Responding to the rise of free trade in the global economy, the Southeast Asian Council for Food Security (SEACON) set out in 2003 to conduct a unique, participatory research project to investigate the impacts of these macroeconomic changes on small scale food producers in Southeast Asia.
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.
policy
Distributing air quality testing equipment to community members to promote environmental justice
Since 1995, many communities across the United States have begun or joined “Bucket Brigades,” programs that instruct communities near industrial polluters how to build and use simple air monitoring devices, or “buckets.” In the absence of strong environmental laws, standards, or environmental enforcement bodies, buckets give communities the means to independently monitor the air quality of their neighborhoods and provide them with the evidence to affect environmental and industrial policy change.
Campaign for Popular Education (CAMPE)--Education Watch
Education Watch Bangladesh was set up in 1998 by a group of like-minded individuals and organizations concerned about educational development in the country.
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.
Human Rights Budgeting to Promote and Protect Social and Economic Rights
The Budget Information Service of the Institute for Democratic Alternatives in South Africa (IDASA) analyzes government budgets from a human rights perspective to determine, through criteria of transparency, accountability, and governance, whether particular groups of people are being fairly and democratically represented in government programs.
IDASA was established in 1985, and worked

