The National Weather Service has issued a cold weather advisory until noon Saturday for wind chills as low as nine below zero. As cold weather persists, the University wants to remind our community about tips for protecting yourself, your residences and your property, plus dealing with winter weather. These will be posted on UD's emergency preparedness and response page, along with updates on weather alerts, event cancellations and building closures.

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SPHR26: Creative Resistance — Artivism, Technology and the Right to Dissent

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All Day In Person and Virtual

About the Conference

The Social Practice of Human Rights (SPHR) Conference convenes scholars, artists, activists, organizers and practitioners to examine how human rights are imagined, challenged and advanced in practice. In 2026, SPHR gathers at a moment of profound global tension and possibility; when dissent is increasingly criminalized, technologies both enable and constrain resistance, and creative practices have become vital tools for survival, solidarity and transformation.

SPHR26 explores how artivism, digital technologies, and creative forms of protest shape contemporary struggles for human dignity and justice. Across disciplines and movements, participants will interrogate how creative resistance confronts repression, mobilizes communities and reclaims public space; while also grappling with the risks, exclusions and ethical dilemmas that accompany these practices.


SPHR 2026 Theme: Creative Resistance

"We must never forget that art is not a form of propaganda; it is a form of truth."
- U.S. President John F. Kennedy

A quarter-century removed from the September 11 attacks, a new generation knows only the dread and despair that dominate the narrative of now. Authoritarian governance, climate collapse and techno-dystopia recalibrate a reality once set on the promise of tomorrow. Human rights and democracy face unprecedented existential threats. Legal foundations fray under bombardment while illiberal forces celebrate cruelty. Nation-states retreat from cooperation with others, looking inward and backward for scapegoats and excuses.

What’s worse, the mechanics we have to build new futures have themselves been endangered and hacked. Local law enforcement chills free expression and violates the rights of assembly with military-grade gear, immigration enforcement is weaponized to punish political opposition and terrorism statutes outlaw protest across continents. From heightened digital authoritarianism in East Asia to the suppression of civil society in parts of Africa, the criminalization of social movements across the Americas, and the tightening grip on media in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, threats to the basic freedoms of democracy are everywhere. Documentation could be deep-faked while malignant algorithms surveil and shape online communities. Reliable philanthropic resources are evaporating at the very moment when investment in movement infrastructure is so essential.

These are difficult times, but a shift is underway.

Amidst this contracting civic space, a powerful counter-narrative is emerging. From mural movements and punk protests to indigenous artistic revivals, from digital memorials and silent theater to TikTok activism and algorithmic subversion, social movements are redefining the very act of resistance and actively defending fundamental human rights in powerfully creative ways. These movements are at the forefront of protecting the rights to assembly, association, belief, opinion, free expression and dissent — all indispensable pillars of a healthy democracy. In this hostile environment, artistic expression and digital technologies have not merely become modes of activism and advocacy; they are now urgent tools for preserving democratic space, directly challenging structural violence, and amplifying marginalized voices. This convening of social movement scholars and practitioners of human rights links directly to the defense of democracy as a core objective.

In this spirit, the Human Rights Center at the University of Dayton will convene the 2026 Social Practice of Human Rights (SPHR) conference to center this critical conjuncture. As the weight of disinformation, militarization, and belligerent politics bears down, communities are demonstrating remarkable adaptability. They are innovating, finding new ways to speak truth to power, to organize effective movements, and to reclaim public discourse. From the poignant street art that bears witness to state violence to the encrypted messaging apps that enable safe mobilization, the convergence of art and technology is fundamentally reshaping the architecture of protest and the defense of democratic ideals.


Conference Schedule and Information

SPHR26 is a three-day conference featuring keynotes, plenaries, workshops and concurrent sessions.

We will be sharing a full program soon as we wait to finalize our speakers and participants.

Keynote: Varun Gauri

Varun GauriLecturer in Public and International Affairs, Princeton University
Former Head, Behavioral Science Unit, The World Bank

Varun Gauri is a Lecturer in Public and International Affairs at Princeton University and formerly served as Head of the Behavioral Science Unit at The World Bank. His work explores the intersection of human rights, governance and behavioral science, with a focus on how institutions can better design policies and practices that advance dignity, accountability and social justice.

Plenaries

SPHR26 will host four plenary sessions featuring speakers whose work engages the conference themes and their intersections, including:

Artivism as Resistance

The leveraging of visual, performative, and literary activism (murals, theater, spoken word, zines, music) for memory, imagination and political intervention. How does this work drive change and foster dialogue in the face of repression?

Technological Transformation

The implications and promise of artificial intelligence (AI), autonomous systems, technology-based innovation, and the role of digital freedom and the opportunity for engagement with stakeholders across public and private sectors.

Upholding the Human Right to Protest and Dissent

Investigates the human right to protest and dissent, examining the legal frameworks, the strategic role of movement lawyering, and international mechanisms that safeguard collective action in an era of evolving social movements.

The Future of International Law

Creative resistance challenges, reinforces and redefines the impact of international legal mechanisms, and the viability of multilateralism and global governance is being challenged like never before. How can we reimagine human rights advocacy to create stronger institutions for peace and justice?

Concurrent Sessions

Concurrent sessions will include a mix of:

  • Panels
  • Roundtables
  • Research sessions
  • Creative and practice-based presentations, exhibits and performances

Sessions will bring together scholars, practitioners, artists and organizers working on topics related to creative resistance, technology and dissent.

Workshops

SPHR26 will host a series of 120-minute workshops on Friday and Saturday. Workshops are designed to be interactive and skills-based, offering participants opportunities to engage deeply with tools, methods and practices relevant to human rights advocacy and creative resistance.


Get Social #sphr26

Join the conversation, share photos, tweet, post and go live tagging @udhumanrights and using: #sphr26 #CreativeResistance

Stay Informed

We will be updating this page regularly to better accommodate your participation at SPHR26 April 9-11, 2026. If you have any questions, please contact us at hrc@udayton.edu.