Framing Human Rights
Framing Human Rights
ECCHR
ECCHR’s podcast about activism, art and justice. The European Center for Constitutional and Human Rights (ECCHR) is an independent, non-profit legal and educational organization dedicated to enforcing civil and human rights worldwide. Together with those affected and partners worldwide, ECCHR uses legal means to end impunity for those responsible for torture, war crimes, sexual and gender-based violence, corporate exploitation and fortressed borders. Find out more here: www.ecchr.eu and in our Living Open Archive: loa.ecchr.eu
#15 Tödliche Algorithmen: Drohnen und KI in der Kriegsführung
Drohnen und Künstliche Intelligenz sind aus modernen Kriegen kaum noch wegzudenken. Seit 2001 gehört die permanente Angst vor US-Drohnenangriffen zum Alltag vieler Menschen in Afghanistan oder im Jemen. Im Gazastreifen wird KI in großem Umfang für Luftangriffe, die Überwachung der Bevölkerung und das Aufspüren möglicher Ziele eingesetzt. Auch in der Ukraine beeinflusst die massenhafte Produktion kommerzieller Drohnen, die kostengünstig gegen klassische Militärtechnologie eingesetzt werden, maßgeblich den Kriegsverlauf. Der Einsatz von KI und Drohnentechnologie verändert grundlegend, wie Kriege geführt werden – und stellt die bisherige Vorherrschaft konventioneller militärischer Macht zunehmend infrage. Die Tötungsmaschinerie wird dabei von riesigen Datenmengen und deren automatisierter Auswertung angetrieben. Doch wer trägt Verantwortung für gezielte Tötungen, wenn letztlich eine Maschine oder ein Algorithmus über Leben und Tod entscheidet? Wie lässt sich der Einsatz von KI im Einklang mit Menschenrechten und dem Völkerrecht regulieren? Und vor allem: Welche Rechte und Handlungsmöglichkeiten haben die Betroffenen? Im Gespräch mit Anne Schroeter (ECCHR) sind Jutta Weber (Wissenschafts- und Technikforscherin, Philosophin, Medienwissenschaftlerin sowie Professorin für Mediensoziologie an der Universität Paderborn, Leiterin des Forschungsverbunds MEHUCO) und Andreas Schüller (Programmleiter des Bereichs Völkerstraftaten und rechtliche Verantwortung beim ECCHR, wo er u.a. Betroffene US-amerikanischer Drohnenangriffe unterstützt). Quellen in dieser Folge genannter Berichte:  Yuval Abraham: ‘Lavender’: The AI machine directing Israel’s bombing spree in Gaza Future of Life Institute: Slaughterbots Future of Life Institute: Slaughterbots – if human: kill()  Marc Santora, Lara Jakes, Andrew E. Kramer, Marco Hernandez and Liubov Sholudko: A Thousand Snipers in the Sky: The New War in Ukraine Human Rights Watch: A Hazard to Human Rights: Autonomous Weapons Systems and Digital Decision-Making  ECCHR: Ramstein vor Gericht: Deutschlands Rolle bei US-Drohnenangriffen im Jemen
Jul 18, 2025
1 hr 11 min
#14 Migration narratives: Trapped in racism and colonialism?
