Brian Currin is a renowned South African Human Rights lawyer recognized internationally for his multidimensional global contribution as a human rights lawyer, activist and peace maker over a period of four decades.
Human Rights Attorney
Brian qualified as a lawyer in 1977 in the wake of the 1976 Soweto student riots which catalysed a new era of political protest and activism in South Africa, met with excessive security measures and gross human rights violations perpetrated by the state, marking the beginning of the end of the apartheid era through a peace process and a negotiated settlement 18 years later.
As a human rights attorney from 1977 to 1987, Brian represented thousands of anti-apartheid political activists unlawfully detained, arrested, charged and tortured. Post- apartheid, 1997 and 1998, he represented many families at the Truth and Reconciliation Commission whose loved ones had been assassinated by the apartheid security forces.
Human Rights Activist
In 1987 Brian was approached by prominent senior human rights lawyers in South Africa to set up the National Directorate of Lawyers for Human Rights and to lead the organisation, which he did for 8 years until South Africa’s transition to democracy. During that period, as a human rights activist, he initiated, participated in and oversaw a number of significant projects which today are recognized as part of his legacy:
International Peace Process Facilitator
Brian’s role as a human rights lawyer and activist in South Africa’s transition from dictatorship to democracy was recognized internationally, and, as result his experience and expertise were sought after in numerous other countries during their peace processes:
Commenting on his work as a peace process facilitator and human rights activist, Brian makes the point that human rights violations are most prevalent in countries engaged in civil insurrections and civil wars. Bring peace, he says, and human rights violations decline massively.
Jennifer Connet is a Legal Advisor at Human Rights Activists in Iran (HRA), where she supports the Spreading Justice Project in identifying individuals and entities responsible for human rights violations and international crimes.
She is a human rights and international humanitarian law specialist with 15 years of experience spanning humanitarian aid and protection of civilians in armed conflict, accountability for international crimes, and human rights advocacy, primarily focused on the Middle East. Her work has included analyzing violations of international law, advising on humanitarian and human rights policy and strategy, and managing large-scale protection and emergency response programs in Syria and Iraq. She has also contributed to civil and political rights advocacy in Egypt.
Jennifer holds a Master of Laws (LLM) in International Human Rights and Humanitarian Law from the University of Essex and a Bachelor of Arts in Peace and Conflict Studies from the University of California, Berkeley.
Director, Rule of Law; General Counsel Christina Storm joined Spreading Justice Legal advisory team to provide legal reviews on the human rights violators documented in SJ database through her innovative approached. Christina Storm is a General Counsel and Director of Rule of Law at DT Institute, following a 20-year tenure as founder and Executive Director of the international NGO, Lawyers Without Borders and twenty years as a practicing trial lawyer. Christina has been nationally recognized for producing outside-the-box and innovative approaches to justice sector programming that includes harnessing and leveraging resources pro bono services from lawyers around the world. Her thematic areas of focus have included counterterrorism, human trafficking, gender violence, corruption, and wildlife crime.
Christina Storms Approach to Writing Legal reviews for Spreading Justice:
Legal Policies and Disclaimers
Privacy Policy
Securiport 2020 © All rights reserved
