Abstract
This paper examines how people-centered accountability initiatives are operating to enforce the right to health amid Israel's genocide in Gaza. Drawing on a critical case study of Doctors Against Genocide, Healthcare Workers Watch, and the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, we situate these actors' work within international human rights law, social accountability scholarship, and decolonial and abolitionist critiques. We show how these actors are able to combine clinical documentation, survivor testimony, and direct action to monitor human rights violations, generate medically literate records of the harm inflicted, and press for remedies that state-centered mechanisms have failed to deliver despite findings of war crimes and genocide by United Nations bodies and human rights groups. Across these cases, we identify some common practices and tensions surrounding coalition-building, risks to documentation, navigating a media environment of mis/disinformation, and engaging strategically with institutions that often reproduce health harms or are directly complicit. We argue that these movements treat people-centered accountability as part of their professional duty and act on a mandate to prevent mass atrocity crimes rather than being silent. We conclude by outlining some practical implications for clinicians, professional associations, and health systems seeking to align their global health practice with a people-centered approach to accountability.