civil and political rights pilot methodology. He has participated in HRMI’s co-design workshops and is helping to connect us to potential survey respondents. Brian received his PhD in International Development from Tulane University Law School.
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Rāwā Karetai
Adviser – Disability and SOGI
Rāwā Karetai
Rāwā is passionate about the communities he is a part of, having lived experience and identifying as a member of the Rainbow, Disability and Indigenous communities. He is based between in Wellington and Christchurch in Aotearoa, New Zealand. Rāwā has extensive experience in civil society and cross-Government approach to tackling complex issues and has a background in organisational change and development, strategy and leadership, Academic Board and University Council, Te Ao Māori and Capability Development. Rāwā enjoys supporting the community and grassroots organisations such as Qtopia as the Co-Chair, Christchurch Heroes as the Co-chair and Manager, Hui Takatāpui and Kahukura Pounamu as a board member, ILGA World as the Bi+ Steering Committee Chairperson and board member and ILGA Oceania as one of the two New Zealand representatives. Rāwā is the Principal Advisor, System Transformation for the Disability Directorate at the Ministry of Health – a cross-Government approach to reform the disability sector in New Zealand, also known as Enabling Good Lives.
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Pablo Santos-Pineda
Research
Pablo Santos-Pineda
Pablo is an avid research analyst who enjoys learning new languages and cultures. His special focus is understanding indigenous approaches to politics and economics for the purpose of advancing human, economic and cultural rights.
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Sylvia Frain
Pacific Engagement
Sylvia Frain
Sylvia currently lives on Waiheke Island in Aotearoa New Zealand and enjoys waka ama (outrigger canoeing) and spending time in and on the ocean. She serves as a Research Associate with the Micronesian Area Research Center at the University of Guam and is one of the co-founders of The Everyday Peace Initiative, a social enterprise supporting people and communities to build peace through data, education and research. Sylvia earned her PhD with the National Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Otago, Dunedin in 2017 and was the inaugural postdoctoral fellow with the Pacific Media Centre at Auckland University of Technology in 2018.
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Beatriz Fagionato Oliveira
Outreach
Beatriz Fagionato Oliveira
Beatriz is a Law student and human rights activist in Brazil. She participates in research groups and enthusiasts over International Law and Human Rights competitions. Her central research is about Democracy in Latin America and she hopes to pursue a career in this field.
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Bruna Fontes
Outreach
Bruna Fontes
Bruna holds a Bachelor’s degree in International Relations from the São Paulo State University (UNESP) and is currently a Law student at the University of Buenos Aires (UBA). She is also a passionate human rights and climate activist. Her fields of interest include Human Rights in Latin America, Climate Refugees and the intersection between International Relations and Film.
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David Matsinhe
Adviser
David Matsinhe
David is the Lusophone Research Specialist at Amnesty International. Based in Johannesburg, South Africa. Most of his work focuses on Angola and Mozambique. David is passionate about creative and innovative ways of galvanizing the public for positive change and is contributing his expertise to the development of HRMI's civil and political rights expert survey methodology. Previous positions include senior lecturer of development studies and social innovation at the University of Johannesburg, and a World Bank senior coach on change management in the Ministry of Education in Mozambique. David earned his PhD in political sociology from the University of Alberta where he was a Canada Graduate Scholar.
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Begümhan İdikut Şimşir
Outreach
Begümhan İdikut Şimşir
Begüm is a final year law student at Turkish German University in Istanbul, Turkey. She is a frequent mooter, Pictetist and a member of the Themis Court Simulations’ Academic Team. Her main research areas are international public law, the law of armed conflict and human rights. She is currently working as a young researcher at UNESCO's Youth as Researchers Project.
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Tori Hawley
Strategy and Communications
Tori Hawley
Tori is a Canadian student currently based in the UK. She has a BA in International Relations from Western University and is now studying Law at the University of Liverpool. Tori has focused her studies and research on public international law, particularly children’s rights and international criminal law. After graduation in 2023, she plans to connect her background in international affairs and human rights with a career in legal practice.
