Margaret Satterthwaite
Margaret Satterthwaite es profesora de derecho clínico y directora de la Clínica de Justicia Global de la Facultad de Derecho de la NYU, donde también es directora docente del Instituto Robert L. Bernstein de Derechos Humanos y del Centro de Derechos Humanos y Justicia Global (CHRGJ). Su trabajo en este estudio y en este blog se ha llevado a cabo en calidad de profesora.
Margaret Satterthwaite se yon Pwofesè Pratik Jiridik ak Direktris Global Justice Clinic at NYU School of Law, kote l ap travay tou kòm Direktris nan Robert L. Bernstein Institute for Human Rights (Enstiti Robert L. Bernstein pou Dwa Moun) epi nan Center for Human Rights and Global Justice (CHRGJ) (Sant pou Dwa Moun ak Jistis Mondyal).
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Participatory baseline water study improves scientific data and strengthens community power
By: Ellie Happel & Beth Hoagland & Olriche Jean Pierre & Tess Russo
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An interdisciplinary research team conducted the first community-owned baseline study on water in an area included in a mining permit in northern Haiti.

Critical legal empowerment for human rights
By: Margaret Satterthwaite
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Human rights advocates should become reliable partners to movements led by the communities experiencing grave rights deprivations.

Solidarity in the fight for justice: partnerships to oppose extractivism in Haiti
By: Nixon Boumba & Margaret Satterthwaite
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Can activists in Haiti and American-based law students and professors create trust, honesty, and a commitment to equality in radically unequal conditions?

In a world of radical inequality, solidarity is a cornerstone of justice
By: Margaret Satterthwaite
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Can a human rights clinic, based at a well-resourced law school in the United States, stand in solidarity with activists in the global South?

New and inclusive measuring needed for SDG promise of access to justice for all
By: Sukti Dhital & Margaret Satterthwaite
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SDG 16 promises access to justice for all, but current plans for measuring progress are far too limited. There are opportunities in 2019 to change this.

Evidence of trauma: the impact of human rights work on advocates
By: Margaret Satterthwaite
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It’s time to think seriously about the effects of trauma on human rights activists.

Human rights data used the wrong way can be misleading
While data is important for human rights advocacy, the risks of misleading people are also very real and advocates must insist on rigor.