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THE UNRAVELLING: Journey Through The Central African Republic (Human Rights Watch, 2014)

Editor

Published by Human Rights Watch, The Unravelling is a multimedia feature combining text, photographs and video. The videos were featured in multiple reports on the conflict by Christiane Amanpour on CNN and Huffington Post. The project was featured at the 2014 Human Rights Watch Film Festival in partnership with The Committee to Protect Journalists and in 2015, won the Robert Capa Gold Medal from the Overseas Press Club of America. The report explains the roots of the conflict and the current status quo, largely through the lens of the people caught up in it: the fighters and their victims, the peacekeepers and the refugees.

MADE IN THE USA: Child Labor & Tobacco (Human Rights Watch, 2014)

Editor

Following its publication by Human Rights Watch, this video accompanied reports and campaigns by renowned platforms nationwide including, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, CNNTED, CBS News, NY Times, and World News Network. In response to this report, two associations of tobacco growers, which combined represent more than half of all U.S. growers, adopted policies to ban hiring children under 16 to work in tobacco farming. The parent companies of Philip Morris and R.J. Reynolds then announced they would not allow farms producing tobacco for them to hire workers under 16.

TORN APART: Families and US Immigration Reform (TIME and Human Rights Watch, 2014)

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Created by Human Rights Watch and TIMETorn Apart features a series of videos featuring the heart-wrenching stories that underscore the necessity of U.S. government to adopt comprehensive immigration reform. Without meaningful immigration reform, millions of immigrants—like those whose stories follow —will continue to live in fear and endure serious abuses. Their lives, and those of their families, are at stake. 

Child Marriage in Malawi (Human Rights Watch, 2014)

Editor

Child Marriage in Malawi, published by Human Rights Watch, urges the government of Malawi to increase efforts to end widespread and forced child marriage in the country. Six months after the release of this video and accompanying report, the legal age of marriage in Malawi was increased to 18 and child marriage effectively outlawed.


© JAMIE BOYLE 2020