Martha Tudón currently serves as the digital rights program officer at ARTICLE 19, Office for Mexico and Central America, where she leads investigations and political and media advocacy processes in defense of freedom of expression and information in the digital environment. She is a human rights defender, with expertise in the construction of participatory public policies and advocacy processes towards the truth, memory, and justice of human rights violations. Her work experience includes political risk consulting and research on public security, the criminal justice system, and human rights abuses.
Tudón holds a double master’s degree in public policy and human development from the United Nations University (UNU-Merit) and Maastricht University (Universiteit Maastricht), as well as a bachelor’s degree in international relations from the Instituto Tecnológico Autónomo de México (ITAM). Tudón also has a specialization in risk and vulnerability assessment from the Institute for Environment and Human Security, and postgraduate studies in national security from ITAM, and privacy, regulation, and data protection from the Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE).
Tudón was an event speaker at the Dialogue.