The European Parliament has published a study requested by the Subcommittee on Human Rights (DROI) and coordinated by the Trans European Policy Studies Association (TEPSA).
“Transnational repression of human rights defenders: The impacts on civic space and the responsibility of host states” is authored by Dr Saipira FURSTENBERG, Independent Research Consultant, Dr Marcus MICHAELSEN, Senior Researcher, The Citizen Lab, Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, University of Toronto, Canada, and Siena ANSTIS, PhD Fellow in Law, University of Oslo, Norway; Senior Legal Advisor, The Citizen Lab, Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy, University of Toronto, Canada. Coordination was managed by TEPSA Project Manager Sonia Chabane and TEPSA Project Assistant Ana Leladze.
Abstract
Transnational repression arises when foreign governments reach across national borders to coerce, control and silence individuals in other countries using a broad range of methods, ranging from digital surveillance to extraterritorial killings. Amongst the primary targets of transnational repression are human rights defenders, whose advocacy is perceived by repressive regimes as a threat to their interests and power. As a result, human rights defenders fleeing persecution or other forms of repression at home are now facing increasing danger even though they have moved abroad. The practice of transnational repression negatively impacts every level of society, from individual rights to national security and democratic institutions. This paper presents global trends in transnational repression against human rights defenders, focusing on human rights impacts and curtailment of civic space. It examines the human rights obligations of European Union (EU) Member States as host countries to address transnational repression and outlines some of the emerging policy responses by governments worldwide. The paper also examines how current EU legal and policy frameworks and instruments could be applied to counter transnational repression and provides recommendations for improving protection for the human rights defenders.
