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Human Rights Measurement InitiativeHuman Rights Measurement Initiative

HRMI in the Journal of Peace Research

ByThalia Kehoe Rowden 4 November 202022 March 2023

We’re delighted to have a new peer-reviewed article published in the Journal of Peace Research:

“Using practitioner surveys to measure human rights: The Human Rights Measurement Initiative’s civil and political rights metrics”
K Chad Clay, Ryan Bakker, Anne-Marie Brook, Daniel W Hill, Jr, Amanda Murdie, in Journal of Peace Research, October 2020

You can read it here as a free PDF download.

Here’s the abstract:

“Most cross-national datasets of civil and political rights practices have relied on internationally distributed English language secondary sources as the core source of information for their metrics. This approach has yielded data that are highly reliable, but also suffer from the fact that their information sources under-represent the overall level of abuse internationally and do so in a way that is biased across countries. The combined knowledge of the individual human rights practitioners working to directly monitor the abuses occurring within a country would likely serve to overcome much of this biased under-reporting, but it is difficult to compare that knowledge across country and cultural contexts. In this article, we discuss how we overcome these problems in the Human Rights Measurement Initiative (HRMI) civil and political rights data. Using an expert survey that contains anchoring vignettes in concert with Bayesian scaling techniques, we present a new methodology for collecting and aggregating data on the intensity and distribution of respect for eight separate civil and political rights.”

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  • Use our data
    • Go to the Rights Tracker
    • Download our datasets
    • Private sector
    • Methodology
    • Country spotlights
    • Data for SDGs
    • Data for UPR
  • See our impact
    • The need for better data
    • Data in action
    • Data in the media
  • Get involved
    • Donate
    • Help us expand – countries
    • Help us expand – rights
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    • The team
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