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Mining data on mutilations, beatings, murders


The Quiet Revolution


Open-source plan could aid torture victims


Doing a Number on Violators


Counting the Civilian Dead in Iraq


The Forensic Humanitarian

International human rights work attracts activists and lawyers, diplomats and retired politicians. One of the most admired figures in the field, however, is a ponytailed statistics guru from Silicon Valley named Patrick Ball, who has spent nearly two decades fashioning a career for himself at the intersection of mathematics and murder. You could call him a forensic humanitarian.


Coders Bare Invasion Death Count


How statistics caught Indonesia’s war-criminals


Setting the Record Straight


Guatemala Police Archive Yields Clues to ‘Dirty War’


Doing Well By Doing Good


Guatemala Struggles to Find War Crimes Justice


A Human Rights Statistician Finds Truth In Numbers

The tension started in the witness room. “You could feel the stress rolling off the walls in there,” Patrick Ball remembers. “I can remember realizing that this is why lawyers wear sport coats – you can’t see all the sweat on their arms and back.” He was, you could say, a little nervous to be cross-examined by Slobodan Milosevic.


Justice by the Numbers

Wilkerson was speaking at the inaugural Conference on Fairness, Accountability, and Transparency, a gathering of academics and policymakers working to make the algorithms that govern growing swaths of our lives more just. The woman who’d invited him there was Kristian Lum, the 34-year-old lead statistician at the Human Rights Data Analysis Group, a San Francisco-based non-profit that has spent more than two decades applying advanced statistical models to expose human rights violations around the world. For the past three years, Lum has deployed those methods to tackle an issue closer to home: the growing use of machine learning tools in America’s criminal justice system.


Hissène Habré, le Pinochet Africain


Martus: Software for Human Rights Groups


Death March

A mapped representation of the scale and spread of killings in Syria. HRDAG’s director of research, Megan Price, is quoted.


How Do We Know the Death Toll in Syria Is Accurate?


Death and the Mainframe: How data analysis can help document human rights atrocities


Estimating Deaths


Our work has been used by truth commissions, international criminal tribunals, and non-governmental human rights organizations. We have worked with partners on projects on five continents.

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