31. | Coomans, Fons (ed.) : Cases and concepts on extraterritorial obligations in the area of economic, social and cultural rights, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Cases and concepts on extraterritorial obligations in the area of economic, social and cultural rights / Coomans, Fons (ed.) ; Künnemann, Rolf - ( Maastricht series in human rights ; 14), xix, 304 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2012. ISBN 978-94-000-0046-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. CHAPTER 1. TRADE AND INVESTMENT. CHAPTER 2. ECODESTRUCTION AND CLIMATE CHANGE. CHAPTER 3. INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND SOCIAL POLICIES. CHAPTER 4. INTERGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS. CHAPTER 5. TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS. CHAPTER 6. MILITARY CONFLICT. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Guatemala / Uganda / Israel / Lebanon / Morocco / Western Sahara / Germany / Zambia / USA / Kenya / Ghana / France / India / Australia / Canada / China / Nigeria / Switzerland / Turkey / Argentina / Uruguay / Paraguay / Spain / Kenya NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; CEDAW; CERD; ICESCR; ECHR; ICCPR; UN charter; UDHR; |
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32. | Heijer, Maarten den : Europe and extraterritorial asylum, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Europe and extraterritorial asylum / Heijer, Maarten den - (Studies in international law), xx, 321 p.. - Oxford : Hart publ., 2012. ISBN 978-1-849946-270-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Chapter 1: Introduction. Chapter 2: The Extraterritorial Applicability of Human Rights. Chapter 3: The Responsible Actor. Chapter 4: Extraterritorial Asylum under International Law. Chapter 5: Extraterritorial Asylum under European Union Law. Chapter 6: Interdiction at Sea. Chapter 7: External Processing. Chapter 8: How to Take Refugee Rights into Account. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): AMR; CAT; CEDAW; ICESCR; CERD; CRC; TFEU; UDHR; Vienna convention on consular relations; Vienna convention on diplomatic relations; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Refugee convention; Schengen convention; ECHR; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt
URL http://www.hartpub.co.uk/books/details.asp?isbn=9781849462709 |
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33. | Costa, Karen Da : Extraterritorial application of selected human rights treaties, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Extraterritorial application of selected human rights treaties / Costa, Karen Da - (Graduate Institute of international and development studies ; vol. 11), x, 324 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2013. ISBN 978-90-04-22837-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of contents:. INTRODUCTION. 1. ORIGINS OF THE CURRENT DEBATE. 2. OBJECT AND METHOD OF THE PRESENT INVESTIGATION. 3. ARE STATES BOUND BY HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES WHEN THEY OPERATE ABROAD?. A. MAIN ARGUMENTS SUPPORTING THE TERRITORIAL APPLICATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES. B. MAIN ARGUMENTS SUPPORTING THE EXTRATERRITORIAL APPLICATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES. CHAPTER 1: THE INTERNATIONAL COVENANT ON CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS ON THE INTERPRETATION OF INTERNATIONAL TREATIES:. 1. WORDING AND ORIGINS. 2. HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS. A. SPATIAL SCOPE OF THE COVENANT DURING THE INITIAL PHASE (1947-1948). B. RELEVANT DEVELOPMENTS DURING THE DRAFTING PHASE (1949-1954). C. RELEVANT DEVELOPMENTS DURING THE DELIBERATION PHASE (1954-1966). CONCLUSION: EXTRATERRITORIALITY IN THE PREPARATORY WORK OF THE ICCPR 3. THE JURISDICTIONAL CLAUSE OF THE ICCPR INTERPRETED BY MONITORING BODIES PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS. A. QUASI-JUDICIAL BODIES: THE POSITION OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS COMMITTEE. B. JUDICIAL BODIES: THE POSITION OF THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE. C. FURTHER INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS MECHANISMS: UN SPECIAL PROCEDURES CONCLUSION. CHAPTER 2: THE SPATIAL REACH OF THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN RIGHTS. INTRODUCTION. 1. WORDING AND ORIGINS OF ARTICLE 1 ECHR. 2. EUROPEAN COMMISSION OF HUMAN RIGHTS: ‘AUTHORITY AND CONTROL OVER PERSONS’. A. CASES RELATED TO DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR AUTHORITIES. B. CASES INVOLVING ARREST OR DETENTION OF PERSONS ABROAD. C. FURTHER EXERCISE OF PUBLIC POWERS ABROAD. D. CASES INVOLVING THE PRESENCE OF TROOPS ABROAD. CONCLUSION. 3. CASES BEFORE THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS. A. CASES BEFORE BANKOVIC'. B. THE BANKOVIC' CASE. C. FIRST CASES AFTER BANKOVIC'. D. LATER CASES AFTER BANKOVIC'. CHAPTER 3: THE CONVENTION AGAINST TORTURE. 1. A DIFFERENT TREATY COVERING AN ABSOLUTE RIGHT. 2. EXTENT OF STATES PARTIES’ OBLIGATIONS. A. STATES’ MAIN OBLIGATION UNDER THE CONVENTION AGAINST TORTURE. B. PREPARATORY WORK OF THE CONVENTION AGAINST TORTURE. 3. DOUBTS RAISED ON THE GEOGRAPHICAL EXTENT OF APPLICATION OF THE CAT. A. THE POSITION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM. B. THE POSITION OF THE UNITED STATES. C. THE POSITION OF THE COMMITTEE AS REFLECTED IN ITS FURTHER PRACTICE. CONCLUSION. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Austria / Belgium / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Cambodia / Canada / Costa rica / Cyprus / Denmark / France / Haiti / Iran / Iraq / Israel / Italy / Japan / Jordan / Kenya / Kuwait / Lebanon / Morocco / Netherlands / Palestine / Peru / Philippines / Poland / Romania / Russian Federation / Somalia / sweden / Switzerland / Turkey / Uganda / USA / Uruguay / USSR / Yugoslavia LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; CAT; ECHR; ICCPR; ICESCR;
URL http://www.brill.com/extraterritorial-application-selected-human-rights-treaties |
