Claiming Our Role as Human Rights Lawyers: How a Human Rights Framework Can Advance Our Advocacy
The editorial team of Clearinghouse Review hosted a panel discussion, "Claiming Our Role as Human Rights Lawyers: How a Human Rights Framework Can Advance Our Advocacy," on June 21, 2011.
Webinar recording (WMA format; 58MB)
Speaker Bios
Chandra
Bhatnagar is a Senior Staff Attorney with the ACLU’s Human Rights
Program, focusing on the intersection of racial justice and immigration.
He also works on advocacy regarding use of international and foreign
law in U.S. courts and domestic implementation of the International
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination
(ICERD). Bhatnagar is counsel in David, et al. v. Signal International, LLC, et al.,
representing over 500 Indian men trafficked into the U.S. as
guestworkers and subjected to abuse and involuntary servitude. Before
the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, he represents
undocumented workers whose rights were violated in the wake of the
Supreme Court decision in Hoffman Plastic Compounds, Inc. v. NLRB.
He has filed a Request for Precautionary Measures to the IACHR on
behalf of residents of Puerto Rico who were subjected to police
brutality, denial of access to basic water and electrical services, and
forced eviction. Bhatnagar is the principal author of The Persistence of Racial and Ethnic Profiling in the United States (2009), submitted to the U.N. Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
Martha
F. Davis is Professor of Law at Northeastern University School of Law,
where she also co-directs the law school’s Program on Human Rights and
the Global Economy. Professor Davis is the author of numerous articles
on human rights, women’s rights and welfare law and policy. She is
co-editor of the book Bringing Human Rights Home and author of the prizewinning book, Brutal Need: Lawyers and the Welfare Rights Movement.
Prior to joining the Northeastern faculty, Professor Davis was the
Vice President and Legal Director of the NOW Legal Defense and Education
Fund in New York. She has litigated cases at all levels of state and
federal courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, has testified before
Congress on numerous occasions, and has extensive experience with
national television, radio and print media.
Monique
Harden is co-director and attorney with Advocates for Environmental
Human Rights in New Orleans, Louisiana, which she and co-director
Nathalie Walker founded in 2002. Dedicated to upholding the human right
to a healthy environment, AEHR holds companies and the government
accountable when this right is violated and advocates for public policy
that supports this right. On behalf of African Americans living in the
historic community of Mossville, Louisiana, Ms. Harden and AEHR legal
staff filed the first human rights petition seeking fundamental change
to the U.S. environmental regulatory system. The Inter-American
Commission on Human Rights of the Organization of American States
recently accepted the petition for review on the merits, marking the
first time that an international human rights body has taken
jurisdiction over a case of environmental racism in the United States.
In the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina and the BP oil drilling disaster,
AEHR is spearheading advocacy aimed at protecting the basic right of
people harmed by a disaster to recovery with dignity and justice.
Cheryl
Hystad is the Director of Advocacy for the Maryland Legal Aid Bureau, a
private non-profit legal services provider. In that capacity she
supervises the appellate and impact litigation of Legal Aid as well as
its policy advocacy. Prior to joining Legal Aid, Ms. Hystad was the
Executive Director of the Maryland Consumer Rights Coalition, where she
advocated for consumers on a wide variety of issues including predatory
lending, privacy and identity theft.
Sarah
Paoletti is a Practice Associate Professor of Law at the University of
Pennsylvania Law School, where she founded and directs the Transnational
Legal Clinic. From 2003-2006, she was a Practitioner-in-Residence in
the International Human Rights Law Clinic at the Washington College of
Law American University, where she taught a seminar on immigrant
workers' labor and employment rights. Sarah has expertise in
international human rights, immigrant and migrant rights, asylum law,
and labor and employment law. For the past 18 months Prof. Paoletti has
served as Senior Coordinator/Consultant for the US Human Rights
Network’s US Universal Periodic Review Project, coordinating civil
society participation as the US went through its review before the UN
Human Rights Council. Before moving into clinical teaching, she was a
staff attorney at Friends of Farmworkers, Inc., a statewide legal
services program serving migrant workers in Pennsylvania. She also
serves as President of the Board of Directors of Centro de los Derechos
del Migrante, Inc. (Center for Workers' Rights), based in Zacatecas, MX.
Resources
Martha Davis, Human Rights in the Trenches: Using International Human Rights Law in 'Everyday' Legal Aid Cases, Clearinghouse Review, 2007.
For more on the Universal Periodic Review process see:
For the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights see:
For information about the various international treaties see the website of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights see:
