Jo Becker
Jo Becker is the advocacy director of the children’s rights division at Human Rights Watch. As the founding chairperson of the international Coalition to Stop the Use of Child Soldiers, she helped campaign successfully for an international treaty banning the forced recruitment of children under age 18 or their use in armed conflict. Her advocacy also helped lead to a groundbreaking 2011 treaty ensuring labor rights for domestic workers, which number 50-100 million worldwide. She has conducted field investigations on children’s rights in Burma, Ghana, India, Indonesia, Morocco, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Uganda, and the United States. Based on her expertise on the issue of child soldiers, she has addressed the United Nations Security Council, testified before the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee, conducted trainings for US and African military officers, and testified as an expert in a Dutch war crimes trial. She has written several Human Rights Watch reports and her op-eds have appeared in the Washington Post, International Herald Tribune, The Guardian, and other major papers. She is also the author of two books, Campaigning for Justice: Human Rights Advocacy in Practice and Campaigning for Children: Strategies for Advancing Children’s Rights. She also teaches human rights advocacy at Columbia University.
Articles Authored
-
May 25, 2020
-
April 24, 2020
Why Covid-19 Choices Are Critical for Children
-
-
January 31, 2020
Iraq’s ISIS Trials Don’t Deliver Justice – Including for Children
-
December 20, 2019
10 Good News Stories for Children in 2019
-
December 10, 2019
Pressure Mounts on New York Governor to Ban Toxic Pesticide
-
November 20, 2019
Spread the Progress on Children’s Rights to All
-
November 18, 2019
America Should Not Lag Behind on Protecting Children
-
June 12, 2019
What Congress can do to end child labor in the US
-
May 24, 2019
Children in War Deserve Accurate ‘List of Shame’
Reports Authored
-
Trinidad and Tobago: Bring Home Nationals from Northeast Syria
Unlawfully Detained Trinidadians at Risk, Including 56 Children
-
“My Son is Just Another Kid”
Experiences of Children Repatriated from Camps for ISIS Suspects and Their Families in Northeast Syria
-
US: Failure to Pass Build Back Better Act Imperils Rights
Can Advance Economic Justice, Fix Broken Safety Net, But More Needed
-
-
-
“They Didn’t Know if I Was Alive or Dead”
Military Detention of Children for Suspected Boko Haram Involvement in Northeast Nigeria
-
-
The Hidden Cost of Jewelry
Human Rights in Supply Chains and the Responsibility of Jewelry Companies
-
-
-
-
-
-