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34. | Langford, Malcolm ... [et al.] : Global justice, state duties, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Global justice, state duties : the extraterritorial scope of economic, social and cultural rights in international law / Langford, Malcolm ... [et al.], xviii, 477 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U.P., 2013. ISBN 978-1-107-01277-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. 1. Introduction: an emerging field, by Malcolm Langford, Wouter Vandenhole, Martin Scheinin and Willem van Genugten. 2. On terminology: extraterritorial obligations, by Mark Gibney. PART I. Legal Status:. 3. Extraterritorial duties in international law, by Malcolm Langford, Fons Coomans and Felipe Gómez Isa. 4. International financial institutions, transnational corporations and duties of states, by Smita Narula. PART II. Jurisdiction:. 5. Extraterritorial human rights and the concept of 'jurisdiction', by Maarten den Heijer and Rick Lawson. 6. Jurisdiction: towards a reasonableness test, by Cedric Ryngaert. 7. Just another word? Jurisdiction in the roadmaps of state responsibility and human rights, by Martin Scheinin. PART III. Causation: 8. Causality and extraterritorial human rights obligations, by Sigrun I. Skogly. 9. Deprivation, causation and the law of international cooperation, by Margot E. Salomon. PART IV. Division of Responsibility:. 10. Division of responsibility between states, by Ashfaq Khalfan. 11. Extraterritorial human rights obligations and the north-south divide, by Wouter Vandenhole and Wolfgang Benedek. V. Remedies and Accountability: 12. Remedies and reparation Dinah Shelton 13. Accountability mechanisms Ashfaq Khalfan 14. Moral theory, international law and global justice Malcolm Langford and Mac Darrow. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; Vienna declaration on the law of treaties; UN charter; CRC; ICESCR; ICCPR; Maastricht guidelines on violations of economic, social and cultural rights; ILC articles on state responsibility; Genocide convention; CRPD; Aarhus convention; AMR; Protocol of San Salvador; ACHPR; ECHR; |
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35. | Yearbook on humanitarian action and human rights , 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Yearbook on humanitarian action and human rights : 2012 /, 158 p.. - Bilbao : University of Deusto, 2012. - ISSN 1885-298X LANGUAGE: ENG, SPA ABSTRACT: Articles a.o.: 1. The Tradition of Civil Litigation in a New Age of international Law: International Perspectives on the Domestic Enforcement of Human Rights, by Phillip Wardle. 2. The Batwa indigenous People in Uganda and their Detachment from Forest Livehood: Land Eviction and Social Plight, by Norman Mukasa. 3. Voices in transition, by Alessio Surian. 4. Asylum Seeker's Access to Education- A Humanitarian Crisis in Israel, by Jessica Ody. 5. Land Grabbing in Sub Saharan Africa. A Human Rights Framework to address State and Extraterritorial Obligations: The case of China in the D. R. of the Congo, by Ute Reisinger. INDEX WORDS:
LIBRARY LOCATION: s Yearbook on h.a. |
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36. | Gibney, Mark (ed.) : Litigating transnational human rights obligations, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Litigating transnational human rights obligations : alternative judgments / Gibney, Mark (ed.) ; Vandenhole, Wouter - (Routledge research in human rights law), xviii, 366 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2014. ISBN 978-0-415-85811-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction: Transnational human rights obligations, by Mark Gibney and Wouter Vandenhole. PART I: INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC GOVERNANCE BODIES:. 2. U.S. Trade Santions (World Trade Organization, Panel, by Claire Buggenhoudt. 3. Biofuel and the Right to Food (World Trade Organization, Panel), by Alexia Herwig. 4.Land Grabbing and Gender Issues (International Finance Corporation and Compliance Advisor Ombudsman), by Joss Saunders. PART II: GLOBAL (HUMAN RIGHTS) MONITORING BODIES:. 5. Putting an End to Victims without Bo rders: Child pornography (Committee on the Rights of the Child), by Gamze Erdem Türkelli. 6. Extraterritorial Shared Responsibility for the Right to Health (Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights), by Rachel Hammonds and Gorik Ooms. 7. Economic, Social and Cultural Rights of Nuba Peoples (Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights), by Jernej Letnar Cernic. 8. "Only the Little People Pay Taxes": Tax evasion and Switzerland’s extraterritorial obligations to economic, social and cultural rights (Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights), by Nicholas Lusiani. 9. Labour Rights in a Transnational Perspective (Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights), by Arne Vandenbogaerde. 10. Climate Change (Human Rights Committee, Ad hoc Conciliation Commission), by Margreet Wewerinke. 11. Land Grabbing in Uganda by a Multinational Coporation (World Court of Justice), by Christopher Mbazira. 13. Structural Adjustment and Farmers' Suicide in India (International Court of Justice), by Anita Punj. 14. (Economic) Crimes against Humanity (International Criminal Court), by Michael Wabwile. PART III: REGIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS MONITORING BODIES:. 15. Public Duties for Private Wrongs: Regulation of multinationals (African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights), by Takele Soboka Bulto. 16. Forced Evictions in Zimbabwe (African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights), by Khulekani Moyo. 17. Land Grabbing in South America (Inter-American Human Rights Commission), by Ana Maria Suarez-Franco. 18. Enforcing Extraterritorial Social Rights in the Eurozone Crisis (European Committee of Social Rights), by Matthias Sant'Ana. 19. Military Interventions in Non-European States (European Court of Human Rights), by Nico Moons. PART IV: DOMESTIC COURTS: 20. Extraordinary Rendition (U.S. Supreme Court), by Mark Gibney. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Canada / Chad / Germany / Iraq / Japan / Kenya / Korea / Nigeria / Serbia / Syria / Thailand / Uganda / Zaire / Zambia / Zimbabwe NOTE (GENERAL): AMR; Protocol of San salvador; ACHPR; CRC; ICESCR; CRPD; Genocide convention; CEDAW; CAT;ECHR; ESC; ICCPR; Kyoto protocol; Maastricht guidelines on violations of economic, social and cultural rights; Maastricht principles on the extraterritorial obligations of states in area of economic, social and cultural rights; ICCPR-OP; ICESCR-OP; CRC-OP; CRC-OP; ICC statute; UN charter; UDHR; Vienna convention onthe law of treaties; |
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37. | Meles, Tsega Gebremeskel : Extraterritorial application of economic, social and cultural rights, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: unpublished document Extraterritorial application of economic, social and cultural rights : the international covenant on economic, social and cultural rights / Meles, Tsega Gebremeskel, 99 p.. - Turku/Åbo : Åbo Akademi Univ., 2014. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (THESIS): Master's thesis in public international law, ÅAU, Institute for Human Rights, 2014 NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; ICESCR; UN charter; Maastricht principles; ICCPR; ECHR; CRPD; CRC; LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: seminarierummet |
