The Global foundation For Human Rights (GFFHR) is an international coalition of activists, legal professionals, researchers, and advocates united by a shared mission: to confront and dismantle human rights abuses in conflict zones around the world. Established on the principle that peace is impossible without justice, GFFHR works tirelessly to document violations, hold perpetrators accountable, and support the long-term recovery of communities devastated by war and systemic oppression.
At the core of GFFHR’s work is the belief that transparency, accountability, and global solidarity are the foundations of meaningful human rights protection. We aim to:
With operational hubs on five continents, GFFHR deploys multilingual, multidisciplinary teams to some of the world's most dangerous and underserved regions. From conflict documentation in the Sahel, to refugee advocacy along Mediterranean routes, to peacebuilding in Southeast Asia, our field teams work in partnership with local communities to ensure culturally sensitive, contextually grounded interventions.
We recognize that sustainable change does not only come from international courts or government resolutions — it comes from empowered communities. GFFHR supports grassroots efforts to secure justice, offering training in transitional justice, trauma-informed reporting, legal literacy, and digital safety for human rights defenders.
Over the past decade, GFFHR has played a critical role in landmark prosecutions of war criminals, influenced key human rights resolutions at the United Nations, and equipped thousands of frontline defenders with tools to carry their missions forward. Our work has helped to recover mass graves, reunite separated families, and restore a measure of dignity to survivors whose stories might otherwise have been silenced.
Whether through research, advocacy, volunteering, or partnership, your support helps GFFHR continue to close the gap between human suffering and global response. Together, we can build a future where justice is not the exception, but the norm — even in the world’s most troubled regions.