31. | Twesiime-Kirya, Monica : "Until marriage or graduation?" : Abstinence-only strategies and their impact on university students in Uganda, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial "Until marriage or graduation?" : Abstinence-only strategies and their impact on university students in Uganda / Twesiime-Kirya, Monica REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): East African journal of peace & human rights. Special issue on Law, gender and sexuality : vol. 15; no. 1., p. 4-224. - Kampala : Human Rights and Peace Center, 2009. - ISSN 1021-8858 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Other articles:. 1. Nudity and morality:legislating women's bodies and dress in Nigeria, by Bibi Bakare-Yusuf. 2. Paradoxes of sex work and sexuality in modern-day Uganda, by Sylvia Tamale. 3. Keeping our heads but losing our hearts: some current sexualities and gender debates in South Africa, by Jane Bennett. 4. Law, circumcision and gendered sexuality in Eastern Uganda and Western Kenya, by Sarah N. Ssali. 5. Post-female circumcision: a call for collective unmasking, by Wanjiku Khamasi. 6. Advice columns as a teaching resource for gender and sexuality: experiences from the University of Cape Coast, by Mansah Prah. 7. The legal regime governing sexuality and gender-based violence. a case COMMENT:. The Mukasa judgment and gay rights in Uganda, by Busingye Kabuma. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; CEDAW; |
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32. | Kameri-Mbote, Patricia : Separating the baby from the bath water, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Separating the baby from the bath water : women's rights and the politics of constitution-making in Kenya / Kameri-Mbote, Patricia ; Kabira, Nkatha REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): East African journal of peace & human rights : vol.14; no. 1., p. 1-218. - Kampala : Human Rights and Peace Center, 2008. - ISSN 1021-8858 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Other articles:. 1. Access to information, gender participation and good governance in Uganda, by denis Asiimwe Katebire. 2. A regression on the right to health: the question of access to antiretrovirls (ARVS) in Uganda, by Denis Asiimwe Katebire. 3. African states and the right to freedom from torture: an international perspective, by Jamil Ddamulira Mujuzi. 4. Globalization monsense upon stilts? Reflections on the globalization and human rights nexus, by H.S. Kanzira-Wiltshire. 5. Moslem women, religion and the Hijab: a human rights perspective, by Manisuli Ssenyonjo. COMMENT: Do confessions and evidence obtained through tortue have legal force in international law? A critical appraisal of remedies available to victims of torture in Uganda, by Deogratius Odokel Opolot. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; ICESCR; ICCPR; CAT; ACHPR; |
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33. | Taiwo, L.O. : The international criminal court, the United States and the fight against impunity, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial The international criminal court, the United States and the fight against impunity / Taiwo, L.O. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): East African journal of peace & human rights : vol.14; no. 2., p. 219-484. - Kampala : Human Rights and Peace Center, 2008. - ISSN 1021-8858 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Other articles: 1. The implications of the arrest of Jean Pierre bemba by the International Criminal Court, by Kasaija Philip Apuuli. 2. Political prohibition and the World Bank's role in the protection of human rights in the saga of the Chad-Cameroon pipeline, by Robert Kirunda. 3. A human rights perspective on privatization policy and legislation in Malawi, by Danwood Mzikenge Chirwa. 4. The dilemma of peace and justice in Northern Uganda, by Patrick Hoenig. 5. Building a strong African Union : the question of funding of regional integration, by Chris Maina Peter. 6. African states' response to domestic and global pressures: institutional and ideological dilemmas in Uganda, by Friedrick Kisekka-Ntale. 7. From Archaic to modern law: Uganda's refugees act 2006 and her international treaty obligations, by Jamil Ddamulira Muzuzi. 8. The capacity of war and HIV/AIDS-affected households to provide livelihood and protection to orphans and vulnerable children in Uganda, by Deborah Mulumba. 9. Between Sahria, constitutionalism and human rights in Nigeria, Fatula Olugbemi Arsikhia. COMMENTS:. 1. Ending the cycle of violence : is peace possible in the Congo?, by Luke J.F. Moffet. 2. Gender and forced migration: where do men fit in?, by Anne Thormann. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Refugee convention; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
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34. | Harrington, John (ed.) : Global health and human rights, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Global health and human rights : legal and philosophical perspectives / Harrington, John (ed.) ; Stuttaford, Maria - (Routledge research in human rights law), viii, 219 p.. - London : Routledge, 2010. ISBN 978-0-415-47938-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction, by John Harrington and Maria Stuttaford. 2. The Place of the Human Right to Health and Contemporary Approaches to Global Justice: Some Impertinent Interrogations, by Upendra Baxi. 3. Developing and Applying the Right to the Highest Attainable Standard of Health: The Role of the UN Special Rapporteur (2002-2008), by Paul Hunt and Sheldon Leader. 4. What Future for the Minimum Core? Contextualizing the Implications of South African Socio-Economic Rights Jurisprudence for the International Human Right to Health, by Lisa Forman. 5. The Ancillary-Care Responsibilities of Researchers: Reasonable But Not Great Expectations, by Roger Brownsword. 6. Human Rights and Health Sector Corruption, by Brigit Toebes 7 . The Child’s Right to Health and the Courts, by Aoife Nolan. 8. The World Health Organization, the Evolution of Human Rights and the Failure to Achieve Health for All, by Benjamin Mason Meier. 9. The Human Right to Health in an Age of Market Hegemony, by Paul O’Connell INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; CEDAW; ICESCR; ICCPR; CERD; ICESCR-OP; Limburg principles;
URL http://www.routledgelaw.com/books/Global-Health-and-Human-Rights-isbn9780415479387 |
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35. | Karns, Margaret P. : International organizations, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International organizations : the politics and processes of global governance / Karns, Margaret P. ; Mingst, Karen A.. - 2. ed.., xiii, 632 p.. - London : Lynne Rienner publ., 2010. ISBN 978-1-58826-698-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART 1: UNDERSTANDING GLOBAL GOVERNANCE:. 1.The Challenges of Global Governance. 2. The Theoretical Foundations of Global Governance. PART 2: EVOLVING PIECES OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE:. 3. Foundations of the Pieces of Global Governance. 4. The United Nations: Centerpiece of Global Governance. 5. Regional Organizations. 6. Nonstate Actors: NGOs, Networks, and Social Movements. 7. The Role of States in Global Governance. PART 3: THE NEED FOR GLOBAL GOVERNANCE:. 8. The Search for Peace and Security. 9. Promoting Human Development and Economic Well-Being. 10. Protecting Human Rights. 11. Protecting the Environment. PART 4: THE DILEMMAS OF GLOBAL GOVERNANCE:. 12. Innovations in Global Governance for the Twenty-First Century. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Africa / Afghanistan / Albania / Asia / Belarus / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Chile / China / Cuba / Cyprus / Czech republic / Darfur / East Timor / Ecuador / Egypt / Eritrea / Estonia / Finland / Ghana / Georgia / Germany / Guatemala / Haiti / Honduras / Hong Kong / India / Iran / Iraq / Israel / Italy / Japan / Kazahkstan / Korea / Kuwait / Latvia / Liberia / Libya / Maceodonia / Malaysia / Malta / Mexico / Moldova / Mozambique / Myanmar / Nicaragua / New Zealand / Nigeria / Namibia / Netherlands / Norway / Pakistan / Poland / Portugal / Russian Federation / Rwanda / Serbia / Sierra Leone / Somalia / Singapore / South Africa / Spain / Sri Lanka / Syria / Taiwan / Tanzania / United Kingdom / USA / Uzbekistan / Venezuela / Viet Nam / Zimbabwe NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW; ECHR; ACHPR; Charter of economic rights and duties of states; Framework convention on climate change; Kyoto protocol; CAT; Convention concerning the prohibition and immediate action for the elimination of the worst forms of child labour (ILO convention no. 182 in full text); CEDAW; ESC; Geneva conventions; ICCPR; ICESCR; CRC-OP; UN charter; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Charter of Paris; Ottawa convention; |