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38. | Sheeran, Scott (ed.) : Routledge handbook of international human rights law, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Routledge handbook of international human rights law / Sheeran, Scott (ed.) ; Rodley, Nigel (ed.), xvi, 791 p.. - London : Routledge, 2013. ISBN 978-0-415-62073-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Scott Sheeran and Sir Nigel Rodley: The broad review of international human rights law. 2. Wiktor Osiatynski: The historical development of human rights. 3. Guglielmo Verdirame: Human rights in political and legal theory. 4. Michael Freeman: Universalism of human rights and cultural relativism. 5. Micheline Ishay: The evolving study of human rights: interdisciplinary and new directions. 6. Scott Sheeran: The relationship of international human rights law and general international law: hermeneutic constraint, or pushing the boundaries?. 7. Antony Anghie: International human rights law and a developing world perspective. 8. Radhika Coomaraswamy: The contemporary challenges to international human rights. 9. Bruno Stagno Ugarte: Human rights and foreign policy: syntheses of moralism and realism. 10. Andrew Clapham: The use of international human rights law by civil society organisations. 11. Michael O'Flaherty and Daria Davitti: International human rights in field operations: a fast developing human rights tool. 12. Francoise J. Hampson: The relationship between international humanitarian law and international human rights law. 13. William Schabas: International criminal law and tribunals and human rights. 14. Cornelis (Kees) Wouters: International refugee and human rights law: partners in ensuring international protection and asylum. 15. Sheldon Leader: Human rights and international trade. 16. Peter T. Muchlinski: International finance and investment and human rights. 17. Karen Hulme: International environmental law and human rights. 18. Evadné Grant: Customary law and human rights. 19. Alain Pellet: Reservations to treaties and the integrity of human rights. 20. Lee Swepston: The International Labour Organization and international human rights system. 21. Awn Shawkat Al-Khasawneh: The International Court of Justice and human rights. 22. Scott Sheeran and Catherine Bevilacqua: The UN Security Council and international human rights obligations: towards a theory of constraints and derogation. 23. Philip Leach: The European system and approach. 24. Clara Sandoval: The Inter-American system of human rights approach. 25. Frans Viljoen: The impact and influence of the African regional human rights system on domestic law. 26. Vitit Muntarbhorn: The South East Asian system for human rights protection. 27. Mervat Rishmawi: The League of Arab States and human rights. 28. Lorna McGregor: The relationship of the UN treaty bodies and regional systems. 29. Sir Nigel Rodney: Non-state actors and human rights. 30. Paul Hunt, Judith Bueno de Mesquita, Joo-Young Lee and Sally-Anne Way: Implementation of economic, social and cultural rights. 31. Malcolm Evans: The relationship of religion and human rights. 32. Martin Scheinin: Counter-terrorism and human rights. 33. Upendra Baxi: International development, global impoverishment and human rights. 34. Andrew Byrnes: Gender challenges for international human rights. 35. Ralph Wilde: The extraterritorial application of international human rights law on civil and political rights. 36. Dinah Shelton: Enforcement and remedies. 37. Megan Hirst: Victims' participation and reparations in international criminal proceedings. 38. Nadia Bernaz: Continuing evolution of the United Nations treaty bodies system. 39. Ted Píccone: The future of the United Nations special procedures. 40. Allehone M. Abebe: The role and future of the Human Rights Council. 41. Juan E. Méndez and Catherine Cone: Transitional justice. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; UDHR; Refugee convention; UN Charter; ECHR; ACHPR; Arab charter on human rights; ICESCR; CEDAW; CERD LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: Inst.ref. |
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39. | Benedek, Wolfgang (ed.) : The common interest in international law, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The common interest in international law / Benedek, Wolfgang (ed.) ; De Feyter, Koen (ed.) ; Kettemann, Matthias C. (ed.) ; Voigt, Christina (ed.), 234 p.. - Cambridge : Intersentia, 2014. ISBN 978-1-78068-271-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Wolfgang Benedek, Koen De Feyter, Matthias C. Kettemann and Christina Voigt: Introduction. 1. Christina Voigt: Delineating the common interest in international law. 2. Sten Schaumburg-Müller: To what extent does international law obstruct the protection of common interests?. 3. Koen De Feyter: Differentiation between developing and developed countries in international law. 4. Claire Buggenhoudt: The common interest in international litigation. 5. Vito Todeschini: Collective security, the common interest, and the responsibility to protect doctrine. 6. Jure Vidmar: Protecting the community interest in a state centric legal system: the UN Charter and certain norms of 'special standing'. 7. Werner Scholtz: Human rights and climate change: extending the extraterritorial dimension via the common concern. 8. Ana Sofia Barros: Shaping the common interest in global development: the World Bank and its member states as responsible actors. 9. Matthias C. Kettemann: The common interest in the protection of the internet: an international legal perspective. 10. Wolfgang Benedek: Humanization of international law, human rights and the common interest. 11. Henning Bang Fuglsang Madsen Soerensen: Political activity, extradition and the common interest. Wolfgang Benedek, Koen De Feyter, Matthias C. Kettemann and Christina Voigt: Conclusions: the common interest in international law - perspective for an undervalued concept. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter |
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40. | Kinnunen, Kuisma : The extraterritorial reach of the European convention in flux, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: unpublished document The extraterritorial reach of the European convention in flux : the attribution of conduct and the extraterritorial application of the European Convention in the European Union civilian CSDP missions / Kinnunen, Kuisma, 115 p.. - Åbo : Åbo Akademi University. Department of Law. Institute for Human Rights, 2014. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (THESIS): Master's thesis in public international law, ÅAU, Institute for Human Rights, 2014. NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; ILC articles on the responsibility of states for internationally wrongful acts LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: seminarierummet |