We have been raised and operate in an environment in which narrations on “migration” and “migrants” are intrinsically racist and colonial. The terms themselves attempt to eclipse and decontextualise Global South mobility within a deeply imbalanced and exploitative postcolonial global system. This allows policymakers to target racialized people by making their movement, stay and activities irregular through reforms focused on excluding them from legality. Public acceptance of these policies is enabled by an often-non-critical media discourse which further dehumanizes migrants”. These othering narratives run deep and without actively seeking to identify and deconstruct them, they will be reproduced even by those acting for the interest of “migrants”. In these circumstances, can we ever talk of “migrants” and “migration” without perpetuating racism and colonialism? How much do narratives matter in efforts for social justice?In this episode, listen to the live recording of an evening event hosted by Hanaa Hakiki from ECCHR’s Border Justice team as she is joined by guests to explore how deeply narratives on migration are still trapped in racism and colonialism. Together they discuss knowledge and narrative formation, the pseudo-science of constructed identities and categories, as well as the aliveness of colonization coupled with collective amnesia. Thinking beyond the present, the guests talk about the power of reimagining new futures, of reclaiming language and celebrating amazing human connections.  Hanaa’s guests are Aghogho Akpome, Musa Okwonga and Sandra Alloush. Aghogho is a narratives specialist and associate professor from the University of Zululand. Through his project, “The refugee ‘crisis’ and European re-imaginings of Africa”, he has analysed the portrayal of black African refugees by authors, filmmakers and playwrights. Musa is a widely published journalist, the author of a number of books including, “In the End It was All About Love” and he hosts a very popular football podcast and Sandra is a Syrian refugee journalist and documentary filmmaker and vice chair of the European Network Against Racism.
Jun 27, 2025
1 hr 21 min
#13 International Law and Repression: A Conversation with Francesca Albanese
Listen to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian Territory occupied since 1967. Francesca speaks about her mandate in the context of the ongoing genocide in Gaza, and the increasing threat to the international legal order. She also shares her experiences of repression and human rights violations she witnessed during her visit to Germany in February 2025.In conversation with Francesca Albanese are Fiona Thorp, Legal Fellow in the Palestine Team at ECCHR, and Chantal Meloni, Senior Legal Advisor in the International Crimes and Accountability program. ECCHR has worked on cases relating to crimes committed by Israeli forces against Palestinian civilians for over a decade. Recently, ECCHR has filed several requests for provisional measures against German exports of weapons of war and other military equipment to Israel, which are used in attacks on the Palestinian population in Gaza. We have also compiled a detailed Q&A on the topic of genocide in Gaza and on the arrest warrants against Israeli Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and former-Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant.Let’s stay in touch! You want to stay up to date on ECCHR’s cases, events and publications? Subscribe to our newsletter.Or support our work with your donation! image © Laura Fiorio
May 27, 2025
43 min
#12 Staatsräson gegen Grundrechte?
Die neue Folge „Staatsräson gegen Grundrechte“ beschäftigt sich mit der deutschen Staatsräson im Kontext der anhaltenden Kriegsverbrechen Israels in Gaza. Welche politischen, rechtlichen sowie gesellschaftlichen Auswirkungen hat sie im Inneren? Und welche solidarischen Allianzen lassen sich gegen die repressiven Maßnahmen schließen?  Im Gespräch mit Amira Tamim (ECCHR Alumna) sind Simin Jawabreh, Aktivistin und Politikwissenschaftlerin und Paula Zimmermann, Fachreferentin für Meinungs- und Versammlungsfreiheit bei Amnesty International.  Das ECCHR hat mehrere Eilanträge gegen deutsche Kriegswaffen- und Rüstungsexporte nach Israel gestellt. Unsere Serie von Klagen und Eilanträgen begann am 11. April 2024 vor dem Verwaltungsgericht Berlin. Erfahrt ⁠hier ⁠mehr über den Fall. In unserem ⁠Q&A⁠ findet ihr Fragen und Antworten zum Thema Völkerrecht und den aktuellen Krieg in Gaza.Auch zum rechtlichen Hintergrund des Genozids sowie aktuellen Entwicklung haben wir Fragen und Antworten aufbereitet. Diese findet ihr ⁠hier. Amnesty International veröffentlichte gerade einen Bericht, in dem sie zu dem Schluss kommen, dass Israel in Gaza einen Genozid begeht. Den Bericht findet ihr in englischer Sprache ⁠hier⁠. ⁠⁠⁠ Zur systematischen Einschränkung und Unterdrückung der Versammlungsfreiheit in Europa gab Amnesty ⁠diesen Bericht⁠ in englischer Sprache heraus. Simin Jawabreh hat ⁠diesen Artikel⁠ zum kürzlich wieder eingeführten Ordnungsrecht und den damit verbunden Repressionen an deutschen Hochschulen verfasst.