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36. | Gilbert, Geoff (ed.) : The delivery of human rights, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The delivery of human rights : essays in honour of Professor Sir Nigel Rodley / Gilbert, Geoff (ed.) ; Hampson, Francoise ; Sandoval, Clara, xxx, 249 p.. - London : Routledge, 2010. ISBN 978-0-415-57992-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Deriving concrete entitlements from abstract rights / Sheldon Leader. 2. The United Nations charter-based procedures for addressing human rights -- Violations : historical practice, reform and future implications / David Weissbrodt. 3. Holding pharmaceutical companies to account : a UN special rapporteurs -- Mission to GlaxoSmithKline / Paul Hunt and Rajat Khosal. 4. Reform of the UN Human Rights Treaty body system : locating the Dublin statement / Michael O'Flaherty. 5. The OPCAT at 50 / Malcolm Evans. 6. Redressing non-pecuniary damages of torture survivors : the practice of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights / Clara Sandoval and Michael Duttwiler. 7. A lighter shade of black : "secret detention" and the UN disappearances convention / Matt Pollard. 8. The scope of the extra-territorial applicability of international human rights law / Francoise Hampson. 9. Implementing protection : what refugee law can learn from IDP law and vice versa / Geoff Gilbert. 10. Still waiting for the goods to arrive : the delivery of human rights to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict / Noam Lubell. 11. From Bangladesh to responsibility to protect : the legality and implementation criteria for humanitarian intervention / Basak Cali. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Belarus / Belgium / Burundi / Cambodia / China / Columbia / Cuba / Cyprus / Estonia / Georgia / Germany / Haiti / India / Honduras / Japan / Korea / Lebanon / Liberia / Mexico / Maldives / Moldova / Namibia / Nepal / Nigeria / Pakistan / Palestine / Panama / Paraguay / Philippines / Russian Federation / Sierra leone / Somalia / South Africa / Sri Lanka / Sweden / Syria / Thailand / Turkey / United Kingdom / Uruguay / Viet Nam NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; AMR; ECPT; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; Genocide convention; ICCPR; ICESCR; ICC statute; UN charter; CAT; Inter-American convention to prevent and punish torture; OAS charter; CAT-OP; Convention for the protection of all persons from enforced disappearance; CEDAW-OP; CRPD-OP; CRC; Refugee convention; UDHR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
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37. | Abass, Ademola : Protecting human security in Africa, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Protecting human security in Africa / Abass, Ademola, xxvi, 397 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2010. ISBN 978-0-19-957898-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Introduction:. 1: Ademola Abass: An Introduction to Protecting Human Security in Africa. PART I - THREATS TO HUMAN SECURITY IN AFRICA:. 2: Opeoluwa Ogundokun: Food Security in Africa. 3: Ilias Bantekas: Environmental Security in Africa. 4: Kwesi Aning: Understanding the Nexus Between Human Security and Small Arms in Africa: the case of Ghana. 5: Ben Chigara: The ILO and 'Human Security' of Sub-Saharan Africa Labour. 6: Abiodun Alao: Natural Resource Management and Human Security in Africa. 7: Efthymios Papastavridis: Piracy off Somalia: The 'Emperors and the Thieves of the Ocean' in the 21st Century. 8: Maria O'Sullivan: Human Security and the Protection of Refugees in Africa. 9: Manisuli Ssenyonjo: Human Rights of Women in Africa: A Prerequisite for Human Security. 10: Ebenezer Durojaye: Corruption as a Threat to Human Security in Africa. PART II _ REGIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND MECHANISMS:. 11: Ademola Abass: African Regional Organisations, African Peace and Security Architecture and the Protection of Human Security of Africans. 12: Gino J. Naldi: The Role of the Human and Peoples' Rights Section of the African Court of Justice and Human Rights. 13: Obiora Chinedu Okafor: The African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights as a Collective Human Security Resource: Promise, Performance, and Prospects. 14: Rachel Murray: The Role of NGOs and Civil Society in Advancing Human Security in Africa. Conclusion 15: Ademola Abass: The Future of Human Security in Africa INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Sudan / Ghana / Gambia / Guinea / Kenya / Liberia / Madagascar / Niger / Nigeria / Rwanda / Somalia / South Africa / Uganda / Togo / Zambia / Zimbabwe NOTE (GENERAL): AU corruption convention; ACHPR; ACHPR-OP; AMR; OAS charter; Geneva conventions; CERD; CEDAW; Refugee convention; CRC; CRC-OP; UDHR; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ICESCR; GC-12 (ICESCR); Convention on climate change; UN charter-chap.VII; ICCPR; Protocol to the African charter on the rights of women in Africa; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
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38. | Margai, Florence : Environmental health hazards and social justice, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Environmental health hazards and social justice : geographical perspectives on race and class disparties / Margai, Florence, xviii, 286 p.. - London : Earthscan, 2010. ISBN 978-1-84407-825-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: Themes and Concepts:. 1. Geographic Foundations of Environmental Health Hazards: The Need for A Place-Based Perspective. 2. Environmental Health and Disease Indicators: Valuation Measures, Transition Frameworks, and Burden of Disease Estimates. 3. Population Health Disparities and Social Injustices: Indicators and Spatial Patterns. 4. Conceptualization and Measurement of Race, Ethnicity and Class. 5. Environmental Health Data Collection, Analysis and Visualization: An Overview of Geographic Methodologies. PART II: Environmental Aspects of Health Disparities:. 6. Global Climate Change and Environmental Degradation: Place Vulnerability and Public Health Challenges. 7. A Spatial Analysis of Emergent and Re-emergent Public Health Risks. 8. Toxic Chemicals: Disparate Patterns of Exposure and Health Outcomes. 9. Geographic Principles of Environmental Justice and Equity. 10. Global Geographies Environmental Injustice and Health Inequities. 11. Population Disparities in Water Access, Sanitation and Health Implications. 12. Food Justice, Nutritional Security and Pediatric Health Outcomes. PART III: Social Attributes and Economic Factors in Population Health Disparities:. 13. Poverty, Race and Place: A Triple Whammy Hypothesis for Minority Health Geographies. 14. Globalization, Population Mobility and Immigrant Health Disparities. 15. Group Disparities in Access, Quality and Utilization of Health Resources. 16. Exploring Pathways to Environmental, Health and Social Equity INDEX WORDS:
LIBRARY LOCATION: Domvillan SHELF CODE: Miljörätt |