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41. | Allen, Stephen : The Chagos islanders and international law, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The Chagos islanders and international law / Allen, Stephen, xx + 315 p. - Oxford : Hart, 2014. ISBN 978-1-84946-265-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Introduction. 1. The Chagossian litigation in English courts. 2. The Chagos islanders and the European Convention on Human Rights: extra-territoriality and the concept of state jurisdiction. 3. Detaching the Chagos Islands from Mauritius: the 1965 Mauritian constitutional conference and the making of the Lancaster House agreement. 4. The 1965 Lancaster House agreement and international law. 5. Detaching the Chagos Islands from Mauritius: the status of colonial self-determination in international law during the mid-1960s. 6. Mauritian claims of sovereignty over the Chagos Islands: Mauritian self-determination. 7. The Chagos Islanders and international law. Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Chagos Islands / Mauritius / United Kingdom NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; UN Charter |
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42. | Nolan, Aoife (ed.) : Economic and social rights after the global financial crisis, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Economic and social rights after the global financial crisis / Nolan, Aoife (ed.), xxxiv + 378 p. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2014. ISBN 978-1-107-04325-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Magdalena Sepúlveda Carmona: Alternatives to austerity: a human rights framework for economic recovery. 2. Raquel Rolnik and Lidia Rabinovich: Late-neoliberalism: the financialisation of homeownership and the housing rights of the poor. 3. Olivier De Schutter: The role of global governance in supporting human rights: the global food price crisis and the right to food. 4. Aoife Nolan, Nicholas J. Lusiani and Christian Courtis: Two steps forward, no steps back? Evolving criteria on the prohibition of retrogression in economic and social rights. 5. Radhika Balakrishnan and James Heintz: Extraterritorial obligations, financial globalisation and macroeconomic governance. 6. Colm O'Cinneide: Austerity and the faded dream of a 'social Europe'. 7. Nicholas J. Lusiani: Rationalising the right to health: is Spain's austere response to the economic crisis impermissible under international human rights law?. 8. Helen Hershkoff and Stephen Loffredo: Tough times and weak review: the 2008 economic meltdown and enforcement of socio-economic rights in US state courts. 9. David Landau: The promise of a minimum core approach: the Colombian model for judicial review of austerity measures. 10. Gustavo Maurino and Ezequiel Nino: Economic and social rights and the Supreme Court of Argentina in the decade following the 2001-2003 crisis. 11. Anashri Pillay and Murray Wesson: Recession, recovery and service delivery: political and judicial responses to the financial and economic crisis in South Africa. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Argentina / Colombia / South Africa / Spain / United States |
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43. | Desierto, Diane A. : Public policy in international economic law, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Public policy in international economic law : The ICESCR in trade, finance, and investment / Desierto, Diane A., xlvi, 394 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2015. ISBN 978-0-19-871693-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Keynes v. Hayek in IEL. 2. The role of the state under the ICESCR. 3. The ICESCR in state public policy-making within the world trade system. 4. The ICESCR in state public policy-making in the international financial system. 5. The ICESCR in state public policy-making in the international investment system. 6. Conclusion: Beyond Keynes v. Hayek - social protection and the rejection of inequality in the ICESCR as the normative foundation of states' economic decisions. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICESCR; ICESCR-OP |
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44. | Kaltenborn, Markus : Social rights and international development, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Social rights and international development : global legal standards for the post-2015 development agenda / Kaltenborn, Markus - (Springer briefs in law), ix, 117 p. - Heidelberg : Springer, 2015. ISBN 978-3-662-45351-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction: social rights as a legal framework for international development strategies. 2. Legal sources of social rights and implementation mechanisms at the international level. 3. Social rights obligations: the link between human rights law and international development law. 4. Scope and relevance of specific social rights for poverty reduction strategies in developing and emerging countries. 5. Social rights and the international development agenda. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICESCR; UN Millennium declaration |
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45. | Murillo Chávarro, Jimena : The human right to water, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The human right to water : a legal comparative perspective at the international, regional and domestic level / Murillo Chávarro, Jimena, xxviii, 381 p. - Cambridge : Intersentia, 2015. ISBN 978-1-78068-297-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. General introduction. 2. Emergence, definition and core content of the human right to water. 3. Recognition of the human right to water at the international level. 4. Recognition of the human right to water at the regional level. 5. Recognition of the human right to water at the domestic level: a case study approach. 6. Extraterritorial application of the human right to water in a transboundary watercourse context. 7. General conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Argentina / Bolivia / Chile / Colombia NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; ICCPR; ICESCR; CEDAW; CRC; CRPD |
