I have been working with a local Non prophet organization that is trying to education our community and our state about the Universal Human Rights. They are in charge of the Anne Frank Memorial in Down Town Boise Idaho and give regular tours to guests and school groups. I was tasked with the job to revamp their educational materials. The two posters and the workbook that is the long timeline like piece were the start of this project. They were pleased with these results and so have asked me to continue this process by redesigning all of their promotional materials so as to give them a cohesive look. (more to come)
Educational Materials
A small booklet of all 30 Human Rights that the Center will give away to all of those that visit the Anne Frank Memorial.
An interactive timeline workbook for classrooms around the state. This gives the history of the 30 articles of the Human Rights and asks critical thinking questions as you move through it. (Below is a closer look at the timeline side of the workbook when it is completely folded out.)
Classroom Posters 
These give a shorter and more digestible version of the 30 articles of the Human Rights.
Pole Banners 
On the lamp posts near the Anne Frank Memorial as a way to advertise their new "Think about what you saw" tagline.
Quote book 
A project that I am still working on with the center. Soon to be a souvenir you can buy that will help you take home all the quotes of the memorial.
Bookmark
Special event giveaway for the centers annual fundraising dinner.
Mobile Exhibit - Be An Upstander

And interactive mobile exhibit meant to help explain what a Human Rights Upstander is rather then a bystander. Created for the Wassmuth Center for Human Rights as a teaching tool for schools that cannot visit the Idaho Anne Frank Human Rights Memorial in Boise Idaho.
I was contracted to help design a traveling exhibit for the Wassmuth Center for Human Rights in Boise Idaho. They are a non-profit organization working to provide teaching material for schools about the Universal Declaration for Human Rights (UDHR) as well as running guided tours of the Idaho Anne Frank Human Rights Memorial. They have been working to reach areas in the state of Idaho that cannot make it to the memorial for a tour, which is where a mobile exhibit comes in!

Their wish was to express to a view what an "Upstander" is and how someone can take on that roll instead or being a bystander. This exhibit takes four classic questions, (What, Why, How & When should someone be an "Upstander,") and explains via quotes from the Idaho Anne Frank Human Rights Memoral; as well as with easily scanable QR codes that bring up short videos about each section of the exhibit.

Below you will see images of the Boise based Memorial, screen shot details of the exhibit and a few photos of the finished towers.
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