Bilateral Cooperation

Building Competence on Investigative Interviewing bilaterally. 

Ukraine

NCHR has established a collaboration with the Ukrainian NGO JustGroup and the Ukrainian prosecution authorities to provide training in effective and human rights-friendly investigation methods, particularly in connection with war crimes. The cooperation is supported by the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs through the Nansen Support Programme for Ukraine. 

Thailand

Together with our partner, the Thailand Institute of Justice (TIJ), NCHR has been engaged in projects to advance investigative interviewing in Thailand for more than a decade. This includes trainings and workshops on investigative interviewing and evidence evaluation for and with experts from the Royal Thai Police, The Royal Thai Police Cadet Academy, the Office of the Attorney General in Thailand and the Nitivajra Institute. NCHR also facilitates the participation of Thai experts during important meetings and events on access to justice and police reform at the United Nations in Vienna, Geneva and New York.

Vietnam

NCHR has worked with the Ministry of Public Security and the People's Police Academy since 2011. The first phase of the project identified candidates for a core group of Vietnamese experts that eventually will form the backbone of the corps of instructors for the Vietnamese police in investigative interviewing. The expert group has developed Vietnamese training modules and curriculum to be taught in the police academies in Vietnam. The second phase of the project concerns expanding the corps of instructors to cover the major police districts as well as the training and teaching facilities. The training and selection is undertaken jointly with the Vietnamese experts.

Indonesia

Having started out as a search for alternatives to the use of torture, NCHR contributed to the first training in Indonesia on investigative interviewing for military intelligence and military police in 2013. Since then the work has gradually been oriented towards the police. In 2014 both military and police personnel participated in the training. By 2015, most of the participants were representatives of the police. From 2016, investigative interviewing has been included in the continuing education programme for criminal investigation detectives. The methods have been put to use in different police departments, and a core group of skilled detectives is specialising in the application of the investigative interviewing methodology.

China

There is a keen interest in alternatives to traditional interrogation methods in China. In 2016, Renmin University organised a roundtable on investigative interviewing where Norwegian experts from NCHR interacted with Chinese professionals and academics involved in or interested in the police investigation process for the first time. In 2017, the NCHR was invited to the Yunnan province to train the police in investigative interviewing. Later that year, the NCHR visited the Peoples Public Security Police College in Beijing to give presentations at a symposium and to lecture on investigative interviewing to police cadets.

Published Jan. 23, 2020 2:29 PM - Last modified Nov. 7, 2023 2:23 PM