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46. | Cernic, Jernej Letnar (ed.) : Human rights and business, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights and business : direct corporate accountability for human rights / Cernic, Jernej Letnar (ed.) ; Van Ho, Tara (ed.), xxx, 532 p. - Oisterwijk : Wolf Legal Publishers, 2015. ISBN 9789462402072 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Introduction, by Jernej Letnar Cernic and Tara Van Ho. 1. Multinationals, human rights and international law: time to move beyond the 'state-centric' conception, by Surya Deva. 2. Direct international humanitarian obligations of non-state entities: analysis of the lex lata and the lex ferenda, by Nicolá Carrillo. 3. Transnational private regulation and human rights: the limitations of stateless law and the re-entry of the state, by Cedric Ryngaert. 4. An elephant in a room of porcelain: establishing corporate responsibility for human rights, by Jernej Letnar Cernic. 5. Corporations as agents of global justice, by Vojko Strahovnik. 6. Human rights due diligence and the responsible supply of minerals from conflict-affected areas: towards a normative framework?, by Mary E. Footer. 7. 'Due diligence' in 'transitional justice states': an obligation for greater transparency?, by Tara L. Van Ho. 8. Privatisation and the obligation to fulfil rights, by Nicholas McMurry. 9. Direct corporate human rights obligations under the right to health: from mere 'respecting' towards protecting and fulfilling, by Brigit Toebes. 10. Defying territorial limitations: regulating business conduct extraterritorially through establishing obligations in EU law and national law, Karin Buhmann. 11. Business & human rights: from a 'responsibility to respect' to legal obligations and enforcement, by Humberto Fernando Cantú Rivera. 12. Access to justice through company complaint mechanisms?, by Karin Lukas. 13. The Dutch Shell case: foreign direct liability claims as an avenue for holding multinational corporations accountable for human rights violations, by Dorothée Cambou. 14. The assessment of corporate conduct towards human rights in investor-state dispute settlement: why we should (and can) mix the sheep and the goats, by Adriana Espinosa Gonzáles. 15. Private military and security companies, transnational private regulation and public international law: from the public to the private and back again?, by Willem van Genugten, Nicola Jägers and Evgeni Moyakine. 16. State-owned enterprises and human rights: the qualification & the responsibility of the state, by Charline Daelman. 17. The worst forms of child labour in cocoa plantations in Côte d'Ivoire & direct obligations of transnational corporations, by Silvia Scarpa. 18. Corporate complicity for human rights violations in Africa post-Kiobel case, by Atabongawung Tamo. 19. Human rights obligations of transnational corporations in domestic tort law, Cees van Dam. 20. Transnational corporate liability for gendered harms in the fashion sector from an American and Danish perspective, by Sara Andersen. INDEX WORDS:
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47. | Vandenhole, Wouter (ed.) : Challenging territoriality in human rights law, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Challenging territoriality in human rights law : building blocks for a plural and diverse duty-bearer regime / Vandenhole, Wouter (ed.), xxi, 209 p. - London : Routledge, 2015. ISBN 978-1-138-79945-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction: an emerging multi-duty-bearer human rights regime?, by Wouter Vandenhole and Willem van Genugten. 2. Extraterritorial human rights obligations: wider implications of the Maastricht Principles and the continuing accountability challenge, by Ashfaq Khalfan and Ian Seiderman. 3. The World Bank Group, the IMF and human rights: about direct obligations and the attribution of unlawful conduct, by Willem van Genugten. 4. Corporate responsibility for human rights: towards a pluralist approach, by Jerjec Letnar Cernic. 5. Litigating transnational human rights obligations, by Mark Gibney. 6. Obligations and responsibility in a plural and diverse duty-bearer human rights regime, by Wouter Vandenhole. 7. Transnational legal responsibility: some preliminaries, by George Pavlakos. 8. The common interest in international law: implications for human rights, by Koen De Feyter. 9. You say you want a revolution: challenges of market primacy for the human rights project, by Margot E. Salomon. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Maastricht principles on the extraterritorial obligations of states in the area of economic, social and cultural rights |
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48. | Fabbrini, Federico (ed.) : Constitutionalism across borders in the struggle against terrorism, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Constitutionalism across borders in the struggle against terrorism / Fabbrini, Federico (ed.) ; Jackson, Vicki C. (ed.), viii, 359 p. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Publishing, 2016. ISBN 978-1-78471-538-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Federico Fabbrini and Vicki C. Jackson: Introduction. 2. Martin Scheinin: United Nations law: substantive constitutionalism through human rights versus formal hierarchy through Article 103 of the Charter. 3. Erika de Wet: (Implicit) judicial favoring of human rights over United Nations Security Council sanctions: a manifestation of international constitutionalism?. 4. Karen Cooper and Clive Walker: Heroic or hapless? The legal reform of counter-terrorism financial sanctions regimes in the European Union. 5. Cian C. Murphy: The dynamics of transnational counter-terrorism law: towards a methodology, map, and critique. 6. Vicki C. Jackson: Translating rights across centuries: U.S. constitutional protection against unreasonable searches and seizures in a transnational era. 7. Akiko Ejima: Japanese efforts to have a secrecy law and a 'National Security Council': a runner who is one lap behind? Or good things come to those who wait?. 8. Kim Lane Scheppele: The deep dilemma of evidence in the global anti-terror campaign. 9. David Cole and Federico Fabbrini: Reciprocal privacy: towards a transatlantic agreement. 10. Jennifer Daskal: Transnational seizures: the constitution and criminal procedure abroad. 11. Brice Dickson: The extra-territorial obligations of European states regarding human rights in the context of terrorism. 12. Jonathan Hafetz: Detention at sea: the persistence of territorial constraints on constitutional rights. 13. Anna Su: The extraterritorial First Amendment. 14. Or Bassok: Missing in action: the human eye. 15. Stephen Ellmann: Unraveling the law of war. 16. Lech Garlicki: Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Japan / United States NOTE (MEETINGS): Conference of the Research Group on 'Constitutional Responses to Terrorism' of the International Association of Constitutional Law, Harvard Law School, March 2014 |
