El Proyecto de Nuevas Tácticas en Derechos Humanos busca activamente individuos y organizaciones con interés, conocimiento y recursos para ayudar a traducir materiales relacionados con Nuevas Tácticas y el contenido web en otras idiomas aparte del Inglés. Además, organizaciones y otros proyectos con interés en el mantenimiento de partes de el sitio del web Nuevas Tácticas se les anima a ponerse en contacto con nosotros en newtactics [at] cvt [dot] org.
Seeking redress
Instituting a community-level truth and reconciliation commission to address racial divisions
The community of Greensboro, North Carolina hosted a unique Truth and Reconciliation Commission, developed as an act of society rather than the government, and has been the only Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) in the United States. Community survivors and activists saw a need for action beyond the legal system; they wanted to alleviate the pain harbored in victims, and address the racial hatred enduring in others. The 2004-2006 Greensboro Truth and Reconciliation Commission (GTRC) launched a healing process for victims, raised awareness of the racial divisions within the community, and promoted open dialogue and equality within Greensboro. As a result, a Task Force was created as a post Truth and Reconciliation Commission plan to educate the Greensboro citizens, and continues to hold monthly meetings and assist in the on-going healing process for victims of discrimination.
Demanding Compensation: Convincing the government to compensate victims of abuse by police, military, and armed forces personnel
The National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) in India investigates complaints of human rights abuses and responds to verified complaints by requesting that the government provide financial compensation to victims and issue appropriate penalties to perpetrators.
Litigating representative cases to push for women’s rights through legal reform
The Center for Women’s Law Studies and Legal Services of Peking University was founded 1995 as a pubic interest law firm that conducts research on women’s issues and provides pro-bono legal services to Chinese women of all backgrounds. The center’s most successful tactic has been in litigating a select number cases that carry great implications for Chinese women’s struggles in the current
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Sharing stories of political prisoners and their relatives to pressure for their release
The Center for Human Rights & Development (CHRD) is a Sri Lankan NGO founded by a group of human rights lawyers and activists. It has facilitated the release of approximately 400 political prisoners by widely sharing stories of political prisoners and their relatives.
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Mobilizing public resources for victims of human rights violations
The ICAR Foundation in Romania mobilized public resources for the victims of human rights violations in order to get the State to take full responsibility for its actions by acknowledging and treating former political prisoners justly and humanely.
Using international law to affect national policy
In the late 1990s, in decisions regarding former Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet, governments in Spain and Britain used international law to determine that perpetrators of crimes against humanity cannot claim immunity from charges against them. Spanish courts invoked the principle of universal jurisdiction to order Pinochet’s arrest; this principle holds that every state has an interest in bringing to justice the perpetrators of crimes against humanity, no matter where those crimes take place or by whom. Pinochet’s challenges to this warrant were overturned by the British House of Lords, which argued that because Chile had ratified the 1984 UN Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatments or Punishments, he could not claim immunity from charges of torture. Although Pinochet was ultimately allowed to return to Chile, where he was excused from trial for medical reasons, the decisions by the Spanish and British courts helped demonstrate that there is no immunity from prosecution on charges of torture, that such crimes can be prosecuted anywhere in the world under the principle of universal jurisdiction, and that national courts can be used to force states to fulfill their obligations under international law.
Developing pro bono services in the professional legal community
Since 2001, Brazil’s Instituto Pro Bono has worked to persuade individual lawyers and law firms to provide free legal services for nonprofit organizations and people in need.
Training local level monitors to document and seek redress for human rights violations
The Chiapas Community Defenders Network (Red de Defensores Comunitarios por los Derechos Humanos, or RED, in Spanish) trains young indigenous community members throughout areas of Zapatista support in Chiapas to monitor
Using civil lawsuits to seek redress for victims of torture
The Center for Justice and Accountability (CJA) helps victims of torture by using United States Federal Laws to bring charges against their torturers, regardless of the country in which the torture took pla