Dec 20, 2024
1 hr 32 min
#11 Archival interventions - The untold stories of (colonial) wars
In this episode, Ethiopian-American author Maaza Mengiste and Italian artist and photographer Laura Fiorio sit down with ECCHR General Secretary Wolfgang Kaleck. The conversation centers on the colonial history of Italy in Ethiopia. Mengiste talks about the often overlooked role of women in Ethiopia's fight against Italian occupation during World War II, and Italian artist Fiorio talks about her work “My fascist Grandpa.” Both bring their perspectives to contextualize photography and its manifold meaning and ability to hold and tell truths.   © Vittoria Trovato / Laura Fiorio © Nina Subin / Maaza Mengiste
Apr 27, 2023
41 min
Corporate power, the role of law and human rights
Human rights in times of crises #2 Law not only organizes and secures economic profits, it is a crucial factor in creating wealth. Katharina Pistor (author, Columbia Law School) speaks with Guillermo Torres (lawyer, ProDESC), Johan Horst (Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin) and Miriam Saage-Maaß (ECCHR program director Business and Human Rights) about how corporate power and law are intertwined. Our guests explore how economic and financial law are important factors in creating corporate power, and our legal and political options  to restrict this dynamic of growing corporate wealth and power. Can human rights, especially economic and social rights, play a role in insuring our societies become more equitable? Human rights in times of crises is ECCHR’s talk series on resistance and concrete utopias. With our conversations, we want to create the necessary platform for actors from all over the world to discuss and advance global human rights struggles. Human rights are a concrete utopia worth defending. But how to defend them needs to be constantly reinvented. As we find ourselves in a time of profound global transitions, human rights actors need to refer to prevailing inequalities and the underpinning social questions. ECCHR initiated an event series that is now available as a podcast to rethink the struggle for and around human rights.  For more information, go to ecchr.eu/human-rights-in-times-of-crises Let’s stay in touch! You want to stay up to date on ECCHR’s cases, events and publications? Subscribe to our newsletter.
Mar 7, 2022
1 hr 23 min
The concrete utopia of human rights
Human rights in times of crises #1 Welcome to ECCHR’s talk series on resistance and concrete utopias. With our conversations, we want to create the necessary platform for actors from all over the world to discuss and advance global human rights struggles. Human rights are a concrete utopia worth defending. But how to defend them needs to be constantly reinvented. As we find ourselves in a time of profound global transitions, human rights actors need to refer to prevailing inequalities and the underpinning social questions. ECCHR initiated an event series that is now available as a podcast to rethink the struggle for and around human rights. Alejandra Ancheita (lawyer, founder of ProDESC, Mexico), Joshua Castellino (executive director, Minority Rights Group International), and Wolfgang Kaleck (ECCHR General Secretary) kick off our talk series Human rights in times of crises. On the basis of Kaleck’s latest book The concrete utopia of human rights: A look back into the future (in German, S. Fischer publishers), our guests discuss how, when faced with a climate crisis, a pandemic, deeply unequal economic models, and authoritarianism, human rights activists can no longer go on with business-as-usual. These unprecedented global transitions are a chance to rethink new strategies and ways forward, and reclaim human rights and their potential for change. For more information, go to: ecchr.eu/human-rights-in-times-of-crises Let’s stay in touch! You want to stay up to date on ECCHR’s cases, events and publications? Subscribe to our newsletter.
