What it is: NIM (Norwegian Human Rights Institution) is an independent public body established by the Norwegian Parliament to strengthen the implementation of human rights in Norway. NIM’s mandate is to promote and protect human rights through monitoring, reporting, advice, and public communication.
What NIM is (and is not)
- NIM is not a court and normally does not replace complaint bodies.
- NIM does system‑level work: publishes reports, recommendations, analyses, and tools that document patterns and gaps.
- NIM can be a powerful reference authority when you write complaints, policy letters, or media documentation.
Why NIM matters for Do Better Norge
DBN is about accountability through documentation. NIM helps by:
- mapping Norway’s human rights obligations (Constitution + Human Rights Act + treaties),
- tracking international recommendations to Norway, and
- publishing analysis that can be cited in complaints and advocacy.
How to use NIM in your casework
- Find relevant NIM publications on your theme (family life, due process, discrimination, children’s rights).
- Extract the principles (procedural safeguards, proportionality, effective remedies).
- Use these principles in your letters to agencies and oversight bodies.
- If you are doing advocacy, point to NIM’s materials to show the issue is systemic, not only personal.
Do Better Norge pro‑tip: the Human Rights Tracker
NIM runs a tracker that helps you see what international bodies have recommended to Norway and which ministries are responsible for follow‑up. This is useful when you want to connect your story to a broader pattern and to accountable institutions.
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