The projects of the Human Rights Clinic cover the full range of human rights advocacy. Priority areas include gender and racial justice, immigrant and Indigenous women’s rights, and the rights to housing, health, and food.
Projects have a cross-cutting gender and racial justice dimension and have focused on:
The Human Rights Clinic has a number of projects focused on Indigenous women's rights.
• In 2024, the Clinic collaborated with the National Indigenous Women's Resource Center (NIWRC) on a factsheet on Foster Care as a Driver of Homelessness in Indigenous Communities in the U.S.
• In 2023, the Human Rights Clinic developed a factsheet on Indigenous Peoples and the Right to Water.
• In March 2021, the Clinic produced an advocacy brief and U.N. submission on behalf of Indigenous women leaders on the interpretation of the U.N. Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) with respect to Indigenous women and girls. The submission was drafted on behalf of MADRE and FIMI to inform the CEDAW Committee’s development of a new General Recommendation on the rights of Indigenous women and girls.
• Another project addresses the intersection of gender-based violence against Indigenous Peoples and environmental justice.
• In 2021, the Human Rights Clinic produced a report on the impacts of COVID-19 on Indigenous Peoples and women, in particular.
• In 2021, the Human Rights Clinic produced a report on the “Rights of Nature and Indigenous Communities.” For more information on the Clinic’s work on the rights of Nature, please also see the Clinic’s report on the rights of rural and Indigenous women in Ecuador and advocacy brief and CEDAW submission on the rights of Indigenous women and girls.
• Additionally, the Human Rights Clinic advocates on behalf of missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls in Canada, along with Canadian partner organizations.