Home »
» When Students Stand Up
|
THE WEEK IN RIGHTS | MARCH 01, 2018 |
| |
|
|
| In a remarkably short period of time, the student activists who survived the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting have galvanized a national debate over gun violence and school safety and sparked school walkouts and protests across the United States. But inspiring teen activists aren’t unique to the US. Around the world, high school students have been on the forefront of social change. From the student activists in Florida to Black Lives Matter to campaigns around the world to promote education and children’s rights, the power of teenagers to change the world should not be in doubt. |
|
| | | China’s “predictive policing” in Xinjiang province is simply Orwellian. Based on intrusive data collection, police are targeting people based on personal information that gets analyzed to determine their “trustworthiness.” |
|
| | | Women and children told Human Rights Watch they spent up to three nights in cells with uncomfortably low temperatures, sleeping on the floor or concrete benches with only a foil blanket to protect them. |
|
| | | According to the report, fighters “are deliberately targeting civilians on the basis of their ethnic identity” and their crimes include “killings, abductions, rape, and sexual violence, as well as the destruction of villages and looting.” |
|
|
|
| | | Gold and diamonds are often mined under brutal, abusive conditions. Children are injured or even killed working in hazardous mines. But some of the biggest jewelry companies won't come clean on their sources. Help us tell them to now. |
|
|
|
Thank you for supporting Human Rights Watch! | Follow Us On: |  | |
| Human Rights Watch | 350 Fifth Avenue, 34th Floor | New York, NY 10118-3299 USA | t 1.212.290.4700 |
|
|