KENNETH ROTH
Ideas
22
Responses
8

Kenneth Roth

Since 1993, Kenneth Roth has been the executive directof or Human Rights Watch, an NGO that investigates, reports on, and seeks to curb human rights abuses in over 70 countries. He was the deputy director of the organization from 1987-1993, before which he worked as a private litigator and served as a federal prosecutor for the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York and the Iran-Contra investigation in Washington. During his time as Executive Director, Human Rights Watch has quadrupled its size, expanded its geographic reach, and developed new programs specific to issues such as refugees, children's rights, AIDS, gay rights, counter-terrorism and international justice.

Roth has conducted numerous human rights investigations around the world, and helped develop the human rights policies of the United States, the United Nations, and various multinational businesses. The author of more than 80 articles and chapters on a range of human rights topics, Roth's work has been published in many newspapers, including the New York Times, the Washington Post, the journal of Foreign Affairs, the International Herald Tribune, and the New York Review of Books. Roth is a regular guest in the major media and a lecturer at educational institutions. He earned his BA from Brown University and his JD from Yale Law School. The son of a refugee of Nazi Germany, he has been drawn to human rights issues since boyhood.

Ideas recorded on: 8/14/07
Interests
Most Recent Idea
Science & Technology
12/31/2007

Description: Better communication gives us a greater global perspective and a greater ability to empathize with those in danger.

Transcript: I think one thing that you could say the world is doing right today is that there is a more global perspective. People are, because of the communications revolution, better able to understand and potentially identify with people on the other side of the world. Certainly that process of identification has been absolutely key to the human rights movement. You know if you go back 100 years, the only thing you could have a human rights movement about were great big trends. You know you could talk about, you know, slavery or colonialism – some of the . . . the big kind of abuses that didn’t really change day to day, and therefore you could really build a movement about. But the idea of generating pressure to stop this particular war or that atrocity was impossible because you wouldn’t even know about it until it was too late. Today, because of communication, there is this greater capacity to . . . to see the person on the other side of the world both literally, but I think more importantly to figuratively identify with that person. And I do think that there is a growing globalization spirit which we are doing right. There’s a long way to go. Still many Americans don’t even have a passport. They’ve never traveled abroad. It’s a big country, and there’s often a feeling that, you know, why do you need anybody else? You can travel for 1,000 miles and still only find Americans. But that’s beginning to change, and I think that’s for the best because it will make America a better global citizen; perhaps a more humble citizen, but one that is more willing to live according to the values that it’s preached for many years.

Recorded on: 8/14/07

 

 

 

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22
Ideas
Science & Technology
12/31/2007
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Outlook & the Future
12/31/2007
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The World
12/31/2007
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The Environment
12/31/2007
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Asia
12/31/2007
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The World
12/31/2007
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Foreign Policy
12/31/2007
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