FULL-TIME JOB VACANCY
CHIEF INFORMATION OFFICER
Multiple Office Locations Considered
Application Deadline: 4 July, 2024
The Chief Information Officer (CIO) will provide strategic and tactical Information Technology and Security leadership across all functions at Human Rights Watch (“HRW”), including fact-finding tools, publishing, knowledge management, human resources, fundraising and operations to provide a secure, scalable and robust infrastructure to support HRW’s highly distributed global organization. As a key member of the operations and leadership team, the CIO will be a partner and advisor to the senior leadership, the board of directors, and the wider organization.
The CIO will play a critical leadership role in defining and communicating HRW’s technology strategy, including a cloud-based systems architecture and will be responsible for building, operating, and securing all significant technology within HRW. The CIO will also manage the Information Security team to implement and maintain an information security risk management program and support in incident response in coordination with the Director of Physical Security. The CIO will prepare for and enable a future digital transformation of how HRW executes its core mission of investigating human rights violations, exposing them, and demanding change.
The technology portfolio includes the tools needed for digital advocacy and targeted communications, knowledge management systems, digital (text, video, and audio) publishing stacks, ML/AI tools to automate investigations where possible, and critically the evolution and integration of marketing, finance, human resources, monitoring and evaluation, and other enterprise IT systems.
HRW investigates and reports on abuses happening in all corners of the world. The organization is roughly 550 people of 70-plus nationalities and includes country experts, lawyers, journalists, and others who work to protect the most at risk, from vulnerable minorities and civilians in wartime, to refugees and children in need. It directs its advocacy towards governments, armed groups, and businesses, pushing them to change or enforce their laws, policies, and practices. To ensure its independence, it refuses government funding and carefully reviews all donations to ensure that they are consistent with its policies, mission, and values. HRW partners with organizations large and small across the globe to protect embattled activists and to help hold abusers to account and bring justice to victims.
HRW’s researchers conduct work in over 90 countries, uncovering facts that create an undeniable record of human rights abuses. The organization writes detailed reports, news releases and tells the stories of what it finds, sharing them via social media with millions of online followers each day. News media often report on its investigations, furthering its reach. While it relies on in-person interviews, its research method has evolved to use technology – whether it is through using satellite imagery to track the destruction of villages and city blocks or mining big data for patterns in arrest rates or the deportation of immigrants – to deliver unimpeachable facts to those in positions of power to deliver human rights change, including governments, the United Nations, rebel groups, and corporations. HRW has also addressed abuses against those likely to face discrimination, including women, LGBT people, and people with disabilities as well as investigated and brought to light the baseless arrests of activists and political opposition figures. When it comes to ending abuses, some victories are big, and others are merely steps on a much longer journey to change. But each represents progress on the many issues HRW works on around the world. HRW’s work is centered in its commitment to justice, dignity, compassion, and equality.
REPORTING RELATIONSHIPS
The Chief Information Officer oversees the Information Technology & Security Divisions which are comprised of approximately 40 staff members who are responsible for all aspects of HRW’s Information Technology and Information Security needs.
KEY RELATIONSHIPS
Director of Physical Security
Deputy Executive Director & Chief of Programs
Chief Financial Officer
Chief People Officer
Program Director
General Counsel
Senior Advisor on Global Strategy
Chief of Staff and Advisor to the Executive Director
Global Head of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion
RESPONSIBILITIES
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE AND QUALIFICATIONS
The CIO will be an expert, collaborative, innovative and visionary leader with outstanding technical, planning, and financial skills as well as the capacity and passion to play a leadership role in a global team. It is critical that the CIO possess exceptional managements skills, an ability to motivate and inspire a global and experienced team, and a commitment to diversity, equity and inclusion. Both high intellectual and emotional intelligence are critical in order to communicate and influence effectively within a global, highly distributed organization.
The successful candidate will have at least 12-15 years of relevant experience in technology or related work, including experience in an international organization or business, with at least five (5) years in a senior management position. A bachelor’s degree, or equivalent experience, in Computer Science, Engineering or a relevant field is required. A master’s degree is desirable.
Ideally the candidate will have strong implementation experience with cloud-based technologies, particularly Microsoft, NetSuite, and Salesforce. Candidates should have experience in cyber-security risk management and incident management and demonstrate a practical approach to securing critical systems. Recent experience in how broadcast and digital content is originated, delivered, and managed would also be very useful.
Required Qualifications/Skills
Specifically, the CIO should have the following skills and qualifications:
Salary and Benefits: HRW seeks exceptional applicants and offers comprehensive compensation and benefits. HRW can offer a relocation assistance package and immigration support for this role if required, and people of all nationalities are encouraged to apply. If this position is based in the United States, the salary range would be USD 245,000-266,000. Salary ranges outside of the United States vary based on location.
Location: HRW is flexible about the location of this position, but the candidate must be based in one of HRW’s major global office locations and have a flexible schedule to accommodate working with colleagues in multiple time zones. This role will require both international and domestic travel.
How to Apply: Please apply immediately or by July 4, 2024 by visiting our online job portal at careers.hrw.org and attaching a cover letter and a CV or resume, preferably as PDF files. No calls or email inquiries, please. Only complete applications will be reviewed, and only shortlisted candidates will be contacted.
If you are experiencing technical difficulties with your application submission or if you require accommodations during the application process, please email [email protected]. Due to the large response, application submissions via email will not be accepted and inquiries regarding the status of applications will go unanswered.
Human Rights Watch is strong because it is diverse. We actively seek a diverse applicant pool and encourage candidates of all backgrounds to apply. Human Rights Watch does not discriminate on the basis of disability, age, gender identity and expression, national origin, race and ethnicity, religious beliefs, sexual orientation, or criminal record. We welcome all kinds of diversity. Our employees include people who are parents and nonparents, the self-taught and university educated, and from a wide span of socio-economic backgrounds and perspectives on the world. Human Rights Watch is an equal opportunity employ
Human Rights Watch is an international human rights monitoring and advocacy organization known for its in-depth investigations, its incisive and timely reporting, its innovative and high- profile advocacy campaigns, and its success in changing the human rights-related policies and practices of influential governments and international institutions.