conducting community interviews ovm volunteer training
TRANSCRIPT
One Voice Minnesota Monitoring Project
Investigate
Document
Assess
how fully Minnesota welcomes all residents of our state
What is a welcoming state?All people can live with dignity = HUMAN RIGHTS
Equality Life Family Physical integrity Right to adequate food,
clothing, and housing Freedom from slavery Right to education Freedom from arbitrary
arrest, detention or exile Right to health care
Freedom of movement Due process Right to form trade
unions and to strike Asylum Freedom of expression Freedom of association Right to safe & healthy
working conditions Right to social security Right to privacy
Volunteer RoleThe Advocates for Human Rights Volunteer Agreement:
• No compensation for volunteers• Confidentiality• Advocates holds copyright
Community Human Rights Monitor Volunteer Agreement – Interviewer
• Volunteer is responsible for finding interview subjects• Complete work within 6 weeks• Communicate with Advocates• Confidentiality• Media inquiries
Human rights monitoring is a method used to see, in a systematic, unbiased, and factual manner, whether human rights are fully respected.
Through monitoring, information is collected, verified, analyzed, and used to identify and address human rights problems.
What is Human Rights Monitoring?
Human rights monitors seek to identify and investigate the gap between the international standards and those standards in reality.
What is Human Rights Monitoring?
Why Monitor Human Rights?
• Help victims
• Raise awareness
• Influence public policy
• Provide early warning of potential
violations
• Pressure government to fulfill obligations
• Empower rights-holders
• Build the human rights movement
Human Rights Fundamentals
Safety and Security: Political, legal, economic, cultural, and social systems exist that, when combined, give people the building blocks for survival, livelihood, and dignity.
Non-discrimination: All people are entitled to the same human rights without distinction based on race, color, sex, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth, or other status.
Accountability: Human rights must be protected by the rule of law. Governments must comply with the legal norms and standards enshrined in human rights instruments.
Participation: Every person is entitled to active, free, and meaningful participation in, contribution to, and enjoyment of political, economic, social, and cultural development.
Strategies of a Human Rights Approach
Address root causes
Empower rights-holders
Work with responsible authorities
Protect marginalized groups
Safety and Security
Non-discrimination
Accountability
Participation
Address the root causes of the problem
Uncover the political, legal, social, economic, and cultural conditions that perpetuate human rights violations.
Safety and SecurityHUMAN RIGHTS STRATEGY 1
Address Root Causes in Action
To identify systemic barriers to welcome, the OVM Monitoring Project brings together:
• Analysis of laws and policies• Interviews with government officials,
community leaders, and other “systems” people
• Community interviews and conversations
• Data and statistics on problem areas
Protect marginalized groups
The investigation of human rights violations should not cause further damage to those who have already
suffered human rights violations.
Non-discrimination
HUMAN RIGHTS STRATEGY 2
Human Rights Monitoring Principles
• DO NO HARM (ensure safety and security)• Consider the unintended consequences• Respect the mandate• Know the international human rights standards• Understand the community and seek their
consultation• Protect confidentiality of information• Always exercise good judgment/ act
professionally• Be impartial, objective, accurate, and patient• Ensure credibility
Protect Marginalized Groups in Action
OVM Monitoring Project Confidentiality Policy:
• All information gathered from community interviews will be used anonymously in the report – no names or identifying information.
• All records will be kept at The Advocates office – do not keep any records of the interviews after submitting them.
Identify responsible authorities
Cooperate with and encourage positive changes in the response of government and other responsible
authorities to human rights situations.
Accountability
HUMAN RIGHTS STRATEGY 3
Identify Responsible Authorities in Action
After the report is finished, the One Voice Minnesota project will undertake:
• Public education to raise awareness and change values around immigration
• Legal reform so laws reflect human rights• Training for responsible authorities so they
have knowledge and skills to uphold rights• Coalition-building to expand the
movement for immigrant rights in Minnesota
Understand the community you are working with and seek their consultation and involvement in the
monitoring process.
Empower rights-holders
Participation
HUMAN RIGHTS STRATEGY 4
Empower Rights-Holders in Action
Community members are at the heart of the OVM Monitoring Project
• Community-based fact-findingo Interviews o Community conversations
• Training for community members to build human rights knowledge and skills (YOU!)
• Findings from community help guide other research and shape recommendations
DO NO HARM
How can you “do no harmdo no harm” in the following situation?
You arrange an interview with a member of your community organization. During the interview, you notice the person appears nervous about talking to you and hesitant in giving answers. When you ask her if she really wants to do the interview, she says that the director of the organization strongly encouraged her to participate and she’s worried about not getting the assistance she needs if she does not give an interview. How do you respond?
