Witness (organization)

WITNESS is a human rights non-profit organization based out of Brooklyn, New York.[1][2] Its mission is to partner with on-the-ground organizations to support the documentation of human rights violations and their consequences, in order to further public engagement, policy change, and justice.[3] Witness has partnered with more than 300 human rights groups in over 80 countries.[4]

Mission statement

WITNESS is an international organization that trains and supports people using video in their fight for human rights. Every day, activists and citizens risk their lives to expose the truth. We help make sure their efforts aren't in vain. WITNESS is a leader of a global movement that uses video to create human rights change.[5]

History

Witness was founded in 1992 by Peter Gabriel, along with the help of Human Rights First (then known as the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights) and its founding executive director Michael Posner.[6]

Musician and activist Peter Gabriel was influenced by his experience using a Sony Handycam, one of the first small camcorders marketed to consumers, to record the stories he heard while traveling with Amnesty International’s 1988 Human Rights Now! Tour. He decided to found Witness after the 1991 police brutality incident involving Rodney King, Jr., in which a bystander's video of King's beating by the Los Angeles police was critical both in raising awareness and in generating widespread public attention.[7] To Gabriel, this video demonstrated the power of video to capture the world’s attention and viscerally communicate human rights abuses.

WITNESS was founded the next year, in 1992, with a one million dollar seed grant from the Reebok Human Rights Foundation and a partnership with the Lawyers Committee for Human Rights (now Human Rights First).

In 1999, WITNESS.org was utilizing streaming video as a part of its mission and was a finalist for RealNetworks, Inc. Streamers Progressive Award as the year's best non-profit streaming media organization losing out to Assistive Media.

In 2001, WITNESS became an independent nonprofit organization. In 2012, WITNESS released a 20 year timeline about the organization.

In 2004, WITNESS started hosting a benefit dinner and concert called "Focus for Change." The event brings together video activists, funders, and celebrities to share the work of WITNESS' partners.[8][9][10]

In 2009, WITNESS initiated a focused use of social media as a part of its outreach for video for change.[11] Since 2009, the organization started reporting social media statistics in the organization's performance reports.[12][13]

In 2012, WITNESS launched a joint project with Storyful[14] and YouTube[15] called the Human Rights Channel.[16][17][18][19][20][21]

WITNESS has worked in over 80 countries to advance human rights through the use of video for change. Today, WITNESS has a staff[22] of 30 and a $3.9 million budget.

Campaigns

WITNESS has worked with over 300 organizations in over 80 countries since its founding.[23][24][25] On February 18, 2015, the New York Times article, “The Media Doesn’t Care What Happens Here”,[26] featured WITNESS’ work in Brazil and their groundbreaking video as evidence initiative with media activists operating in the country's favelas.[27] Other programs include:

Training

WITNESS has developed training kits to help activists and videographers use video effectively and safely to support their advocacy campaigns. WITNESS gives access to their educational materials through their online library.[28] Other resources: Español,[29] Français,[30] Português,[31] جميع أعداد.[32]

They have released the WITNESS Video for Change Book,[33] a document intended to teach human rights, environmental, and social justice organizations how to use video most effectively in campaigns.[34]

They have also created an Advocacy Planning Toolkit,[35] an interactive step-by-step guide to help advocates and organizations develop a strategic video advocacy plan.[36]

Cameras Everywhere

WITNESS partnered with the Guardian Project to begin the Cameras Everywhere program with the goal of ensuring that human rights videos are created and distributed safely, effectively, and ethically.[37] The focus of the Cameras Everywhere project is SecureSmartCam, a program that runs on smartphones to ensure the safety and authenticity of human rights videos.[38] The safety of activists is the goal of the ObscureCam,[39] which detects and blurs faces in photos and videos.[40][41] Video support is under development as of March 2012.[42] The authenticity of the video is the goal of InformaCam, which automatically records and encrypts information such as the GPS coordinates of the camera during filming, and nearby wireless signals.[43][44] The Cameras Everywhere Report[45] lays out a call to technology companies, investors, policymakers and civil society to work to use technology for the benefit of human rights.[46]

2015: The Quest For Social Justice Goes Mobile[47][48]

Gender-based violence

WITNESS provides support to activists and survivors of gender-based violence by empowering them use video to share their stories, make their voices heard and catalyze the change they seek in their lives.[49] Resources available: Español,[29] Français,[30] Português,[31] جميع أعداد.[32]

Femicide in Mexico: In March 2009, Mexico's Attorney General and Minister of Interior committed to personally follow-up on the cases of Neyra Cervantes, who was brutally murdered in 2003, and her cousin, David Meza who spent three years in jail after being tortured into confessing to her murder. This agreement was the outcome of a meeting between Peter Gabriel, actor Diego Luna, JaguaresSaúl Hernández, Patricia Cervantes (Neyra’s mother) and Mexico’s President Calderón, asking him to end feminicide in Ciudad Juárez and Chihuahua, Mexico. Since the meeting, WITNESS partner Comisión Mexicana has met twice with government officials, who are reviewing the status of the proceedings of Neyra/David’s cases and studying the list of priority policies related to ending feminicide. Neyra’s story is the focus of the film, Dual Injustice,[50] co-produced by WITNESS and Comisión Mexicana de Defensa y Promoción de los Derechos Humano (CMDPDH). The video was part of a successful international WITNESS campaign in 2006 calling for Miguel David Meza’s release and a further investigation into Neyra’s case to ensure that justice will be served for all families suffering similar fates.

