The Human Rights WatchNameUniversityIntroductionIt has been 71 years since the United Nations passed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 and yet, we still have human rights violations happening around the world. Just recently, the US government separated families in the US-Mexico border, which was seen by many as a cruel violation of human rights (Human Rights Watch, 2019). In Syria, the government used chemical weapons against innocent civilians and in Burma, thousands of Rohingya Muslims were ethnically cleansed by their government. These atrocities together with the Syrian Civil war show that human rights violations are still being committed today (Human Rights Watch, 2019). The organizations tasked with addressing these violations are referred to as human rights organizations and the most notable one is the Human Rights Watch. The Human Rights Watch is a not-for-profit organization that was established to investigate and report human rights abuses with the aim of bringing accountability and justice to victims. With operations in over 100 countries, the Rights Watch has taken many governments to task over their rights abuses (Human Rights Watch, 2019). With such a mandate, does this organization have enough power to