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Zemfira Gogueva
Outreach
Zemfira Gogueva
Zemfira is currently doing an MA in Human Rights and Democratization in the Caucasus, in Yerevan (Armenia), and is looking forward to her second semester in Tbilisi (Georgia). In the future Zemfira hopes to pursue a career in human rights fields and work in a nonprofit organization that helps to ensure rights to education.
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Julia de Cresci Oliveira Matsuda
Internships
Julia de Cresci Oliveira Matsuda
Julia is a human rights activist and a law student in the State University of Londrina, where she heads the campus' mock trial team. Her main field of study is International Law, and she hopes to pursue a career as an international civil servant.
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Vibhaa Sreedharan
India and South Asia
Vibhaa Sreedharan
Vibhaa is in her 4th year of Law School at SASTRA Deemed University. She is passionate about human rights and is looking forward to doing her part in helping people understand their rights and ensuring the same is provided to them.
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Mariana Dian Agoston
Internships
Mariana Dian Agoston
Mariana is a Brazilian senior student at the Pontifical Catholic University of São Paulo, Brazil, pursuing her Bachelor’s in International Relations. Her experiences, especially in the public sector, allowed her to identify a career path within human rights in Latin America.
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Chris Felstead
Adviser
Chris Felstead
Chris has an extensive background in IT project management, having led large IT teams in the US, UK, and Europe. Over the last two years, he has been involved in assisting HRMI develop a secure and well-supported IT environment. Having recently completed a Master of Arts (Human Rights) at the University of London, he is broadening his involvement with the core team to support HRMI’s strategic direction. Chris has degrees in Social Sciences and Project Management and is a fellow of the Australian Institute of Project Management.
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Julia Bossmann
Adviser
Julia Bossmann
Julia a technologist with solid foresight, a track record of successful investments, and an extensive network of industry contacts. With an academic background in neuroscience, Julia is active in artificial intelligence and startups. Her past affiliations include McKinsey & Company, Bosch Research & Technology, Singularity University, and Foresight Institute. To increase the odds of responsible development and deployment of artificial intelligence, she serves on the ethics review board at ICLR and contributes on ethical issues in AI at the World Economic Forum.
Interns
Students are able to intern with HRMI remotely, from all over the world. Meet some of our very impressive current interns here:
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Zoe Shepherd
Zoe Shepherd
Zoe Shepherd is pursuing a Master of International Policy, a BA in International Affairs, a minor in Business, and certificates in Data Analytics in Public Policy and Global Studies at the University of Georgia. Her semester studying in Verona, Italy, where she focused on human rights, diplomacy, and democracies, solidified her passion for human security. She is excited to work towards leveraging data analytics to advance human rights on a global scale.
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Aminata Balde
Aminata Balde
Aminata is a student at the University of Georgia pursuing a degree in International Affairs. Her lived experiences in Guinea, West Africa, have allowed her to identify with a career path in improving human rights on a global scale. She aspires to go to law school to study International Law and work to improve global human rights, with a focus on the African continent.
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Sarah Bakewell
Sarah Bakewell
Sarah Bakewell has studied political communications, international relations and political science at Victoria University in Wellington, New Zealand. Once completing undergraduate study, she will begin pursuing a masters of communication during the 2025 academic year. Her role at HRMI writing reports for the United Nations has built on her passions surrounding human rights advocacy, research and diplomacy. She is very excited to be a part of the team, and has enjoyed utilising her report writing skills to contribute positively towards international human rights procedures.
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Natasha Dhliwayo
Natasha Dhliwayo
Natasha Dhliwayo is currently pursuing her LLBS at the University of Zimbabwe and serves as the Law Faculty Representative in the Student Representative Council. She is an aspiring human rights lawyer and public policy expert passionate about gender equality and Africa’s development. Natasha is a gender champion and executive member of the HeForShe UZ Chapter. She has represented her university in international moot competitions, including the World Human Rights Moot, and is actively engaged in policy and advocacy work as she partners with various civic organisations in Zimbabwe the likes of YETT and WELEAD in her work.
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Roxy Malek
Roxy Malek
Roxy is a law graduate from the University of Tehran, Iran, and is currently pursuing a Master's in Global and International Studies at the University of Salamanca in Spain, with a focus on migration and climate change. Her primary interests lie in Middle Eastern affairs and the rights of migrants. Roxy is passionate about advocating for vulnerable communities and aims to build a career at the intersection of human rights, migration policy, and global justice.