Discrimination against Akhdam Women in Yemen: In 2009, Witness partnered with the Sisters Arab Forum (SAF) to produce a documentary called “Breaking the Silence,” about the plight of Akhdam women in Yemen. The video is currently banned in Yemen, and both Witness and SAF are working to repeal the ban.[51]

Middle East and North Africa transitions

Witness launched a program in 2011 to support the transition to democracy in the Middle East and North Africa following the Arab Spring. This program includes: a partnership with the Egyptian Democratic Adademy (EDA); hosting a human rights convening in the region to identify immediate needs; identifying, disseminating and translating innovative tools and tactics; and developing new apps for human rights in the region.[52]

Child Soldiers

2007: WITNESS teamed with AJEDI-Ka/PES to create a video to oppose the recruitment of child soldiers in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The partnership sought to bring to justice those responsible for the crimes that led to the 2007 war crimes charges by the International Criminal Court (ICC) against Congolese warlord Thomas Lubanga Dyilo. The resulting film, A Duty to Protect.[53] was screened at a high-level panel discussion at U.N. Headquarters in November 2007 following the arrest by the ICC of a second DRC warlord for the use of child soldiers. Witness partnered with Amnesty International to develop a companion curriculum for the film.

2009: The trial against Mr. Dyilo begun in January 2009. Three more warlords have been arrested and are currently awaiting trial at the ICC for the use of child soldiers in the DRC.

2012: On March 14, 2012, Thomas Lubanga was convicted[54] of using child soldiers - a war crime.

2015: Court of Appeals Upholds Conviction of Congolese Warlord Thomas Lubanga.[55]

Infrastructure

Following screenings to decision-makers in Chechnya and globally in 2009, Human Rights Center Memorial achieved significant advocacy success by securing the Chechen government's funding for rebuilding homes and other infrastructure in the Zumsoy, Chechnya.

Human trafficking

Modern-Day Slavery in Brazil: In 2007, Bound by Promises,[56] a film about modern-day slavery in rural Brazil, was screened before the Brazilian Congress’ Human Rights Commission, and has proven instrumental in getting the Mobile Inspection Squads to resume the investigation of claims made by runaway slaves. Bound by Promises has also led to greater investments in programs for workers.

Human Sex Trafficking in the United States: In 2012, WITNESS co-produced a 21-minute advocacy video called What I Have Been Through Is Not Who I Am, with ECPAT-USA.[57][58] The short documentary tells the story of Katrina, a child who was trafficked for sex in the United States.

Elder abuse

Elder abuse in the United States of America: In 2009, WITNESS and National Council on Aging (NCOA) produced An Age for Justice: Confronting Elder Abuse in America, a film providing proof of the financial, emotional and physical abuse that up to an estimated five million older Americans face every year.[59]

Climate change

Witness joined the "iMatter Trust Campaign" with Our Children's Trust,[60] the iMatter Campaign and students from Montana State University’s MFA in Science and Natural History Filmmaking to co-produce a series of videos highlighting how climate change and government inaction is affecting the everyday lives of our youth.[61]

Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs)

2007: Footage from Burma Issues was used to buttress a critical BBC Newsnight item that criticized the Labor administration in the UK for its minimal levels of funding to Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in Burma. This broadcast helped push the UK government to conduct an official review that, in July 2007, recommended a four-fold increase in aid to IDPs in Burma.

The Hub: Human Rights Media Center

Witness launched the Hub in 2007 as a single point for users to upload human rights video, that might not be uploadable elsewhere. Because those needs have been fulfilled by other sources, the Hub has now become an archive for the content that had previously been uploaded.[62]

Outside ratings

  • Charity Navigator awards WITNESS 3 out of 4 stars overall, and 4 out of 4 stars on “Accountability and Transparency”.[2]
  • The Global Journal rated WITNESS #83 of the top 100 non-governmental organizations in 2012.[63]
  • The Global Journal rated WITNESS #52 of the top 100 non-governmental organizations in 2013.[64]
gollark: `pacman -Syu` asks you to confirm once then mostly gets on with it itself.
gollark: I'm being optimistic.
gollark: It also stops you from working for something like 20 minutes.
gollark: Just... do them together...
gollark: Sounds stupid.

