David Crow
David Crow est professeur associé d’études internationales au CIDE et l’ancien directeur du projet « les Amériques et le monde ».
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Is the UN a friend or foe?
By: Charles T. Call & David Crow & James Ron
Español |
Français |
العربية
Many Republicans believe that the UN curbs America’s interests, but people in the global South often view the UN as a tool of the United States. Why?

Monetizing the human rights “brand”
By: David Crow & José Kaire & James Ron
Español
Marketing research can help Mexican rights groups monetize their “brand” and boost public donations.

Ordinary people will pay for rights. We asked them
By: James Ron & José Kaire & David Crow
Español
New research suggests that if human rights organizations use evidence-based fundraising strategies, the public will donate.

Human rights groups are secretly US agents. True or false?
By: James Ron & David Crow
Español |
العربية
For rights activists, Trump’s victory is a dark cloud with one silver lining. For the next four years, human rights groups will be inoculated against accusations ...

Mapping human rights skepticism in Mexico
By: David Crow
Español
Most Mexicans don’t associate human rights with protecting criminals, but surveys show this varies depending on region and political affiliation.

Data-driven optimism for global rights activists
By: James Ron & Shannon Golden & David Crow & Archana Pandya
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Français |
العربية
Opinion polls across four world regions suggest that human rights activists can be cautiously optimistic—the public likes and trusts them.

The struggle for a truly grassroots human rights movement
By: James Ron & David Crow & Shannon Golden
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Français |
العربية |
Português |
Türkçe
Using cutting-edge human rights perception polls, the authors explore links between social class and domestic human rights movements in Mexico, Colombia, Morocco, ...