Human Rights Campaign Oral History - Incite at Columbia University

Completed Project

Human Rights Campaign Oral History

The Human Rights Campaign Oral History focused on the Human Rights Campaign (HRC)' mission, achievements, growth, and role in the LGBTQ movement.

The proejct's goal was to produce an archive with more than 150 hours of interviews, conducted with 40 individuals over 80 sessions. 

These interviews center on the organization’s most transformative moments, like the early AIDS crisis, marriage equality, the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, and the expanding focus around diversity and state work, with the recognition that these developments are crucial not only to the organization’s history, but to that of the LGBTQ movement more broadly.

The project asks: what can a single organization tell us about a social movement and social change? How do historic moments shape organizations and vice versa? How do institutions with diverse constituencies reconcile competing needs and agendas for a forward-thinking movement, all while effectively responding to consistent external attacks?

By promoting public knowledge about the unique history of the HRC in a way that can inform and contextualize the ongoing pursuit of equality, this work foregrounds the past with an eye toward the future.

Related Projects

  • go to Tunisian Transition Oral History
    Tunisian Transition Oral History
    Documenting the transition to democracy in Tunisia from the perspective of prominent transition leaders in the technical government and in civil society. Funded by Columbia University's Office of the President
  • go to The Elders Project
    The Elders Project
    Capturing the stories of elders who have shaped America—from Civil Rights activists to tribal leaders to survivors of Stonewall—before they’re lost to history. Funded by Emerson Collective
  • go to Robert Rauschenberg Oral History
    Robert Rauschenberg Oral History
    Documenting the American avant-garde movement and the conditions that enabled it through the life and work of one of its most renowned artists. Funded by the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation
  • go to Phoenix House Oral History
    Phoenix House Oral History
    Capturing the story of how Phoenix House transformed drug rehabilitation in America. Funded by Phoenix House Foundation