See also

References

  1. "Members Give : General Information". Legacy.guidestar.org. Retrieved 22 February 2015.
  2. "Charity Navigator Rating - WITNESS". Charitynavigator.org. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  3. "Peter Gabriel: Fight injustice with raw video | Talk Video". TED.com. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  4. "About WITNESS - Video Production". WITNESS. Retrieved 2019-05-31.
  5. "WITNESS homepage".
  6. "Our Story". www.witness.org.
  7. "kingvideo". Law2.umkc.edu. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  8. "Annual Benefit". 2014.focusforchange.org.
  9. "Press Release for 20-Year Anniversary". www.prnewswire.com (Press release).
  10. "Peter Gabriel Performs At WITNESS Benefit". Look to the Stars. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  11. "[Book Interview] Nonprofit Example of Social Media Excellence: WITNESS". Nonprofitorgs.wordpress.com. 2011-01-18. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  12. "2010 Performance Dashboard". www.witness.org.
  13. "2011 Performance Dashboard". www.witness.org.
  14. "Storyful - Social Insights, Video and Services, Social News and UGC". Storyful.
  15. "WITNESS". YouTube.
  16. "The Human Rights Channel on YouTube". YouTube.
  17. Jardin, Xeni (2012-05-25). "YouTube launches new Human Rights channel with Witness.org and Storyful". Boing Boing. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  18. "YouTube Launches Human Rights Channel". Mashable.com. 2012-05-24. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  19. "YouTube Introduces Human Rights Channel - NPQ". Nonprofit Quarterly. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  20. Hilal, Maha (2012-06-21). "YouTube Human Rights Channel Curator: Witness, New York - Peace and Collaborative Development Network". Internationalpeaceandconflict.org. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  21. Archived June 1, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  22. "Staff Members". Witness. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  23. "Our Work at WITNESS". witness.org.
  24. "Telling it like it shoots". canada.com. 2008-07-20. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  25. "Annual Reports on WITNESS". witness.org.
  26. Shaer, Matthew (18 February 2015). "'The Media Doesn't Care What Happens Here'" via NYTimes.com.
  27. "The Media Doesn't Care What Happens Here - Can amateur journalism bring justice to Rio's favelas?". www.nytimes.com/.
  28. "Video for change educational library". WITNESS library.
  29. "Witness Español". Witness Español.
  30. "Witness Français". Witness Français.
  31. "Witness Português". Witness Português.
  32. "Witness Arabic". Witness Arabic.
  33. "Video for Change Book – All Chapters". WITNESS. 28 July 2014.
  34. "Download entire Video for Change Book". WITNESS library.
  35. "WITNESS". WITNESS.
  36. "WITNESS | Human Rights Video". Videoplan.witness.org. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  37. Ruddock, David (June 29, 2011). "New App: ObscuraCam Automatically Detects, Blurs Faces And Strips Metadata From Your Photos". Android Police. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  38. "The Secure Smart Camera App for Human Rights Video - WITNESS BlogWITNESS Blog". Blog.witness.org. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  39. "ObscuraCam: The Privacy Camera - Android Apps on Google Play". Play.google.com. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  40. "ObscuraCam: Secure Smart Camera | The Guardian Project". Guardianproject.info. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  41. "ObscuraCam | An App to Pixelate Your Photos | Los Angeles | LA | Application". UrbanDaddy. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  42. Bair, Madeleine (April 24, 2013). "The Great Potential (and Challenges) of Citizen Videos Uncovering News". MediaShift. PBS.
  43. "Introducing InformaCam | The Guardian Project". Guardianproject.info. 2012-01-20. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  44. "InformaCam, a plugin for video activists in the works | Activist Archivists". Activist-archivists.org. 2012-01-29. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  45. "Technology and Human Rights".
  46. Cameras Everywhere Report, witness.org
  47. "The Quest For Social Justice Goes Mobile". FastCoExist. 19 February 2015.
  48. "The Quest For Social Justice Goes Mobile". FastCoExist.
  49. "WITNESS Gender-Based Violence Program".
  50. WITNESS (17 December 2007). "Dual Injustice: Feminicide and Torture in Ciudad Juarez ..." via YouTube.
  51. "Taking on Discrimination Against Women in Yemen".
  52. "Video Advocacy Training for Youth Activists in Egypt".
  53. "Child Soldiers in the Democratic Republic of Congo".
  54. "Lubanga Verdict Brings Justice To Child Soldiers in DRC - Tomorrow The Work Continues - WITNESS Blog". blog.witness.org.
  55. "Court of Appeals Upholds Conviction of Congolese Warlord Thomas Lubanga".
  56. "20 Powerful Moments in Human Rights Video - WITNESS Blog". blog.witness.org.
  57. "WITNESS Video Project". ecpatusa.org.
  58. "Protecting Sexually-Exploited Children from Criminalization".
  59. "Confronting Elder Abuse With Video".
  60. "Home". Our Children's Trust.
  61. "Fighting for Climate Justice".
  62. "Peter Gabriel's YouTube for Human Rights".
  63. "#83 - WITNESS". The Global Journal. 2012-01-23. Retrieved 2015-02-22.
  64. "Top 100 NGOs | The Global Journal". theglobaljournal.net. Retrieved 2014-04-04.
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