MultiHub Forum

Full Version: Frameworks and bodies for analyzing state-led digital surveillance abuses
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
I'm researching for a university paper on contemporary human rights violations, specifically focusing on the use of digital surveillance and data extraction by state actors to suppress dissent and control populations. While the physical acts of repression are well-documented, I'm finding it difficult to source credible, non-partisan analysis on how these technological tools are integrated into broader systems of control and their long-term societal impact. What are the most rigorous frameworks or reporting bodies for analyzing these modern, technology-facilitated human rights violations beyond the traditional legal definitions?
Great topic. For rigorous analysis beyond law, start with a Human Rights Impact Assessment (HRIA). It maps how digital surveillance and data extraction affect different groups, not just whether a policy is legal. Pair that with a Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) focused on data flows, retention, access, and purpose limitation. You can also bring in the NIST AI Risk Management Framework and the EU AI Act risk categories to structure governance, risk, and mitigation. In practice, define baseline conditions, model data flows, estimate potential harms, and propose concrete safeguards. Also cite the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights as a baseline for accountability in tech deployments.