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Standing Committee

Committee on Human Rights

The Committee on Human Rights (CHR) is a standing membership committee of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, and National Academy of Medicine. It serves as a bridge between the human rights and scientific communities, in recognition of the importance of rights protection for scientific inquiry and the realization of human dignity worldwide.

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News and Updates

CHR Turns 50: Its Legacy and Future

Update

This year, the CHR marks a half a century of work to safeguard human rights and deepen understanding of the connections between human rights and science, engineering, and medicine. Visit the CHR’s anniversary website for historical highlights, messages from CHR supporters and affected colleagues, and information on the CHR’s ongoing efforts to address STEMM and human rights challenges.

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Watch Now – CHR Video on the Importance of Responding to Rights Abuses

Update

Through stories from colleagues who have been targeted for their work or the exercise of their human rights, a new video highlights why advocacy for threatened scientists, engineers, and health professionals is the cornerstone of the CHR's work.

Helen Mack from the video.

Resources for Researchers and Scholars under Threat in the United States

Update

Researchers and scholars have long been targeted in connection with their professional work. In recent years, such attacks have taken on new dimensions and have originated from a variety of actors. View an array of resources meant to support U.S.-based researchers and scholars facing these threats.

Areas of Impact
Advocacy

The CHR advocates in support of colleagues subjected to serious human rights abuses worldwide, with a focus on individuals targeted for their professional activities or the exercise of other internationally protected rights.

Learn More

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Awareness Raising

The CHR works to raise awareness of pressing global challenges at the intersection of science, technology, health, and human rights by hosting/participating in an array of events and developing online resource collections and other initiatives that examine these challenges. The CHR also helps build communities of scientists, engineers, and health professionals that integrate human rights into their work and take action against rights abuses.

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Assistance

Providing assistance to colleagues suffering human rights abuse is a key part of the Committee’s mandate.  Alongside its advocacy, the CHR connects colleagues under threat, and their families, to:

•  Organizations that assist with academic placements and fellowships
•  Pro bono legal providers
•  Professional colleagues, for the purpose of developing and maintaining links to the international scientific community
•  Other support providers

Colleagues seeking assistance may submit a request to the CHR.

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Description

The Committee on Human Rights (CHR), created in 1976, is a standing membership committee of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences (NAS), National Academy of Engineering (NAE), and National Academy of Medicine (NAM). Through advocacy, awareness raising, and assistance, the CHR serves as a bridge between the human rights and scientific communities, in recognition of the importance of rights protection for scientific inquiry and the realization of human dignity worldwide.

Supported by a staff of human rights professionals, the CHR is composed of 13 members drawn from the membership of the three Academies. Roughly 1500 members of the National Academies are “CHR Correspondents” who frequently make appeals in human rights cases identified by the CHR and engage in CHR awareness raising initiatives.

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International Human Rights Network of Academies and Scholarly Societies (IHRN)*
The CHR serves as the Secretariat for the IHRN, an international consortium of honorary societies in the sciences, engineering, and medicine that advocates in support of colleagues suffering human rights abuses; promotes the free exchange of ideas and opinions among scientists and scholars; and supports the independence and autonomy of national academies and scholarly societies worldwide.

*This activity is not conducted by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine and may not represent the views of the institution.
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Receive updates about CHR events and activities concerning pressing issues at the intersection of human rights and science, engineering, and medicine.

Elected members of the National Academies will be added to a private list that additionally receives information on how they can take action in support of professional colleagues under threat worldwide.
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Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Contributors

Committee

Chair

Vice Chair

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Member

Ex Officio Member

Ex Officio Member

Staff Officer

Membership Committee of

National Academy of Sciences

National Academy of Engineering

National Academy of Medicine

Staff

Tracy Sahay

Lead

Patty Evers

Lead

Rebecca Everly

Lead

Ana Deros

Lead

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