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39. | Baderin, Mashood A. (ed.) : International human rights law, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International human rights law : six decades after the UDHR and beyond / Baderin, Mashood A. (ed.) ; Ssenyonjo, Manisuli, xv, 571 p.. - Farnham, Surrey : Ashgate, 2010. ISBN 978-1-4094-0359-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Foreword, by David Harris. PART I: Introduction:. 1. Development of international human rights law before and after the UDHR, Mashood A. Baderin and Manisuli Ssenyonjo. PART II: Concepts and Norms:. 2. International human rights: universal, relative or relatively universal?, by Jack Donnelly. 3. Economic, social and cultural rights, by Manisuli Ssenyonjo. 4. Civil and political rights, by Sarah Joseph. 5. Simple analytics of the right to development, by Arjun Sengupta. 6. Right to a healthy environment in human rights law, by Jona Razzaque. 7. Right to a peaceful world order, by Nsongurua J. Udombana. 8. Minority rights 60 years after the UDHR: limits on the preservation of identity?, by Tawhida Ahmed and Anastasia Vakulenko. 9. Intellectual property rights, the right to health and the UDHR: is reconciliation possible?, by Robert L. Ostergard Jr and Shawna E. Sweeney. 10. Brave new world? Human rights in the era of globalization, by Paul O'Connell. PART III: Mechanisms and Implementation:. 11. The United Nations human rights system, by Rhona K.M. Smith. 12. The African regional human rights system, by Olufemi Amao. 13. The inter-American human rights system, by Jo M. Pasqualucci. 14. The European Convention on Human Rights, by Alastair Mowbray. 15. Human rights in the International Court of Justice, by Gentian Zyberi. 16. The role of national human rights institutions, by Rachel Murray. 17. Institutional partnership or critical seepages? The role of human rights NGOs in the United Nations, by Dianne Otto. 18. Islamic law and the implementation of international human rights law: a case study of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, by Mashood A. Baderin. 19. Towards an international court of human rights?, by Gerd Oberleitner. 20. Multi-state responsibility for extraterritorial violation of economic, social and cultural rights, by by Todd Howland. PART IV: Responsibilities and Remedies:. 21. State responsibility for human rights, by Danwood Mzikenge Chirwa. 22. State compliance with the recommendations of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights, by Frans Viljoen. 23. Individual responsibility and the evolving legal status of the physical person in international human rights law, by Ilias Bantekas. 24. The International Criminal Court and individual responsibility of senior state officials for international crimes, by Manisuli Ssenyonjo. 25. The right to an effective remedy: balancing realism and aspiration, by Sonja B. Starr. 26. Protecting human rights in emergency situations: the example of the right to education, by Vernor Muñoz Villalobos. 27. Protect, respect, and remedy: the UN framework for business and human rights, by John Gerard Ruggie. PART V: 'And Beyond':. 28. A future for human rights, by Robert McCorquodale. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Aarhus convention; ACHPR; African charter on the rights and welfare of the child; AMR; ADRD; Arab charter of human rights; CEDAW; ICESCR; CERD; CRC; ECHR; EU charter of fundamental rights; Hague convention (1907); ICCPR; Inter-American convention on prevention, punishment and eradiction of violence against women; AMR; Inter-American convention to prevent and punish torture; Inter-American convention on elimination of all forms of discrimination against persons with disabilities; Johannesburg declaration; Rio declaration; ICC statute; UDHR; UN charter;
URL http://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=637&calcTitle=1&title_id=9882&edition_id=12987 |
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40. | Cornwall, Andrea (ed.) : Development with a body, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Development with a body : sexuality, human rights & development / Cornwall, Andrea (ed.) ; Correa, Sonia ; Jolly, Susie, xiv, 257 p.. - London : Zed Books , 2008. ISBN 978-1-84277-891-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Content:. 1. Development with a Body - Andrea Cornwall, by Sonia Corrêa and Susie Jolly. 2. Development's Encounter With Sexuality: Essentialism and Beyond, by Sonia Corrêa and Susie Jolly. SECTION 1: Sexual Rights/Human Rights:. 3. Sexual Rights are Human Rights, by Kate Sheill. 4. Sex Work, Trafficking, and HIV: How Development Is Compromising Sex Workers' Human Rights, by Melissa Ditmore. 5. The Language of Rights, by Jaya Sharma. 6. Children's Sexual Rights in an Era of HIV/AIDS, by Deevia Bhana. 7. The Rights of Man, by Alan Greig. 8. Human Rights Interrupted: an illustration from India, by Sumit Baudh. SECTION 2: Gender and Sex Orders:. 9. Discrimination against Lesbians in the Workplace, by Alejandra Sarda. 10. Ruling Masculinities in Post-Apartheid South Africa, by Kopano Ratele. 11. Gender, Identity and Travesti Rights in Peru, by Giuseppe Campuzano. 12. Small Powers, Little Choice: Reproductive and Sexual Rights in Slums in Bangladesh, by Sabina Faiz Rashid. 13. Social and Political Inclusion of Sex Workers as a Preventive Measure against Trafficking: Serbian Experiences, by Jelena Djordjevic. SECTION 3: Changing Mindsets:. 14. Confronting Our Prejudices: Women's Movement Experiences in Bangladesh , by Shireen Huq. 15. Sexuality Education as a Human Right: Lessons from Nigeria, by Adenike O. Esiet. 16. Terms of Contact and Touching Change: Investigating Pleasure in an HIV Epidemic, by Jill Lewis and Gill Gordon. 17. A Democracy of Sexuality: Linkages and Strategies for Sexual Rights, Participation and Development, by Henry Armas. 18. Integrating Sexuality into Gender and Human Rights Frameworks: A Case Study from Turkey, by Pinar Ilkkaracan and Karin Ronge. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW; ICCPR; ICESCR; |
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41. | Carbone, Maurizio : The European Union and international development, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The European Union and international development : the politics of foreign aid / Carbone, Maurizio - (UACES contemporary European studies series), xvi, 192 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2011. ISBN 978-0-415-66396-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Introduction. 1. Leadership in the European Union: Theorizing the European Commission. 2. The Politics of Foreign Aid in the European Union. 3. Volume of Aid: Reversing Trends in International Development 4. Global Public Goods: More Aid, Better Aid or Managing Globalisation?. 5. Untying of Aid: Enhancing the Quality of Development Assistance. Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): TEU; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt |
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42. | Jones, Jackie (ed.) : Gender, sexualities and law, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Gender, sexualities and law / Jones, Jackie (ed.) ; Grear, Anna ; Fenton, Rachel Anne ; Stevenson, Kim, xi, 334 p.. - Oxon : Routledge, 2011. ISBN 978-0-415-57439-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART 1: Theory, Law and Sex:. 1. Women and the Cast of Legal Persons, by Ngaire Naffine. 2. De/Sexing the Woman Lawyer, by Rosemary Hunter. 3. ‘Sexing the Matrix’: Embodiment, Disembodiment and the Law: Towards the Re-Gendering of Legal Personality?, by Anna Grear. 4. Vulnerability, Equality and the Human Condition, by Martha A. Fineman. PART 2: Representations, Law and Sex:. 5. The ‘Gendered Company’ Revisited, by Alice Belcher. 6. The Public Sex of the Judiciary: The Appearance of the Irrelevant and the Invisible, by Leslie J. Moran. 7. Sexuality, Gender and Social Cognition: Lesbian and Gay Identity in Judicial Decision-Making, by Todd Brower. 8. The Gendered Dock: Reflections on the Impact of Gender Stereotyping in the Criminal Justice System, by Judith Rowbotham. PART 3: Violence, Law and Sex:. 9. ‘She Never Screamed out and Complained’: Recognising Gender in Legal and Media Representations of Rape, by Kim Stevenson. 10. Gendering Rape: Social Attitudes towards Male and Female Rape, by Phil N.S. Rumney and Natalia Hanley. 11. When Hate is not Enough: Tackling Homophobic Violence, by Iain McDonald. 12. The Legal Construction of Domestic Violence: ‘Unmasking’ a Private Problem, by Mandy Burton. PART 4: International Violence, Law and Sex:. 13. Criminalization or Protection? Tensions in the Construction of Prevention Strategies Concerning Trafficking for the Purposes of Sexual Exploitation, by Anna Carline. 14. A Woman’s Honour and a Nation’s Shame: ‘Honour Killings’ in Pakistan, by Shilan Shah-Davis. 15. Supranational Criminal Prosecution of Sexual Violence, by Anne-Marie de Brouwer. PART 5: Reproduction, Law and Sex:. 16. The Strange Case of the Invisible Woman in Abortion Law Reform, by Kate Gleeson. 17. Third-Wave Feminism, Motherhood and the Future of Feminist Legal Theory, by Bridget J. Crawford. 18. ‘Shall I be Mother?’ Reproductive Autonomy, Feminism and the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008, by Rachel Anne Fenton, D. Jane V. Rees and Sue Heenan. 19. Motherhood and Autonomy in a Shared Parenting Climate, by Susan B. Boyd. PART 6: Relationships, Law and Sex:. 20. A very British Compromise? Civil Partnerships, Liberalism by Stealth and the Fallacies of Neo-Liberalism, by Jeffrey Weeks. 21. Attitudes to Same-Sex Marriage in South African Muslim Communities: An Exploratory Study, by Elsje Bonthuys and Natasha Erlank. 22. Taking ‘Sex’ out of Marriage in the EU, by Jackie Jones. 23. From Russia (and Elsewhere) with Love: Mail Order Brides, by Jennifer Marchbank. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): EU charter of fundamental rights; ECHR; |
