See the projects Indela supports
and their impact in the region

Amaranta will develop a communication campaign that enhances the visibility of online gender-based violence and de-normalizes it, and draws attention to the absence of laws and public policies addressing the issue, the need for comprehensive digital literacy, and the importance of a gender perspective and Human Rights in the issue.
To improve existing information security (infosec) standards in the public sector through the co-creation of a platform that allows reporting of computer vulnerabilities in public systems. This will allow public authorities to respond and correct breaches or failures after vulnerabilities are identified.
We seek to achieve our objective through the training of women activists, leaders, public officials, authorities and journalists. We want to provide them with materials and knowledge, in a coordinated manner, so they can create their proposals for laws and policies on technology in Bolivia, and thus promote a digital future with gender perspective.
The project seeks to continue the work started by TEDIC in 2019 on personal data, and aims to enrich the legislative debate in pursuit of a comprehensive personal data protection law in Paraguay, involving various public and private actors.

This project will develop contextualized regulatory frameworks for internet access and the protection of personal data in select Bolivian municipalities.
This project will undertake to strengthen the work of consumer defenders in digital rights, focusing on personal data protection policies and their application and aligning with the strategies of the region’s digital rights community.

To promote the creation of a legislative bill on the protection of personal data with participation from the public and private sectors, as well as to advance the presentation of cases in the judiciary and establish a legal clinic for digital rights.
To comprehensively document both the consequences with which a person facing digital gender violence lives and the response from the Peruvian justice system, and to make evidence-based recommendations for improvement at the federal level regarding the legal, technological and emotional aspects of caring for victims.
To stimulate academic and public debate on the impacts and risks associated with mass surveillance using biometric technologies in Brazil, and to promote human rights parameters such as a respect for legal due process, data protection and the presumption of innocence.
To raise the capacities of society by increasing its knowledge about what technologies are used in Colombia’s electoral processes, as well as how to influence future changes to these technologies and their potential regulation.