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49. | Moreno-Lax, Violeta (ed.) : 'Boat refugees' and migrants at sea, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph 'Boat refugees' and migrants at sea : a comprehensive approach / Moreno-Lax, Violeta (ed.) ; Papastavridis, Efthymios (ed.), 461 p. - Leiden : Brill, 2017. ISBN 978-90-04-30074-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Violeta Moreno-Lax and Efthymios Papastavridis: Introduction: tracing the bases of an integrated paradigm for maritime security and human rights at sea. 1. Guy S. Goodwin-Gill: Setting the scene: refugees, asylum seekers and migrants at sea: the need for a long-term, protection-centred vision. 2. Natalie Klein: A maritime security framework for the legal dimensions of irregular migration at sea. 3. Thomas Gammeltoft-Hansen: The perfect storm: sovereignty games and the law and politics of boat migration. 4. Tamara Last: Who is the 'boat migrant'? Challenging the anonymity of death by border-sea. 5. Jean-Pierre Gauci and Patricia Mallia: The migrant smuggling protocol and the need for a multi-faceted approach: inter-sectionality and multi-actor cooperation. 6. Tom Obokata: Boat migrants as the victims of human trafficking: exploring key obligations through a human rights based approach. 7. Douglas Guilfoyle: Transnational crime and the rule of law at sea: responses to maritime migration and piracy compared. 8. Jasmine Coppens: Interception of migrant boats at sea. 9. Lisa-Marie Komp: The duty to assist persons in distress: an alternative source of protection against the return of migrants and asylum seekers to the high seas?. 10. Mariagiulia Giuffré: Access to asylum at sea? Non-refoulement and a comprehensive approach to extraterritorial human rights obligations. 11. Niels Frenzen: Responses to 'boat migration': a global perspective - US practices. 12. Claire Higgins: The (un-)sustainability of Australia's offshore processing and settlement policy. 13. Marie-Laure Basilien-Gainche: Leave and let die: the EU Banopticon approach to migrants at sea. 14. Cristiano D'Orsi, Sergio Carciotto and Corey R. Johnson: Into Africa: 'boat people' in Sub-Saharan Africa. 15. Maïté Fernandez: The EU external borders policy and Frontex-coordinated operations at sea: who is in charge? Reflections of responsibility for wrongful acts. 16. Meltem Ineli-Ciger: An examination of the comprehensive plan of action as a response to mass influx of 'boat people': lessons learnt for a comprehensive approach to migration at sea. Anja Klug: Conclusion: closing remarks: the present and future of 'boat refugees' and migrants at sea. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Africa / Australia / USA NOTE (GENERAL): Protocol against the smuggling of migrants by land, sea and air, supplemeting the UN convention against transnational organized crime (migrant smuggling protocol); UNCLOS |
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50. | Gammeltoft-Hansen, Thomas (ed.) : Human rights and the dark side of globalisation, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights and the dark side of globalisation : transnational law enforcement and migration control / Gammeltoft-Hansen, Thomas (ed.) ; Vedsted-Hansen, Jens (ed.), 365 p. - London : Routledge, 2017. ISBN 978-1-138-22223-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Thomas Gammeltoft-Hansen and Jens Vedsted-Hansen: Introduction: human rights in an age of international cooperation. 1. André Nollkaemper: Shared responsibility for human rights violations: a relational account. 2. Marko Milanovic: Extraterritoriality and human rights: prospects and challenges. 3. Peter Vedel Kessing: Transnational operations carried out from a state's own territory: armed drones and the extraterritorial effect of international human rights conventions. 4. Mark Gibney: NSA surveillance and its meaning for international human rights law. 5. Douglas Guilfoyle: Jurisdiction at sea: migrant interdiction and the transnational security state. 6. Birgit Feldtmann: Counter-piracy: navigating the cloudy waters of international law, domestic law and human rights. 7. Efthymios Papastavridis: Rescuing migrants at sea and the law of international responsibility. 8. Fabiane Baxewanos: Relinking power and responsibility in extraterritorial immigration control: the case of immigration liaison officers. 9. Nikolas Feith Tan: State responsibility and migration control: Australia's international deterrence model. 10. Maïté Fernandez: Multi-stakeholder operations of border control coordinated at the EU level and the allocation of international responsibility. 11. Melanie Fink: A 'blind spot' in the framework of international responsibility? Third-party responsibility for human rights violations: the case of Frontex. 12. Niels W. Frenzen: The legality of Frontex Operation Hera-type migration control practices in light of the Hirsi judgment. 13. Elspeth Guild: The dark side of globalization: do EU border controls contribute to death in the Mediterranean?. 14. Julian M. Lehmann: 'Outsourcing' protection and the transnational relevance of protection elsewhere: the case of UNHCR. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia |
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51. | de Wet, Erika (ed.) : Convergence and conflicts, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Convergence and conflicts : of human rights and international humanitarian law in military operations / de Wet, Erika (ed.) ; Kleffner, Jann (ed.), 416 p. - Pretoria : Pretoria University Law Press, 2014. ISBN 978-1-920538-32-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Iain Scobbie: Human rights protection during armed conflict: what, when and for whom?. 2. Bonita Meyersfeld: A gender perspective on the relationship between human rights law and international humanitarian law. 3. Jann K. Kleffner: The applicability of the law of armed conflict and human rights law to organised armed groups. 4. Bruce 'Ossie' Oswald: Interplay as regards dealing with detainees in international military operations. 5. Michelle Lesh: Interplay as regards conduct of hostilities. 6. Andrea Carcano: On the relationship between international humanitarian law and human rights law in times of belligerent occupation: not yet a coherent framework. 7. Marten Zwanenburg: The interplay of international humanitarian law and international human rights law in peace operations. 8. André R. Smit: Selected aspects of applicable international human rights law and international humanitarian law in naval counter piracy operations off the east coast of Africa. 