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Zach Leggio
Zach Leggio
Zach Leggio is an undergraduate student at the University of Georgia studying international affairs, journalism, human rights and African studies. He's studied in Italy and in South Africa and is passionate about improving messaging around human rights around the world and communicating foreign policy to be more human rights friendly. He's excited to gain and apply valuable research and communication skills with HRMI!
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Faraday Haydock
Faraday Haydock
Faraday Haydock is a criminology and psychology graduate from the Victoria University of Wellington, with a focus on justice systems, ethics, and research methodology. She is thrilled to be a part of a team where she can employ her research skills and develop her administrative abilities with HRMI while aligning with her values. She aims to use her studies to work in a position where she can apply herself for progress addressing systemic issues through the work of policy or research.
Former interns and research analysts
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Nazia Kazi
United States
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Aalia Garrett
United States
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Bridgett Cox
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Jocelyn Phung
United States
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Patrick Howley
Aotearoa New Zealand
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Yumna Azeez
Sri Lanka
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Olivia Slavov
United States
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Roi Burnett
Research Assistant
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Neeharika Sistu
Internships
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Zohra Khatoon
Pakistan
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Mennah Abdelwahab
CPR Metrics Team
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Priya Mistri
United States
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Rebekah Rodrigues
Canada
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Chiara Anfuso
Outreach
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Natalie Speier
United States
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Carolina Faggion
Germany
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Livvy Mitchell
Research Analyst
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Thayane Pacheco Massopust
Brazil
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Heeyoung Son
United States
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Molly Richardson
United States
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Charity Njeri Muturi
Kenya
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Matheus Marques
Brazil
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Eric Mills
Mexico
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Eva Beggiato
Outreach
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Anukriti Kunwar
India
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Joshua Waxman
United States
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Stephanie Montesino
United States
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Jordan Quiñones-Marrero
United States
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Lisette Donewald
Editorial
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Christine Juma
Kenya
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Afek Shamir
United Kingdom and Cyprus
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Anarga Peiris
Sri Lanka/India
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Bruno Kneip Kratz
Brazil
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Kameron Roberts
United States
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Valéria Emília de Aquino
Brazil
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Roshni Saleem Chagan
Editorial
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Bodhi Ramteke
India
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Katherine Claire Nipper
United States
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Benjamin Stubbing
Aotearoa New Zealand
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Cam Stockdale
Aotearoa New Zealand
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Mariam Rasheed
Pacific Research Assistant
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Katja Phutaraksa Neef
Intern
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Henry Oluwafemi Olayioye
Poland
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Hannah Wambui
Kenya
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Amy Ma’ilo
United States
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Christopher Packwood
New Zealand
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Vanshika Madaan
India
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Mathes Rausch
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Olivia Pavuk
Outreach
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Brittney Parker
United States
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Abigail Marshall
New Zealand
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Paddy Baylis
Researcher
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Hannah Finestone
United States
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Robert Morgan
Ireland
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Nikita Singh
India
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Dom White
Aotearoa New Zealand
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Vincent Nolette
United States
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Teá Flynn
United States
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Caterina Cedolini
Partnerships
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Neha Theresa Concisom
New Zealand
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Miraf Kefelegne Habtegabriel
Ethiopia
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Bright Thulani Chimedza
Zimbabwe
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Léah Guyot
United States
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Weston Lee Brown
United States
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Evan Prescott Jenkins
United States
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Maple Maloney
Internships and Administration
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Praveen Kumar Yadav
Nepal
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Ariel Capers
United States
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Shalizeh Murtaza
Zambia
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Christie Wilson
The Netherlands
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Gant Roberson
United States
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Allyssa Verner-Pula
Research Assistant
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Caroline Vital Boghossian
Brazil
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Davis Matthew Rothe-Chelich
Canada
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Zerlina Wong
Research Assistant
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Maria Rehman
Pakistan
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Gemma Love
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Ellie Loventhal
USA
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Colin Patrick Stanley
USA