RESPECT THE MANDATE
How can you “respect the mandaterespect the mandate” in the following situation?
During an interview, the person you are interviewing tells a story of being discriminated against during a job interview, with the employer using ethnic slurs and stating that they don’t work with “his type of people.” He is clearly upset about the incident, but when you ask what he did after the job interview, he says that he did nothing. What do you do?
RESPECT THE MANDATE
How can you “respect the mandaterespect the mandate” in the following situation?
During an interview, the person you are interviewing talks about how she forces her children to only speak English at home and yells at them if they act “too ethnic.” You want to say something to her about how harmful this is to her children’s self-identity. Do you?
RESPECT THE MANDATE
How can you “respect the mandaterespect the mandate” in the following situation?
In your first 5 interviews, everyone tells you that being an immigrant isn’t a problem, at least compared to being low-income. Do you change your questions to ask about class discrimination?
RESPECT THE MANDATE
How can you “respect the mandaterespect the mandate” in the following situation?
You interview someone who works for a great organization that gives you a lot of good information. You can tell the employees there are hard-working, smart, and dedicated. You are grateful to them for their time in granting you the interview. Before you leave, the organization says they want to start a free legal clinic, because it’s badly needed in their community. They ask if you or The Advocates can help them raise funds or give them advice on starting the legal clinic. What do you do?
MAINTAIN CONFIDENTIALITY
How can you “maintain confidentialitymaintain confidentiality” in the following situation?
You are interviewing a community leader. After the interview, she invites you to have coffee. She asks who you have talked to and specifically, what members of her community have been saying to you. She says that knowing what they are saying will help her improve her advocacy work for immigrants.
MAINTAIN CONFIDENTIALITY
How can you “maintain confidentialitymaintain confidentiality” in the following situation?
After you finish your interviews for this project, a well-respected journal contacts you out of the blue and asks you to write a short article about immigration in Minnesota. You have lots of compelling stories you heard in interviews that you know would make for a great article. You won’t mention anyone by name. Should you use those interviews?
General Considerations
• Will not always have ideal conditions• Use your judgment on how to
deviate from the guidelines• Take advantage of opportunities to
gather information
Interview Conditions
• 2 people per interview– Lead interviewer– Note taker
• Interpreter?• Laptops okay
– Bring notepad
• 1-2 interviewees at a time is ideal
Interview Conditions
• Have as few people as possible in the room
• Consider setup of the room and seating arrangement
• Make sure no interruptions• Seating of interpreter
Conduct during Interview• Maintain eye contact with interviewee
– Cultural considerations• Avoid judgmental or evaluative
remarks or expressions• Be patient – allow silence/time to
speak• Do not interrupt speaker• Do not push interviewee.
– If sensitive issue, return to it later• Know when to stop
Beginning the Interview• Note interviewee names, titles,
organization, city, contact info date, team members, and interpreter present
– Have them write down
• Introductory statement– Mandate of project– Explain how info will be used– Explain what you can and cannot do with
info (do not raise expectations)
• Assure interviewee of confidentiality – review disclosure form
• Establish basic rapport
Interview Questions• Open-ended questions• Begin with non-controversial and less
sensitive questions• Ask for clarification of anything you
don’t understand– No second chances!
• Avoid leading questions• Ask questions in concise language (no
lingo or slang)• Retelling an incident
– Let them tell story chronologically; get details as needed
Interview Questions
• Be prepared to deviate from the question set• Be as thorough as possible
– Treat each interview as though last and only chance with interviewee
• Do not ask questions outside project mandate• Ask interviewee to spell out names as needed• Do not show disbelief or anger about answers• Stories: details, details, details!
Working with Difficult Interviewees
• The interviewee with no information
• The “focus group” – 3+ interviewees
• Interruptions• The interviewee who asks you for
something
Working with Difficult Interviewees
• Anticipate potential problems• Provide context to create trust• Demonstrate understanding of
challenges• Back up and engage in “small talk” if
appropriate• Rephrase your questions• If all else fails, end interview and try
to reschedule
Ending the Interview• Fill out demographic questionnaire• Allow note-taker chance to ask follow-up
questions• Ask if interviewee has anything else to add• Allow interviewee to ask you questions• Reassure interviewee about confidentiality• Reiterate mandate and how info will be
used• Ensure you have contact info for follow-up
questions
After the Interview
• Write up and finalize your notes ASAP (that day or week if possible)
• Add any notes about credibility or observations
• Identify any follow-up• Communicate results with The
Advocates