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WHAT WE DO ›

Digital Rights & Civic Tech

Defending free expression and privacy online, exposing surveillance and digital authoritarianism, and equipping civil society with the tools to operate safely in the region.

Coverage in progress
OVERVIEW

Why digital rights are human rights

The MENA region has become a laboratory for digital authoritarianism. Spyware purchased from democracies is repurposed against journalists. Encryption laws are weaponized. Platforms over-moderate Arabic content while leaving incitement against activists in place. The internet shutdown is now a routine tool of state response.

HuMENA tracks surveillance markets and infrastructure, documents platform-governance failures, and trains civil society in operational security — connecting on-the-ground evidence to policy windows in Brussels, Geneva, and Washington.

Our work intersects every other area: defenders, civic space, refugees, women, minorities. The digital layer is where repression scales the fastest.

HOW WE WORK IN THIS AREA

Three roles, one mission

01

Monitor

We track patterns of repression, civic-space restrictions, and rights violations through trusted partners and primary sources across the region.

02

Document

We produce reports, statements, and analyses grounded in evidence — translating fragmented testimony into structured records that hold up to scrutiny.

03

Advocate

We carry findings to UN mechanisms, EU institutions, and bilateral missions — converting documentation into protection, accountability, and policy change.

FEATURED

Recent reports & analyses

WHERE WE WORK

Digital-rights coverage by country

Stay close to the work. Get our briefings on digital rights and civic tech in MENA.