Understanding the financial materiality of country-level human rights
The Human Rights Measurement Initiative (HRMI), in conjunction with our academic partners (see below), is seeking expressions of interest from researchers interested in using the brand new Rights Intelligence dataset in research to explore the connections between country-level human rights outcomes and investment returns. You will join a network of researchers exploring these connections and sharing their progress.
The Rights Intelligence dataset has been developed to help guide investment decisions and will soon go to market, available to private sector users who pay a membership fee. If you sign up to this network, we will give you free access to the dataset for your research, with the understanding that you will ensure your research is published, with the final pre-publication version made publicly available on the Rights Intelligence and HRMI websites.
What is special about this dataset?
This is the most comprehensive country-level human rights dataset available – with a 15-year time series available for around 195 countries, on three categories of human rights:
- Economic and social rights
- Safety from the State (or physical integrity rights)
- Empowerment rights
For more details, please see this high level info PDF on the dataset. Additional background resources (e.g. on methodology) will be made available.
Can I use the dataset to answer related research questions?
Yes. We want to help the world understand the connections between human rights and economic performance, and how that translates into financial market returns (especially sovereign fixed interest returns). Connections with sovereign credit ratings are also of interest. We invite you to propose research questions that fit within this scope, that are interesting to you. You are welcome to use other datasets in your research as well.
What research has already been done on this topic?
There is a significant body of academic literature exploring these questions using other datasets. The complete Rights Intelligence dataset is new and has not yet been used in any research, although an earlier version of the Economic and Social Rights Performance sub-set has been used in this World Bank publication:
“The Potential Implications of Economic and Social Rights for Sovereign Debt Investing” Gratcheva, Ekaterina M.; O’Reilly Gurhy, Bryan; Wang, Dieter; Brook, Anne-Marie; Clay, K. Chad; Randolph, Susan. Equitable Growth, Finance and Institutions Insight Washington, D.C. : World Bank Group (2023).
What would my participation in this research network look like?
Participants in the network will:
- Be asked to sign a short MOU, in which we ask you to not share the dataset until you publish your findings, and to ensure that your research will be published, with the final pre-publication version made publicly available on the Rights Intelligence and HRMI websites.
- Receive the dataset.
- Be invited to join 2 — 3 initial Zoom calls (at different times, to suit different time zones) with the HRMI team and other network participants. This will give you an opportunity to: learn about the data and methodology; meet others in the field; and share research questions and ideas (including potentially to find co-authors). The researcher can choose to attend just one of these meetings, selecting whichever time works best.
- Be invited to workshops once per quarter where participants will share ideas, present preliminary results, and receive feedback from others in the network.
- There may also be an opportunity for the best papers to be included in a special edition of a journal publication (to be confirmed).
What sort of researchers are you looking for?
Human rights research is cross-disciplinary, so researchers with relevant expertise in the fields of finance, economics, political studies, or others, are welcome. We particularly encourage researchers from low and middle income countries to apply.
I’m interested. How do I sign-up?
If you would like to participate, please fill in this form:
Who else is involved?
Our academic partners include the Center for the Study of Global Issues (GLOBIS) at the University of Georgia.
If your institution would like to be involved as a partner, please get in touch with Anne-Marie Brook: anne-marie@rightsintelligence.com. Funding to support an in-person event or conference for sharing research findings would be very welcome.