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43. | Davis, Lennard J. (ed.) : The disability studies reader, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The disability studies reader / Davis, Lennard J. (ed.). - 3. ed.., xiii, 653 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2010. ISBN 9780-415-87376-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART 1: Historical Perspectives:. 1. Lennard Davis: "Constructing Normalcy". 2. Colin Barnes: "A Brief History of Discrimination and Disabled People". 3. Douglas Baynton: "’A Silent Exile on This Earth’: The Metaphorical Construction of Deafness in the Nineteenth Century". 4. James C. Wilson: "Disability and the Human Genome". 5. Edward Wheatley: "Medieval Constructions of Blindness in France and England". PART 2: The Politics of Disability:. 6. Harlan Lane : "Construction of Deafness". 7. Mark Sherry: "(Post)colonising Disability". 8. Ruth Hubbard: "Abortion and Disability: Who Should and Should Not Inhabit the World?". 9. Marsha Saxton: "Disability Rights and Selective Abortion". 10. Michael Davidson: "Universal Design: The work of Disability in an Age of Globalization". 11. James Charlton: "The Dimensions of Disability Oppression". 12. Bradley Lewis: "A Mad Fight: Psychiatry and Disability Activism". PART 3: Stigma and Illness:. 13. Lerita M. Coleman Brown: "Stigma: An Enigma Demystified". 14. Susan Sontag: "AIDS and Its Metaphors". 15. Rosemarie Garland-Thomson: "Beholding". 16. Brenda Brueggemann: "On (Almost) Passing". PART 4: Theorizing Disability:. 17. Simi Linton: "Reassigning Meaning". 18. Faye Ginsburg and Rayna Rapp: "Enabling Kinship". 19. Ato Quayson: "Aesthetic Nervousness". 20. Tom Shakespeare: "The Social Model of Disability". 21. David Mitchell and Sharon Snyder: "Narrative Prosthesis". 22. Catherine Prendergast: "The Unexceptional Schizophrenic: A Post-Postmodern Introduction". PART 5: Identities and Intersectionalities:. 23. Lennard Davis: "The End of Identity Politics: On Disability as an Unstable Category". 24. Tobin Siebers: "Disability and the Theory of Complex Embodiment—For Identity Politics in a New Register". 25. Susan Wendell: "Toward a Feminist Theory of Disability". 26. Rosemarie Garland-Thomson: "Integrating Disability, Transforming Feminist Theory". 27. Chris Bell: "Is Disability Studies Actually White Disability Studies?". 28. Robert McRuer: "Compulsory Able-Bodiedness and Queer/Disabled Existence". 29. Carol Padden and Tom Humphries: "Deaf People: A Different Center". 30. R. A. R. Edwards: ""Hearing Aids Are Not Deaf": A Historical Perspective on Technology in the Deaf World". 31. Eunjung Kim: "Minority Politics in Korea: Disability, Interaciality, and Gender". 32. Daniel Docherty, Richard Hughes, Patricia Phillips, David Corbett, Brendan Regan, Andrew Barber, Michael Adams, Kathy Boxall, Ian Kaplan, Shayma Izzidien: "This Is What We Think". PART 6: Disability and Culture:. 33. Cynthia Barounis: "Cripping Heterosexuality, Queering Able-Bodiedness: Murderball, Brokeback Mountain and the Contested Masculine Body". 34. , "The Vulnerable Articulate: James Gillingham, Aimee Mullins, and Matthew Barney". 35. Ann Millett-Gallant: "Sculpting Body Ideals: Alison Lapper Pregnant and the Public Display of Disability". 36. Anna Mollow: When Black Women Start Going on Prozac….’ The Poltics of Race, Gender, and Emotional Distress in Meri Nana-Ama Danquah’s Willow Weep for Me". 37. David Hevey: "The Enfreakment of Photography". 38. , "Blindness and Visual Culture: An Eyewitness Account". 39. G. Thomas Couser: "Disability, Life Narrative, and Representation". 40. Joseph N. Straus: "Autism as Culture" Part 7: Fiction, Memoir, and Poetry. 41. Eli Clare: "Stones in my Pockets, Stones in my Heart". 42. Harriet McBryde Johnson: "Unspeakable Conversations". 43. Anne Finger, "Helen and Friday". 44. Cheryl Marie Wade: "’I Am Not One of the’ and ‘Cripple Lullaby’". 45. Kenny Fries: "Beauty and Variations" . 46. Petra Kuppers and Neil Marcus: "Selections from Cripple Poetics". 47. Emanuelle Laborit: "Selections from The Cry of the Gull". 48. Steve Kuusisto: "Selections from Planet of the Blind" INDEX WORDS:
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44. | Brand, Danie (ed.) : Exploring the core content of socio-economic rights, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Exploring the core content of socio-economic rights : South African and international perspectives / Brand, Danie (ed.) ; Russell, Sage, 268 p.. - Pretoria : Protea Book House, 2002. ISBN 1-919825-87-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction - minimum state obligations : international dimensions, by Sage Russel. 2. The essential components of the human right to adequate housing - a South African perspective, by Oierre de Vos. 3. Core obligations related to the right to health and their relevance for South Aafrica, by Audrey R. Chapman. 4. South Africa's commitment to health rights in the spotlight: do we meet the international standard?, by Karrisha Pillay. 5. The right to adequate food : violations related to its minimum core content, by Rolf Künnemann. 6. The minimum core content of the right to food in context: a response to Rolf Künnemann. 7. Social security as a human right, by Lucie Lamarche. 8. The right to social security: a response from a South African perspective, by sandra Liebenberg. 9. In search of the core content of the right to education, by Fons Coomans. 10. Of floors and ceilings - minimum core obligations and children, by Geraldine van Bueren. 11. Children's rights: a response from a South African perspective, by Frans Viljoen. 12. The right to work: South Africa's core minimum obligations, by Richard L. Siegel. 13. The right to work: a response to Richard Siegel, by Kenneth Creamer. 14. The minimum core content of trade union rights in the South African context, by Colin Fenwick. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; ICESCR; |
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45. | Edwards, Alice (ed.) : Human security and non-citizens, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human security and non-citizens : law, policy and international affairs / Edwards, Alice (ed.) ; Ferstman, Carla, xxv, 614 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2010. ISBN 978-0-521-51329-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. PART I. Human Security, Human Rights, and Human Dignity: 1. Humanising non-citizens: the convergence of human rights and human security, by Alice Edwards and Carla Ferstman. PART II. Physical and Legal Security, Armed Conflict and Refuge: 2. The value of the human security framework in addressing statelessness Mark Manly and, by Laura Van Waas. 3. Protection and empowerment: strategies to strengthen refugees' human security, by Frances Nicholson. 4. From here to where? Refugees living in protracted situations in Africa Edwin , by Odhiambo Abuya. 5. Once we were warriors: critical reflections on refugee and IDP militarisation and human security, by Robert Muggah. 6. Human security and protection from refoulement in the maritime context , by Barbara Miltner. PART III. Migration, Development and Environment: 7. Empowering migrants: human security, human rights, and policy, by Pia Oberoi. 8. Labour migration management and the rights of migrant workers, by Ryszard Cholewinski. 9. Socio-economic rights, human security, and survival migrants: whose rights? Whose security?, by Eve Lester. 10. An insecure climate for human security? Climate-induced displacement and international law, by Jane McAdam and Ben Saul. 11. Human security and trafficking of human beings: the myth and the reality , by Ryszard Piotrowicz. PART IV. National Security and the 'War on Terror': 12. A distinction with a legal difference: the consequences of non-citizenship in the 'War on Terror' , by Craig Forcese. 13. Immigration law enforcement after 9/11 and human rights, by Daniel Moeckli. 14. Protection of non-citizens against removal under international human rights law, by Vesselina Vandova. 15. The human security framework and counter terrorism: examining the rhetoric relating to 'extraordinary renditions', by Carla Ferstman. 16. Legal routes to restoring individual rights at Guantanamo Bay: the effectiveness of Habeas Corpus applications and efforts to obtain diplomatic protection, by Lorna McGregor. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Angola / Argentina / Australia / Austria / Belgium / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Brazil / Burundi / Canada / Chad / China / Colombia / Congo / Ivory Coast / Cyprus / Darfur / Ecuador / East Timor / Egypt / Estonia / Georgia / Germany / Ghana / Greece / Guatemala / Guinea / Haiti / Japan / Jordan / Ireland / Kenya / Lebanon / Malawi / Malaysia / Mexico / Morocco / Mozambique / Nepal / Netherlands / North Korea / Norway / Pakistan / Russian Federation / Rwanda / Senegal / Sierra Leone / Slovenia / Somalia / South Africa / South Korea / Spain / Sudan / Sweden / Switzerland / Syria / Tanzania / Thailand / Turkey / Uganda / United Kingdom / USA / Yugoslavia / Zaire / Zimbabwe / Zambia LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Greenland NOTE (GENERAL): AMR; ADRD; Chicago convention; CRC; ECHR; European convention on nationality; European convention on the legal status of migrant workers; ESC; EU charter of fundamental rights; Geneva conventions; Refugee convention; ICCPR; CERD; ICESCR; CAT; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; UDHR;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/gb/knowledge/isbn/item2707864/?site_locale=en_GB |
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46. | Byrne, Suzanne : The elimination of child labour, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: unpublished document The elimination of child labour : applying a rights-based approach / Byrne, Suzanne, viii, 72 p.. - Padua : Padua Univ., 2010. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kenya NOTE (THESIS): EMA thesis) European Master's Degree in human rights and democratisation 2010 at Åbo Akademi Univesity, Department of Law, 2010 NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; CRC; ACHPR; CEDAW; ICESCR; Cotonu agreement; LIBRARY LOCATION: Domvillan |
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47. | Yearbook on humanitarian action and human rights, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Yearbook on humanitarian action and human rights : 2010 /, 152 p.. - Bilbao : University of Deusto. Pedro Arrupe Institute of Human Rights, 2010. - ISSN 1885-298X LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Articles a.o.: 1. Business in development:diminishing humanrights? making the case for a human rights-based approach to corporate social responsibility, by Line Baago-Rasmussen. 2. Integration and coherence: is there a future for independent humanitarian action? A legal inquiry into the provision of humanitarian assistance and protection during armed conflict today, by Luz Gomez-Saavedra. 3. The right to health in Darfur: an unfulfilled promise, by Victor de Currea-Lugo. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; UN charter; ICESCR; LIBRARY LOCATION: S Yearbook on humanitarian action... |
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48. | Invernizzi, Antonella (ed.) : The human rights of children , 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The human rights of children : from visions to implementation / Invernizzi, Antonella (ed.) ; Williams, Jane, xvi, 354 p.. - Farnham, Surrey : Ashgate, 2011. ISBN 978-1-4094-0531-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents: Preface; Introduction: human rights of children: from visions to implementation?. 1. The value and values of children's rights, by Michael Freeman. 2. Are children's rights still human?, by Nigel Cantwell. 3. Understanding a human rights based approach to matters involving children: conceptual foundations and strategic considerations, by John Tobin. 4. The CRC: dynamics and directions of monitoring its implementation, by Jaap E. Doek. 5. Acknowledging children as international citizens: a child-sensitive communication mechanism for the Convention on the Rights of the Child, by Geraldine van Bueren. 6. Has research improved the human rights of children? Or have the information needs of the CRC improved data about children?, by Judith Ennew. 7. How are the human rights of children related to research methodology?, by Harriot Beazley, Sharon Bessell, Judith Ennew and Roxana Waterson. 8. Using the Convention on the Rights of the Child in law and policy: two ways to improve compliance, by Ursula Kilkelly. 9. Using the CRC to inform EU law and policy-making, by Helen Stalford and Eleanor Drywood. 10. The roles of independent children's rights institutions in implementing the CRC, by Brian Gran. 11. Multi-level governance and CRC implementation, by Jane Williams. 12. Human rights and child poverty in the UK: time for change, by Rhian Croke and Anne Crowley. 13. An exploration of the discrimination-rights dynamic in relation to children, by Elspeth Webb. 14. Child health equity: from theory to reality, by Jeffrey Goldhagen and Raúl Mercer. 15. Our rights, our story: Funky Dragon's report to the United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child, by Funky Dragon. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; CEDAW; UDHR; African charter onthe rights and welfare of children; Declaration on the rights of the child; Charter of fundamental rights; CRC-OP; ICESCR; ICCPR; CRPD;
URL http://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=637&calcTitle=1&title_id=9839&edition_id=13096 |
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49. | Ghai, Yash : The millennium declaration, rights and constitutions, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The millennium declaration, rights and constitutions / Ghai, Yash ; Cottrell, Jill, xvi, 204 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U.P., 2011. ISBN 978-019-806928-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: Human Rights and Human Development:. A. Reflection on Poverty; B. The Millennium Declaration and the MDGs; C. Rights; D, Human Rights Framework and the Human Rights Approach to Development; E. How do the MDGs and Rights Relate to Each Other. PART II: Constitutional Strategy: A, Reviewing or Making the Constitution; B. A Constitution to which the People can Relate to; C. An Effective Bill of Rights; D. Specific Rights; E. The Invisible: MDGs, Rights and Constitutions. PART III: Implementing and Consolidating the Constitution:. Constitution as a Framework for Rights, The Neo-colonial State, Restructuring the Neo-colonial State, Societal Context INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Albania / Bangladesh / Bolivia / Brazil / Canada / Ghana / Haiti / Hungary / India / Ireland / Kenya / Mexico / Namibia / Nepal / Papua New Guinea / Philippines / Poland / Portugal / Rwanda / Slovenia / Somalia / South Africa / Sri lanka / Sudan / Switzerland / Turkey / Uganda / Venezuela NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; African charter on rights and welfare of the child; AMR; Canadian charter of rights and freedoms; CRC; CAT; Convention on action against trafficking in human beings; CEDAW; Convention on human rights and biomedicine; Convention on the reduction of statelessness; ECHR; ECPT; ESC; ICCPR; ICESCR; Millennium declaration; UDHR;
URL http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780198069287.do?keyword=ghai&sortby=bestMatches |
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50. | Englund, Harri : Human rights and African airwaves, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights and African airwaves : mediating equality on the Chichewa Radio / Englund, Harri, x, 294 p.. - Bloomington : Indiana U. P., 2011. ISBN 978-0-253-22347-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART 1. Human Rights, African Alternatives:. 1. Rights and Wrongs on the Radio. 2. Obligations to Dogs: Between Liberal and Illiberal Analytics. 3. Against the Occult: Journalists and Scholars in Search of Alternatives. PART 2. The Ethos of Equality:. 4. A Nameless Genre: Newsreading as Storytelling. 5. Inequality Is Old News: Editors as Authors. 6. Stories Become Persons: Producing Knowledge about Injustice. PART 3. The Aesthetic of Claims:. 7. Cries and Whispers: Shaming without Naming. 8. Christian Critics: An Illiberal. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Africa / Botswana / Colombia / China / Ghana / Malawi / Mozambique / Nigeria / South Africa / Tanzania / United Kingdom / Zambia NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; UDHR;
URL http://www.iupress.indiana.edu/product_info.php?products_id=755661 |
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51. | Eriksson, Maria : Defining rape, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Defining rape : emerging obligations for state under international law? / Eriksson, Maria - (The Raoul Wallenberg Institute Human Rights Library ; vol. 38), x, 613 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2011. ISBN 978-9004-20263-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I: Introduction:. 1. The Definition of Rape in an International Perspective. PART II: Elements of the Crime of Rape: A Contextual Approach:. 2. The Prohibition of Rape in Domestic Criminal Law: An Historical Overview. 3. The Harm of Sexual Violence. rape. 5. Sexual Violence in context. PART III: An International Human Rights Law Perspective:. 6. State Obligations to Prevent and Punish Rape. 7. The Recognition of Rape as a Violation of International Human Rights Law. PART IV: An International Humanitarian Law and International Criminal Law Perspective: 8. International Humanitarian Law; 9 International Criminal Law. PART V: The Prohibition of Rape – Closing the Gap between International Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law?:. 10. The Interplay between International Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law. PART VI: A Cultural Perspective: 11. Cultural Relativism and Obstacles to a Uniform International Definition of Rape. PART VII: Conclusions – Emerging Obligations in Defining the Crime of Rape?. 12. Concluding Summary and Remarks. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Vienna declaration and programme of action; UDHR; ICC statute; Protocol on the rights of women in Africa; ICCPR; ICESCR; AMR; Inter-American convention on prevention, punishment and eradiction of violence against women;
URL http://www.brill.nl/defining-rape-emerging-obligations-states-under-international-law |
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52. | Freeman, Michael (ed.) : Law and childhood studies, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Law and childhood studies : current legal issues 2011 / Freeman, Michael (ed.) - (Current legal issues ; vol. 14), xii, 590 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2012. ISBN 978-0-19-965250-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1: Michael Freeman: Introduction. 2: Anne McGillivray: A State of Imperfect Transformation: Law, Myth, and the Feminine in Outside Over There, Labyrinth, and Pan's Labyrinth. 3: Michael Freeman: Towards a Sociology of Children's Rights. 4: Mark Henaghan: Why Judges Need to Know and Understand Childhood Studies. 5: John Tobin: Courts and the Construction of Childhood: A New Way of Thinking. 6: Laura Lundy: Childhood, the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, and Research: What Constitutes a 'Rights-Based' Approach?. 7: Manfred Liebel: Child-Led Organizations and the Advocacy of Adults: Experiences from Bangladesh and Nicaragua. 8: Ann Quennerstedt: Transforming Children's Human Rights - From Universal Claims to National Particularity. 9: Julia Sloth-Nielsen: Modern African Childhoods: Does Law Matter?. 10: Hedi Viterbo: The Age of Conflict: Rethinking Childhood, Law, and Age through the Israeli-Palestinian Case. 11: Kay Tisdall and Fiona Morrison: Children's Participation in Court Proceedings when Parents Divorce or Separate: Legal Construction and Lived Experiences. 12: Priscilla Alderson: Children's Consent and 'Assent' to Healthcare Research. 13: Roberta Bosisio: Children and Young People as Moral and Legal Actors: Findings from Studies Conducted in Northern Italy. 14: Shannon Moore and Richard Mitchell: Rights-Based Restorative Justice in Canada: From Silence to Citizen. 15: Megan Gollop and Nicola Taylor: New Zealand Children and Young People's Perspectives on Relocation Following Parental Separation. 16: Jonathan Herring: Vulnerability, Children, and the Law. 17: Heather Keating: 'When the Kissing has to Stop': Children, Sexual Behaviour, and the Criminal Law. 18: Anne Cheung: Tackling Cyber-Bullying from a Children's Rights Perspective. 19: Ben Mathews: Exploring the Contested Role of Mandatory Reporting Laws in the Identification of Severe Child Abuse and Neglect. 20: Shazia Choudhry: Domestic Violence, Contact, and the ECHR. 21: Michelle Ratpan: Reframing the Practice of 'Son Preference' through the Millennium Development Goals. 22: Noam Peleg: The Child's Right to Development. 23: Ashleigh Barnes: UNCRC's Performance of the Child As Developing. 24: Bronagh Byrne: Minding the Gap? Children with Disabilities and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. 25: China Mills: 'Special' Treatment, 'Special' Rights: Children who Hear Voices or Doubly Diminished Initiative. 26: Kirsty Hughes: The Child's Right to Privacy and Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights. 27: Petra Kouvonen: Foster Care Partnerships in Finland 1990-2010: From Social Task to Ensuring Better Market Share?. 28: Bronwyn Naylor and Bernadette Saunders: Parental Discipline, Criminal Laws, and Responsive Regulation. 29: Aoife Nolan: Litigating the Child's Rights to a Life Free of Violence: Seeking the Prohibition of Parental Physical Punishment of Children Through the Courts. 30: Sofia Johnson Frankenberg: Discipline and the Ethics of Care. 31: Jo Bridgeman: Caring for Children: Risks and Responsibilities in the Law of Tort. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Africa / Australia / Croatia / Ethiopia / France / Germany / Hong Kong / Hungary / Iceland / India / Ireland / Israel / Italy / Kenya / Latvia / lesotho / Liechtenstein / Luxemburg / Malawi / Malaysia / Mexico / Morocco / Namibia / New Zealand / Nicaragua / Nigeria / Northern Ireland / Norway / Rwanda / South Africa / South Korea / Sudan / Spain / Swaziland / Sweden / Taiwan / Tanzania / Uganda / Uruguay / USA / Venezuela / Zanzibar / Zimbabwe LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Palestine |
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53. | Liebenberg, Sandra (ed.) : ESR review , 2007 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial ESR review : economic and social rights in South Africa 1998-2006 / Liebenberg, Sandra (ed.) ; Khaza, Sibonile, var.pag.. - Belville : University of the Western Cape. Community Law Center, 2007. - ISSN 1684-260X LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: The publication consists of articles from the ESR review 1998-2006, a.o.:. PART VIII: 2006, volume 7, no. 1:. 1. Alleviating child poverty in South Africa The role of social assistance grants, by Hye-Young Lim. 2. Children’s right to social services in South Africa, by Mira Dutschke. 3. The Draft Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, by Lilian Chenwi and Christopher Mbazira. 4. Voluntary Guidelines on the Right to Food Their practical implications for Ethiopia, by Fons Coomans. Volume 7; no. 2: 1. The right to health care services and the minimum core Disentangling the principled and pragmatic strands, by David Bilchitz. 2. The importance of a dialogue on strategies to promote socio-economic rights in South Africa, by Sibonile Khoza. 3. A new dimension to the right to housing, by Stuart Wilson. 4. Prisoners’ right of access to antiretroviral treatment, by Lukas Muntingh and Christopher Mbazira. 5. The United Nations Human Rights Council replaces the Commission on Human Rights, by Connie de la Vega. 6. Seminar on strengthening strategies for promoting socio-economic rights in South Africa, by Karen Kallmann. Volume 7; no. 3: 1. Forced evictions A global perspective, by Jean du Plessis. 2. Farm evictions A failure of rights, by Marc Wegerif. 3. Farm evictions and housing crises No cause to celebrate the Constitution for farm dwellers, by Sidney Kgara. 4. ESTA litigation Reflections on representing occupiers, by Marion Hattingh. 5. Security of tenure Giving effect to the mandate of the South African Human Rights Commission, by Ashraf Mahomed. 6. Security of tenure Giving effect to the mandate of the South African Human Rights Commission, by Ashraf Mahomed. 7. Security of tenure from a children’s rights perspective, by Aoife Nolan. 8. Case review, by Johan van der Merwe. Volume 7, No. 4:. 1. Investment with a human face The need for human rights impact assessments, by Danwood Chirwa. 2. Older persons’ right of access to social assistance Is age differentiation still relevant in South Africa?, by Bryge Wachipa. 3. Giving effect to the right to adequate housing The need for a coherent (national) policy on special needs housing, by Lilian Chenwi. 4. The Older Persons Act A step in the right direction?, by Mary Turok. 5. Case review Prisoners’ right of access to anti-retroviral treatment, by Adila Hassim and Jonathan Berger. 6. World Habitat Day seminar calls for improved women’s access to housing rights, by Mercy Brown-Luthango. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICESCR; ICCPR; ICCPR-OP; |
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54. | Dimensions of racism, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Dimensions of racism /, v, 199 p.. - Geneva : United Nations. OHCHR, 2005. LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Eliminating racism in a changing world: arguments for a new strategy, by Doudou Diene. 2. The international legal response to racism, by Nozipho January-Bardill. 3. Racism and education, by Katarina Tomasevski. 4. Racism and employment, by Julio Faundez. 5. Racism and health, by Cristina Torres Parodi. 6. Racism and HIV/AIDS, by Shalini Bharat. 7. Racism and contemporary slavery, by Kevin Bales and Jessica Reitz. 8. Racism and migration, by ILO et al. 9. Researching discrimination against immigrants, by August Gachter. 10. Racism and the administration of justice, by Leila Zerrougui. 11. Racism, the media and the Internet, by Bent Sorensen. 12. Racism and gender, by Sapana Pradhan-Malla. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CERD; |
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55. | Bagenstos, Samuel R. : Law and the contradictions of the disability rights movement, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Law and the contradictions of the disability rights movement / Bagenstos, Samuel R., xii, 228 p.. - New Haven : Yale U. P., 2009. ISBN 978-0-300-12449-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Preface and Acknowledgments. One: Introduction. Two: The Projects of the American Disability Rights Movement. Three: Defining Disability. Four: The Role of Accommodation in Disability Discrimination Law. Five: Disability and Safety Risks. Six: Disability, Life, Death, and Choice. Seven: The Limits of the Antidiscrimination Model. Eight: Future Directions in Disability Law. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: USA
URL http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300124491 |
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56. | Dudley, Michael (ed.) : Mental health and human rights, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Mental health and human rights : vision, praxis and courage / Dudley, Michael (ed.) ; Silove, Derrick ; Gale, Fran, xxvii, 704 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2012. ISBN 978-0-19-921396-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Semyon Gluzman: A personal testament. PART 1: OVERARCHING CONCEPTUAL ISSUES:. 1: Winton Higgins: Human rights development: provenance, ambit and effect. 2: Charles Watters: Mental health and illness as human rights issues: philosophical, historical and social perspectives and controversies. 3: Michael L Perlin and Eva Szeli.: Mental health law and human rights: evolution and contemporary challenges. 4: Laurence Kirmayer: Culture and context in human rights. 5: Jennifer Randall, Graham Thornicroft, Elaine Brohan, Aliya Kassam, Elanor Lewis-Holmes, and Nisha Mehta: Stigma and discrimination: critical human rights issues for mental health. 6: Alexander McFarlane and Richard Bryant: Genes, Biology, Mental Health and Human Rights. The Effects of Traumatic Stress as a Case Example. 7: Tristan McGeorge and Dinesh Bhugra: Race, class, mental health and human rights. 8: Roshni Mangalore, Martin Knapp and David McDaid: Mental health economics, mental health policies and human rights. 9: Catherine Esposito and Daniel Tarantola: Mental disability, HIV and human rights. 10: Amita Dhanda: Universal Legal Capacity as a Universal Human Right. COMENTARY:. 1. Eugene Brody: Technology and human rights: a personal perspective. 2. Ezra Susser and Mich Bresnahan: Global mental health and social justice. PART 2: HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES, PSYCHIATRY, NATION STATES AND MARKETS:. 11: Michael Dudley and Fran Gale: Through a glass, darkly: Legacies of the Nazis and the Nuremberg trials for mental health and human rights. 12: Robert van Voren: The abuse of psychiatry for political purposes. 13: Derrick Silove, Susan Rees, and Zachary Steel: The return of torture. 14: Jim Welsh: Medicine, mental health and capital punishment. 15: Danny Sullivan and Paul Mullen: Mental health and human rights in secure settings. 16: Alan Rosen, Tully Miller Rosen, and Patrick McGorry: The rights of people with severe and persistent mental illness. 17: Jonathan H. Marks: Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape: A Framework Proposal for the Comprehension and Prevention of Health Professionals' Complicity in Detainee Abuse. COMMENTARY 3:. Thomas Kallert: Coercive treatment in psychiatry: a human rights issue?. 18. Philip Mitchell: Psychiatrists and the pharmaceutical industry - on the ethics of a complex relationship. COMMENTARY 4:. Vikram Patel, Arthur Kleinman, and Benedetto Saraceno: Protecting the human rights of people with mental disorders: a call to action for global mental health. COMMENTARY 5:. Meg Smith: Detained, diagnosed and discharged: human rights and the lived experience of mental illness in New South Wales. PART 3: SOME VULNERABLE GROUPS:. 19. Zachary Steel, Catherine R. Bateman Steel and Derrick Silove: Civillilan populations affected by conflict and displacement : mental health and the human rights imperative. 20: Sarah Mares and Jon Jureidini: Child and adolescent refugees and asylum seekers in Australia: The Ethics of exposing children to suffering to achieve social outcomes. 21: Zachary Steel, Catherine R. Bateman Steel, and Derrick Silove: Civilian populations affected by conflict and displacement: Mental health and the human rights imperative. 22: Kathleen Maltzahn and Louella Villadiego: Trafficking, mental health and human rights. 23: Beverley Raphael, Carol Nadelson, Mel Taylor, and Jennifer Jacobs: Human rights and women's mental health. 24: Ernest Hunter, Helen Milroy, Ngiare Brown, and Tom Calma: Mental health, human rights and indigenous people. 25: Ian Hall and Evan Yacoub: Human rights for people with intellectual disabilities. 26: Mark Tomlinson, Peter Cooper, Leslie Swartz, and Mireille Landman: Reflections from a mother-infant intervention: a human rights based approach to research collaboration. 27: Myron Belfer and Diana Samarasan: Missing Voices: Speaking up for the rights of children and adolescents with disabilities. 28: Carmelle Peisah and Henry Brodaty: The mental health and rights of mentally ill older people. 29: Louise Newman: Mental health, rights and people with diverse sexual identities and orientations. 30: Adrian Carter and Wayne Hall: The rights of individuals treated for drug addiction. COMMENTARY 6: Lakshmi Vijayakumar and Lillian Craig Harris: The veil of silence: human rights and suicide. PART 4: Protection of mental health: current provisions and how they may be strengthened:. Introduction. 31: Crick Lund, Tom Sutcliffe, Alan Flisher, and Dan J. Stein: : Protecting the rights of the mentally ill in poorly resourced settings: experiences from four African countries 32: Francois Crepeau and Anne-Claire Gayet: Human rights standards relevant to mental health and how they may be made more effective. 33: John RM Copeland, Eugene Brody, Tony Fowke, Preston Garrison, and Janet Meagher: The role of world associations and the United Nations. 34: David Oaks: Whose voices should be heard: the role of mental health consumers, psychiatric survivors and families Gunilla Backman and Judith Mesquita: The Right to Health. 35: Oliver Lewis and Nell Munro: The right to participation of people with mental disabilities in legal and policy reforms. 36. Reflections from a mother-infant intervention: a human rights-based approach to research collaboration. 37: Peter Walkts. Julia Shearsby and Zachary Steel: Cognitive-behavioural therapy, human rights and psychosis. 38: Fran Gale and Michael Dudley: Promoting social goodness and preventing human rights violations: a post-Nuremberg inheritance for the helping professions. PART 5: Towards the future:. Norman Sartorius: Afterword: Global mental health and human rights: barriers and opportunities INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; UDHR; CEDAW; CERD; CRPD; CAT; CAT-OP; CRC; Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; ICESCR; ECHR; ECPT; ESC; Framework convention on climate change; Geneva conventions; ICCPR; CRPD; Declaration on the rights of persons belonging to minorities; |
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57. | Tobin, John : The right to health in international law, |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The right to health in international law / Tobin, John ISBN 978-0-19-960329-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I:. 1: The history of the right to health. 2: The conceptual foundations of the right to health. PART II:. 3: A methodology to interpret the right to health. 4: The meaning of the highest attainable standard of health. 5: The meaning of the general obligation to recognise the right to health. 6: The specific measures required to recognise the right to health. 7: The meaning of the obligation to protect against harmful traditional practices. 8: The meaning of the obligation of international co-operation. Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; CEDAW; CRC; ICESCR; ACHPR; CAT; ICCPR; |
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58. | Viljoen, Frans : International human rights law in Africa, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International human rights law in Africa / Viljoen, Frans. - 2. ed.., xxxvii, 622 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2012. ISBN 978-0-19-964559-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Part I - Background:. 1: An Introduction to International Human Rights Law. Part II - The Global Level:. 2: The Role of United Nations Organs and Agencies in Realizing Human Rights in Africa. 3: The United Nations Treaty-Based Human Rights System and Africa. Part III - The Regional Level:. 4: The African Regional Architecture and Human Rights. 5: Substantive Human Rights Norms in the African Regional System. 6: The African Commission: An Introduction and Assessment. 7: The African Commission: Protective Mandate. 8: The African Commission: Promotional Mandate. 9: The African Children's Rights Committee. 10: The African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights. Part IV - The Subregional Level:. 11: The Realization of Human Rights in Africa through Subregional Institutions. Part V - The National Level:. 12: Domestication of Human Rights Law. Part VI - Conclusion:. 13: Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; African charter on the rights and welfare of the child; African convention on the conservation of nature and natural resources; AMR; Arab charter on human rights; Cairo declaration on human rights in Islam; CAT; CEDAW; CERD; Convention onthe nationality of married women; Genocide convention; ICCPR; ICESCR; OAU refugee convention; Sirte declaration; Migrant workers convention; Declaration on the right to development; Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; UN charter; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; CRPD; Refugee convention; ECHR; |
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59. | Engelbrecht, Petra (ed.) : Responding to the challenges of inclusive education in Southern Africa, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Responding to the challenges of inclusive education in Southern Africa / Engelbrecht, Petra (ed.) ; Green, Lena, xiii, 210 p.. - Pretoria : Van Schaik publ., 2011. ISBN 978-0-627-02670-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: EXPLORING AND UNDERSTANDING CHALLENGES:. 1. An introduction to inclusive education. 2. Inclusive education in Botswana. 3. Inclusive education in Lesotho. 4. Inclusive education in Namibia. 5. Inclusive education in South Africa. 6. Inclusive education in Zimbabwe. PART II: RESPONDING TO CHALLENGES:. 7. Responding to the challenges of inclusive education. 8. Changing public and professional discourse. 9. Understanding and working with change. 10. Understanding the curriculum as a challenge. 11. Training teachers to become inclusive professionals. 12. Thinking differently about education support. 13. Creating collaborative partnership in inclusive schools. 14. Increasing parent recognition and involvement. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: South Africa
URL http://www.vanschaiknet.com/all-categories.html?task=view&id=205&catid=32 |
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60. | Feyter, Koen de ... [et al.] : The local relevance of human rights, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The local relevance of human rights / Feyter, Koen de ... [et al.] - (EIUC studies in human rights and democratisation), xxiii, 381 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U.P., 2011. ISBN 978-1-107-00956-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. 1. Introduction: reconsidering human rights from below, by Koen De Feyter and Stephan Parmentier. 2. Sites of rights resistance, by Koen De Feyter. 3. Freedom from want revisited from a local perspective: evolution and challenges ahead, by Felipe Gómez Isa. 4. Relevance of human rights in the 'glocal' space of politics: how to enlarge democratic practice beyond state boundaries and build up a peaceful world order?, by Antonio Papisca. 5. The local relevance of human rights: a methodological approach, by Gaby Oré Aguilar. 6. Ensuring compliance with decisions by international and regional human rights bodies: the case of the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture, by Michelle Farrell. 7. Building rights-based health movements: lessons from the Peruvian experience by Alicia Ely Yamin and J. Jaime Miranda. 8. Defining human rights when economic interests are high: the case of the Western Shoshone, by Julie Cavanaugh-Bill. 9. Struggling to localise human rights: the experience of indigenous peoples in Chile, by José Aylwin. 10. Enforcing environmental rights under Nigeria's 1999 constitution: the localisation of human rights in the Niger Delta region, by Rhuks Temitope Ako. 11. Conflict resolution through cultural rights and cultural wrongs: the Kosovo example, by María del Mar Bermúdez, Manuel Calzada Plá and Lydia Vicente Márquez. 12. Epilogue: widening the perspective on the local relevance of human rights, by George Ulrich. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; ACHPR; CEDAW; CERD; ICESCR; CAT; ECHR; ICCPR; CAT-OP; |