Le projet Nouvelles Tactiques pour les droits humains est à la recherche de gens et d'organismes intéressés, compétents et équipés pour prêter main-forte à la traduction des documents et du contenu de notre site vers d'autres langues que l'anglais. Quiconque souhaiterait s'occuper d'une section ou une autre de notre site web est prié de communiquer avec nous à l'adresse suivante : newtactics [at] cvt [dot] org. Merci.

Singing
Syndiquer le contenu

Framing the message: Turning an opponent’s message into a win for Black women’s reproductive rights

Sometimes non-profit sector campaigns may actually put people’s human rights at risk. In early 2010, a pro-life organization in Atlanta, Georgia launched a campaign which called for legislation that would criminalize abortions provided to Black women. To protect and ensure reproductive rights for Black women, the SisterSong Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective created a counter-campaign that used the opponent’s message and brought to light its negative implications for civil and women’s rights. 

Using documentation to draw up a ‘blacklist’ of unacceptable political candidates and moving the public to vote against them

People’s Solidarity for Participatory Democracy (PSPD) worked with a coalition of civic organizations to survey the South Korea population in order to identify criteria meant to eliminate politicians and make them ineligible for election.  Corruption in Korea was so serious that it was the foremost obstacle hindering the progress of Korean society.  Korean political parties

Singing traditional songs in public to advocate for cultural rights

In June of 1988 hundreds of thousands of Estonians (as many as 300,000 or one-third of the Estonian population by some estimates) gathered for five nights in a row in the capital city of Tallinn to sing forbidden or politically-risky folk songs. Similar song festivals were held that summer in Latvia and Lithuania. This “Singing Revolution,” as it became known, was an important step toward the independence of the Baltic states from the Soviet Union in August 1991.