9. Daphna Shraga: The interplay between human rights and international humanitarian law in UN operations. 10. Peter M. Olson: Convergence and conflicts of human rights and international humanitarian law in military operations: a NATO perspective. 11. James Ross: Conflicts of law: NGOs, international law, and civilian protection in wartime. 12. Blaise Cathcart: The legal advisor in the Canadian armed forces addressing international humanitarian law and international human rights law in military operations. 13. Frans Viljoen: The relationship between international human rights and humanitarian law in the African human rights system: an institutional approach. 14. Karin Oellers-Frahm: A regional perspective on the convergence and conflicts of human rights and international humanitarian law in military operations: the European Court of Human Rights. 15. Dinah Shelton: Humanitarian law in the Inter-American human rights system. 16. Gentian Zyberi: The jurisprudence of the International Court of Justice and international criminal courts and tribunals. INDEX WORDS:
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52. | Ratner, Steven R. : The thin justice of international law, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The thin justice of international law : a moral reckoning of the law of nations / Ratner, Steven R., 471 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2017. ISBN 978-0-19-880715-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Legal and ethical approaches to global justice: the dialogue of the (near-)deaf. 2. Conceptual groundwork for a standard of global justice. 3. A standard of global justice. 4. Norms and territorial integrity and political independence: the ban on the use of force and non-intervention. 5. The claims of peoples: self-determination and state borders. 6. Norms of participation: sovereign equality of states. 7. Sovereign equality's limits: membership and decisionmaking rules in international organizations. 8. Human rights for whom?: territoriality, extraterritoriality, and universal jurisdiction. 9. Extraterritorial protection of human rights through force: from humanitarian intervention to the responsibility to protect. 10. Regulating global trade. 11. The international investment regime. 12. The limits of thin justice: international humanitarian, criminal, and environmental law. 14. Beyond thin justice. INDEX WORDS:
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53. | Bhuta, Nehal (ed.) : The frontiers of human rights, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The frontiers of human rights : extraterritoriality and its challenges / Bhuta, Nehal (ed.), 233 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2016. ISBN 978-0-19-876927-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Nehal Bhuta: The frontiers of extraterritoriality: human rights law as global law. 2. Aeyal Gross: The righting of the law of occupation. 3. Marko Milanovic: Extraterritorial derogations from human rights treaties in armed conflict. 4. Tullio Treves and Cesare Pitea: Piracy, international law and human rights. 5. Ralph Wilde: Dilemmas in promoting global economic justice through human rights law. 6. Jorge E. Vinuales: A human rights approach to extraterritorial environmental protection? An assessment. INDEX WORDS:
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54. | Karimova, Tahmina : Human rights and development in international law, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights and development in international law / Karimova, Tahmina, 337 p. - London : Routledge, 2016. ISBN 978-1-138-95713-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction. 2. Development from a human rights perspective. 3. The right to development. 4. The obligation of international assistance and cooperation. 5. New legal ideas: comment on the relationship of the international assistance and cooperation and extraterritorial scope of ESC rights. 6. Respect for human rights in external activities: overarching normative principles. 7. General conclusion INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICESCR |
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55. | Park, Ian : The right to life in armed conflict, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The right to life in armed conflict / Park, Ian - (Oxford monographs in international humanitarian and criminal law), 239 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2018. ISBN 978-0-19-882138-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Substantive right to life obligations. 2. Procedural right to life obligations. 3. The extraterritorial application of international human rights law. 4. How the right to life applies during armed conflict. 5. The right to life of armed forces personnel during armed conflict. 6. The effect of derogation. 7. The right to life obligations of states and how to ensure compliance. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR; ECHR |
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56. | Oberleitner, Gerd : Human rights in armed conflict, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights in armed conflict : law, practice, policy / Oberleitner, Gerd, 412 p. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2018. ISBN 978-1-107-45693-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: Human rights in armed conflict: history of an idea. 1. From medieval sources to modernity. 2. The science of warfare and the progress of civilization. 3. 1945: whither war?. 4. Human rights in armed conflict. PART II: Human rights and humanitarian law: theory. 5. Exclusivity: the misconceived idea of lex specialis. 6. Complementarity: maximizing protection. 7. Integration: the transformative influence of human rights. PART III: Human rights and humanitarian law: challenges and commonalities. 8. The right to life: the limits of human rights in armed conflict?. 9. The extra-territorial application of human rights: functional universality. 10. War as emergency: derogation. 11. Human rights and humanitarian obligations. 12. Operationalizing human rights in armed conflict. PART IV: The dynamics of war and law. 13. The changing character of war. 14. Governing internal armed violence. 15. Human rights in situations of occupation. 16. Context: the humanization of international law. PART V: Enforcement: practice and potential. 17. United Nations Human Rights Council: monitoring armed conflicts. 18. United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. 19. United Nations human righs treaty bodies. 20. The Inter-American human rights system. 21. The European Court of Human Rights. 22. The African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights. 23. Monitoring and litigating humanitarian rights: prospects. Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