Mar 7, 2022
1 hr 22 min
The global right to health and the reality of the COVID-19 vaccine distribution
Human rights in times of crises #4 The COVID-19 pandemic has, in unprecedented ways, highlighted the importance of the right to health. The pandemic sharpens the focus on social inequalities between the Global North and the Global South, while the discrepancy between the rich and the poor is also palpable here in Germany: how healthy one is, has much to do with access to wealth. In this episode, Meena Jagannath (Movement Law Lab), Achal Prabhala (AccessIBSA), Andreas Wulf (medico international) and Miriam Saage-Maaß (ECCHR) discuss what needs to change for medicines and vaccines to no longer be treated as commodities, but instead as common goods. They engage on what role can the global health rights movement play when up against big pharma’s interests. Human rights in times of crises is ECCHR’s talk series on resistance and concrete utopias. With our talks, we want to create the necessary platform for actors from all over the world to discuss and advance global human rights struggles. Human rights are a concrete utopia worth defending. But how to defend them needs to be constantly reinvented. As we find ourselves in a time of profound global transitions, human rights actors need to refer to prevailing inequalities and the underpinning social questions. ECCHR initiated an event series that is now available as a podcast to rethink the struggle for and around human rights. For more information, go to: ecchr.eu/human-rights-in-times-of-crises Let’s stay in touch! You want to stay up to date on ECCHR’s cases, events and publications? Subscribe to our newsletter.
Mar 7, 2022
1 hr 11 min
Rethinking (shrinking) spaces in times of crises
Human rights in times of crises #5 From widespread surveillance, torture and disappearances to the increased criminalization of protest and restrictive rules on associations, we are unquestionably witnessing a global pushback against civic spaces. The repressive tactics that seek to strip legitimacy and rights from activists and other civic actors is not just to be deplored in authoritarian countries, but also a very real threat in liberal democracies as well. While the phenomenon of shrinking spaces is certainly not new, the intersectional crises we face – from socio-economic inequality to climate change, the global pandemic, the rise of far-right populism, new technologies and the further concentration of wealth and power into fewer hands – demand that we rethink our approaches and strategies. In this episode, our guests Ben Hayes, co-author of Rethinking civic space in an age of intersectional crises: A briefing for funders (2020), Isha Khandelwal, a human rights lawyer who can speak to the situation in India and Wolfgang Kaleck (ECCHR General Secretary) discuss concrete visions for organized forms of resistance.  Human rights in times of crises is ECCHR’s talk series on resistance and concrete utopias. With our conversations, we want to create the necessary platform for actors from all over the world to discuss and advance global human rights struggles. Human rights are a concrete utopia worth defending. But how to defend them needs to be constantly reinvented. As we find ourselves in a time of profound global transitions, human rights actors need to refer to prevailing inequalities and the underpinning social questions. ECCHR initiated an event series that is now available as a podcast to rethink the struggle for and around human rights. For more information, go to: ecchr.eu/human-rights-in-times-of-crises Let’s stay in touch! You want to stay up to date on ECCHR’s cases, events and publications? Subscribe to our newsletter.
Mar 7, 2022
1 hr 7 min
Climate change, environmental degradation and human rights
Human rights in times of crises #3 Human rights can help affected communities and others achieve their demands for sustainable climate policies. They can also force governments and businesses to connect environmental concerns and social justice. Do we also need new human rights approaches to do this? What is the relationship between human rights and environmental rights? And who bears the ultimate legal responsibility for the climate crisis? In this episode, César Rodríguez-Garavito (New York University), Arpitha Kodiveri (European University Institute), Luisa Neubauer (Fridays for Future) and Miriam Saage-Maaß (ECCHR Business and Human Rights program director) talk about human rights’ potential to fight climate change and environmental degradation.  Human rights in times of crises is ECCHR’s talk series on resistance  and concrete utopias. With our conversations, we want to create the necessary platform for actors from all over the world to discuss and advance global human rights struggles. Human rights are a concrete utopia worth defending. But how to defend them needs to be constantly reinvented. As we find ourselves in a time of profound global transitions, human rights actors need to refer to prevailing inequalities and the underpinning social questions. ECCHR initiated an event series that is now available as a podcast to rethink the struggle for and around human rights. For more information, go to: ecchr.eu/human-rights-in-times-of-crises Let’s stay in touch! You want to stay up to date on ECCHR’s cases, events and publications? Subscribe to our newsletter.
Mar 7, 2022
1 hr 3 min
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