Sarah Saadoun
Sarah Saadoun is a senior researcher working on poverty and inequality at Human Rights Watch. She investigates the multilayered impact of economic policy reforms, poor governance, and moneyed interests on economic and social rights, including social protection, health, education, and clean water.
Her current work focuses on the International Monetary Fund's response to the Covid-19 pandemic. She has previously investigated the human rights impact of the US government’s deregulation of mountaintop-removal coal mining, as well as of the disposal of coal ash, a toxic byproduct of combusting coal. She has also researched and written extensively on how corruption in resource-rich countries robs people of their fundamental rights, with a particular focus on Equatorial Guinea.
Saadoun was formerly a Leonard H. Sandler fellow at Human Rights Watch, where she researched and reported on human rights abuses in Israel and Palestine. Her primary focus was human rights and international humanitarian law violations associated with businesses operating in or with Israeli settlements in the West Bank, as well as developing broader guidance for companies doing business in occupied territories.
Saadoun received a law degree from Columbia Law School in 2014, a master’s degree in comparative literature from Hebrew University in 2009, and a bachelor’s degree in English from Queens College of the City University of New York in 2004.
Articles Authored
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April 24, 2018
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September 25, 2017
New Day in Angola, Old Story in Equatorial Guinea
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August 4, 2017
IMF’s Initial Steps on Corruption Issue
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January 27, 2017
Trump, Iraqi Oil and International Law
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December 9, 2016
UN Court Rejects Immunity for Autocrat's Son
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November 25, 2016
Trump Plays the Kleptocrat’s Card
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June 21, 2016
Responsible Business in Occupied Territories
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Reports Authored
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Equatorial Guinea: UN Review Should Highlight Abuses
Critics Intimidated, Arbitrarily Detained, Beaten
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The Coal Mine Next Door
How the US Government’s Deregulation of Mountaintop Removal Threatens Public Health
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