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57. | Chenwi, Lilian (ed.) : Extraterritorial human rights obligations from an African perspective, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Extraterritorial human rights obligations from an African perspective / Chenwi, Lilian (ed.) ; Soboka Bulto, Takele (ed.), xxxiii, 308 p. - Cambridge : Intersentia, 2018. ISBN 978-1-78068-198-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Lilian Chenwi and Takele Soboka Bulto: Introduction. 2. Lilian Chenwi and Takele Soboka Bulto: Extraterritoriality in the African regional human rights system from a comparative perspective. 3. Fons Coomans: Commercialisation of educational services and extraterritorial human rights obligations. 4. Lilian Chenwi: Extraterritorial human rights obligations in the context of development assistance to African states. 5. Nadia C.S. Lambek and Claire Debucquois: The right to food beyond borders: the extraterritorial reach of the right to food in Africa. 6. Khulekani Moyo: Extraterritorial application of the right to water under the African system for the protection of human rights. 7. Takele Soboka Bulto: Tortured unity: United States - Africa relations in extraordinary renditions and states' extraterritorial obligations. 8. Ademola Oluborode Jegede: Indigenous communities displaced by climate change and extraterritorial application of states' obligations in Africa. 9. Christopher Mbazira: Land grabbing, extraterritorial obligations and the failure of justice in Uganda: the Mubende case. 10. Prudence Acirokop: Extraterritorial obligations of Uganda for its military's failure to respect and protect civilians in areas of the Lord's Resistance Army activity. INDEX WORDS:
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58. | Lattimer, Mark (ed.) : The grey zone, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The grey zone : civilian protection between human rights and the laws of war / Lattimer, Mark (ed.) ; Sands, Philippe (ed.), xxvi, 448 p. - Oxford : Hart, 2018. ISBN 978-1-50990-863-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Emily Crawford: Who is a civilian? Membership of opposition groups and direct participation in hostilities. 2. Mark Lattimer: The duty in international law to investigate civilian deaths in armed conflict. 3. Amichai Cohen: Protection by process: implementing the principle of proportionality in contemporary armed conflicts. 4. Stuart Casey-Maslen: Regulating armed drones and other emerging weapons technologies. 5. Pavle Kilibarda and Gloria Gaggioli: The globalisation of non-international armed conflicts. 6. Francoise J. Hampson: Administrative detention in non-international armed conflicts. 7. Lois Moore and Christine Chinkin: The crime of rape in military and civilian jurisdictions. 8. Carla Ferstman: The right to reparation by victims of armed conflict. 9. Sharon Weill: Arguing international humanitarian law standards in national courts - a spectrum of expectations. 10. Bill Bowring: The death of lex specialis? Regional human rights mechanisms and the protection of civilians in armed conflict. 11. Cedric Ryngaert: Extraterritorial obligations under human rights law. 12. Liesbeth Zegveld: What duties do peacekeepers owe civilians? Lessons from the Nuhanovic case. 13. Blinne Ni Ghrálaigh: Civilian protection and the arms trade treaty. 14. Valentin Zellweger and Francois Voeffray: A path towards greater respect for international humanitarian law. 15. Jennifer M. Welsh: The responsibility to protect and non-state armed groups. 16. Carrie McDougall: Protecting civilians by criminalising the most serious forms of the illegal use of force: activating the International Criminal Court's jurisdiction over the crime of aggression. 17. Leila Nadya Sadat: Elements and innovations in a new global treaty on crimes against humanity. INDEX WORDS:
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59. | van Aaken, Anne (ed.) : The European Convention on Human Rights and general international law, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The European Convention on Human Rights and general international law / van Aaken, Anne (ed.) ; Motoc, Iulia (ed.) - (European Society of International Law Series), xxvi, 321 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2018. ISBN 978-0-19-883000-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Anne van Aaken, Iulia Motoc and Johann Justus Vasel: Introduction: The European Convention on Human Rights and general international law. PART I: SOURCES. 1. Ineta Ziemele: European consensus and international law. 2. Angelika Nussberger: Hard law or soft law: does it matter? Distinction between different sources of international law in the jurisprudence of the ECtHR. PART II: INTERPRETATION. 3. Anja Seibere-Fohr: The effect of subsequent practice on the European Convention on Human Rights: considerations from a general international law perspective. 4. Geir Ulfstein: Evolutive interpretation in the light of other international instruments: law and legitimacy. PART III: JURISDICTION. 5. Marko Milanovic: Jurisdiction and responsibility: trends in the jurisprudence of the Strasbourg court. 6. Isil Karakas and Hasan Bakirci: Extraterritorial application of the European Convention on Human Rights: evolution of the court's jurisprudence on the notions of extraterritorial jurisdiction and state responsibility. 7. Ganna Yudkivska: Territorial jurisdiction and positive obligations of an occupied state: some reflections on evolving issues under Article 3 of the convention. PART IV: RESPONSIBILITY. 8. Samantha Besson: Concurrent responsibilities under the European Convention on Human Rights: the concurrence of human rights jurisdictions, duties, and responsibilities. 9. James Crawford and Amelia Keene: The structure of state responsibility under the European Convention on Human Rights. 10. Iulia Motoc and Johann Justus Vasel: The ECHR and responsibility of the state: moving towards judicial integration: a view from the bench. 11. Linos-Alexandre Sicilianos: The UN Security Council, state responsibility, and the European Court of Human Rights: towards an integrated approach?. 12. Paulo Pinto de Albuquerque and Anne van Aaken: Punitive damages in Strasbourg. 13. Philippa Webb: A moving target: the approach of the Strasbourg court to immunity. 14. Riccardo Pavoni: The myth of the customary nature of the United Nations Convention on State Immunity: does the end justify the means? Antonio Augusto Cancado Trindade: Conclusion: reflections on the 2015 Strasbourg conference. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR |