91. | Baudouin Dupret (ed.) : Legal Pluralism in the Arab World, 1999 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Legal Pluralism in the Arab World / Baudouin Dupret (ed.) ; Berger, Maurits ; al-Zwaini, Laila ; Laila Al-Zwaini. - 277 - (Arab and Islamic laws series ; vol. 18), xxiii, 280 p.. : Kluwer Law International, 1999. ISBN 90-411-1105-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART ONE: LEGAL PLURALISM, NORMATIVE PLURALITY, AND THE ARAB WORLD: 1. The Idea of Legal Pluralism, by G. Woodman. 2. Norms, Law and Practices: The Practical Obstacles That Make It Impossible to Separate Them, by J.-N. Ferrie. 3. Legal Pluralism, Normative Plurality, and the Arab World, by B. Dupret. 4. A Critical Survey of Western Law Studies on Arab-Muslim Countries, by J. Thielmann. PART TWO : A COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVE: 5. Contrasted Identity Claims Before Egyptian and Belgian Courts, by M.-C. Foblets, B. Dupret. 6. Palestinian Law: Social Segmentation Versus Centralization, by B. Botiveau. 7. Legal Pluralism and Cultural Unity in Morocco, by L. Rosen. 8. Legal Pluralism and Public International Law: An Analysis Based on the International Convention on the Rights of the Child, by M. Paradelle. 9. The Shari`a and Legal Pluralism: The Example of Syria, by M. Berger. 10. The Treatment of Unfair Terms in Arab Countries: An Investigation into the Effects of Legal Pluralism, by H. Gemei. PART THREE: LEGAL PLURALISM AND EGYPT: 11. An Administrator's Nightmare: Feuding Families int he 19th Century Bahariyya Oasis, by R. Peters. 12. The Haqq el-Arab: Conflict Resolution and Distinctive Features of Legal Pluralism in Contemporary Egypt, by S. Ben Nefissa. 13. The Anarchy of Egyptian Legal System: Wearing Away the Legal and Political Modernity, by N. Abd Al-Fattah. 14. Legal Pluralism and the Enclosure of the Legal Field: The al-Muhajir Case,by N. Bernard-Maugiron. 15. Legal Plurality: Reflection on the Status of Women in Egypt, by N. Nassar. 16. Formal and Informal Finance in Egypt: The Significance for Legal Pluralism, by Z. Bahaa-Eldin. 17. Legal Plurality and Legitimation of Human Rights Abuses, by A. Seif Al-Islam Hamed. 18. The Secular Reconstruction of Islamic Law: The Egyptian Constitutional Court and the `Battle over the Veil' in State-Run Schools, by K. BÃlz. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Africa / Australia / Belgium / Canada / Egypt / Ethiopia / France / Germany / Iran / Iraq / Israel / Italy / Jordan / Lebanon / Malaysia / Middle East / Morocco / New Zealand / North Africa / Pakistan / Somalia / Sudan / Tanzania / Tunisia / United Arab Emirates / USA / USSR / West Bank (Palestine) NOTE (GENERAL): Oslo agreements; |
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92. | Murphy, Sean D. : Contemporary practice of the United States relating to international law, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Contemporary practice of the United States relating to international law / Murphy, Sean D. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): American journal of international law : vol. 95; no. 2., p. 387-421. - Washington, D. C. : American Society of International Law, 2001. - ISSN 0002-9300 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: 1. Resumption of U.S. Diplomatic Relations with the FRY. 2. Agreement on UN Financial and Structural Reforms. 3. U.S.-Mexico Continental Shelf Boundary in Gulf of Mexico. 4. Acquittal of Salvadoran Generals in Nuns' Deaths. 5. Defeat of House Resolution on "Armenian Genocide". 6. U.S. Signing of the Statute of the International Criminal Court. 7. U.S. View of Crime of Aggression. 8. ICTY Order for Disclosure of Information by NATO/SFOR. 9. U.S. Reward Program for Rwandan War Criminals. 10. Verdict in the Trial of the Lockerbie Bombing Suspects. 11. International Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children. 12. Admissibility of U.S.-EU "Hushkits" Dispute before the ICAO. 13 . Reform of U.S. Sanctions Relating to Agriculture and Medicine. 14. Obligation to Replenish Iran-U.S. Claims Tribunal Security Account. 15. U.S. Implementation of Intercountry Adoption Convention. 16. Negotiation of Convention on Jurisdiction and Enforcement of Judgments. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: USA / Armenia / Libya NOTE (GENERAL): Chicago convention;
URL http://www.jstor.org/browse/00029300/di015229?backurl=/cgi-bin/jstor/viewitem/00029300/di015229/01p0002b/0%3fconfig%3djstor%26frame%3dnoframe%26userID%3d82e8d53b@abo.fi/01cc9933410050d52366%26dpi%3d3%26PAGE%3d0&backcontext=page&config=jstor&frame=noframe& |
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93. | Baderin, Mashood A. : International human rights and Islamic law, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International human rights and Islamic law / Baderin, Mashood A. - (Oxford monographs in international law), xxi, 279 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2003. ISBN 0-19-926659-X LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. CHAPTER 1: Introduction 2 Human Rights and Islamic Law 2.1 Breaking traditional barriers 2.2 Islamic responses in international human rights discourse 2.3 What are human rights? 2.4 What is Islamic law? 2.5 The justificatory principle CHAPTER 3 : The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) in the Light of Islamic Law 3.1 Introduction 3.2 The rights guaranteed under the ICCPR 3.3 Obligations of State Parties under theICCPR- Article 2 3.4 The right of self-determination-Article 1 3.5 equality of rights between men and women-Article 3 3.6 The right to life-Article 6 3.7 Prohibition of torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of punishment-Article 7 3.8 Freedom from slavery, servitude and forced labour-Article 8 3.9 The right to liberty and security of person-Article 9 3.10 The right to a humane incarceration system-Article 10 3.11 Freedom from imprisonment for contractual obligation-Article 11 3.12 The right to freedom of movement and choice of residence-Article 12 3.13 Freedom of aliens from arbitrary expulsion-Article 13 3.14 The right to fair hearing and due process of law-Article 14 3.15 Freedom from retroactive criminal law-Article 15 3.16 The right to recognition as a person before the law-Article 16 3.17 The right to privacy-Article 17 3.18 The right to freedom of thought, conscience and religion-Article 18 3.19 The right to freedom of opinion and expression-Article 19 3.20 3.21 The right of peacefull assembly-Article 21 3.22 The right to freedom of association-Article 22 3.23 The right to marry and found a family-Article 23 3.24 The rights of the child-Article 24 3.25 Political rights-Article 25 3.26 The right to equality before the law-Article 26 3.27 The rights of ethnic, religious or linguistic minorities-Article 27 3.28 Concluding remarks. CHAPTER 4 : The International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) in the Light of Islamic Law 4.1 Introduction 4.2 Importance of economic, social, and cultural rights 4.3 The rights 'recognized' under the ICESCR 4.4 The object and purpose of the ICESCR 4.5 Obligations of State Parties under the ICESCR-Article 2 4.6 The right to work-Article 6 4.7 The right to just and favourable conditions at work-Article 7 4.8 Trade union rights-Article 8 4.9 The right to social security and social insurance-Article 9 4.10 Family rights Article 10 4.11 The right to an adequate standard of living-Article 11 4.12 The right to the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health-Article 12 4.13 The right to education-Article 05 13 and 14 4 14 The right to cultural life and benefits of scientific progress-Article 15 4.15 concluding remarks. CHAPTER 5: Conclusion. 5.1 A complimentary approach. 5.2 Domestic means of enhancing human rights. 5.3 Regional means of enhancing human rights. 5.4 The 'margin of appreciation'doctrine as a universal means of enhancing human rights. Annex: The Cairo Declaration on Human Rights in Islam Bibliography INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Africa / Algeria / Asia / Azerbaijan / Brazil / China / Czechoslovakia / France / India / Iraq / Israel / Italy / Jordan / Libya / Morocco / Pakistan / Philippines / United Kingdom / Yemen / Yugoslavia NOTE (GENERAL): ICESCR; ICCPR; CRC; CEDAW; ACHPR; OAS charter; OAU charter; CAT; ECHR; ESC; Statute of the ICC, Statute of ICJ; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Cairo declaration on human rights education and dissemination; Declaration on the rights of minorities; Convention on friendly relations; UDHR; Vienna declaration and programme of action; |
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94. | Sumner, Ian : Going Dutch?, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Going Dutch? : A comparative analysis and assessment of the gradual recognition of homosexuality with respect to the Netherlands and England / Sumner, Ian REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Maastricht journal of European and comparative law : vol. 9; no. 1., p. 29-56. - Bruylant : Intersentia, 2002. - ISSN 1023-263X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Netherlands / United Kingdom NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR-8-1214; EU charter of fundamental rights; EC-treaty-protcol;
URL http://www.maastrichtjournal.eu/pdf/?articleId=f034889bbef304e6-3fc2b533fd34ac4 |
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95. | de Groot, Gerard-René : Conditions for acquisition of nationality by operation of law by lodging a declaration of option, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Conditions for acquisition of nationality by operation of law by lodging a declaration of option / de Groot, Gerard-René REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Maastricht journal of European and comparative law : vol. 9; no. 2., p. 121-160. - Bruylant : Intersentia, 2002. - ISSN 1023-263X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (MEETINGS): 2nd European conference on nationality, Strasbourg, [20011008-20011009], [C] NOTE (GENERAL): CRC;
URL http://www.maastrichtjournal.eu/pdf/?articleId=4e34e828a0f3b140-3a98d4a0931d998d |
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96. | Welbourne, Penelope : Adoption and the rights of children in the UK, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Adoption and the rights of children in the UK / Welbourne, Penelope REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): The international journal of children's rights : vol. 10; no. 3., p. 269-289. - Hague : Kluwer Law, 2002. - ISSN 0927-5568 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: United Kingdom NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR-8; CRC; EU charter of fundamental rights; |
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97. | Fahrenhorst, Irene : Adoption and child welfare - a German point of view with special regard to the European convention on human rights, 1998 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Adoption and child welfare - a German point of view with special regard to the European convention on human rights / Fahrenhorst, Irene REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Tilburg foreign law review : vol. 7; no. 3., p. 185-212. - Tilburg : Tilburg University, 1998. - ISSN 0926-874X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Germany NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR-8; |
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98. | Blake, Nicholas : Immigration, asylum & human rights, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Immigration, asylum & human rights / Blake, Nicholas ; Husain, Raza - ( Blackstone's human rights series), lviii, 421 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2003. ISBN 1-84174-140-X LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. The Human Rights Act and the Immigration and Asylum Act. 2. The Protection of Life, Bodily Integrity and Human Dignity. 3. Protection from Arbitrary Detention. 4. The Protection of Family and Private Life. 5. Procedural Rights. 6. Discrimination. 7. The Implications of the Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act 2001. Appendices INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Refugee convention; CAT; AMR; Dublin convention; ECHR; European prison rules; ESC; Geneva conventions (III-IV); Hague convention (inter-country adoptions); UN charter; CEDAW; CERD; Convention on the reduction of statelessness; CRC; ICCPR-6-9-12-14; UDHR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
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99. | Joseph, Sarah : International covenant on civil and political rights , 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International covenant on civil and political rights : cases, materials and commentary / Joseph, Sarah ; Schult, Jenny ; Castan, Melissa. - 2. ed.., lx, 985 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2004. ISBN 0-19-925807-4 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR; ICCPR-OP; ICCPR-2OP; ICESCR; CRC; CEDAW; |
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100. | Bajpal, Asha : Child rights in India, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Child rights in India : law, policy and practice / Bajpal, Asha, xxii, 504 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2003. ISBN 0-19-564908-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Rights of the child: an overview. 2. Right to family environment: adoption and other non-institutional services. 3. Right to parental care: custody and guardianship. 4. Right against economic exploitation: child labour. 5. Right to protection against sexual abuse and exploitation. 6. Juvenile justice: administration and implementation. 7. Right to development. 8. Right to survival: health, nutrition, and shelter. 9. Making child rights a reality. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Declaration on the rights of the child; CRC; Convention on the worst forms of child labour (ILO convention no. 182); UN trafficking protocol; Convention against transnational organized crime; CEDAW-5; UDHR; ICCPR-14; ECHR; ICESCR-13; |
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101. | Cunneen, Chris : Removed and discarded , 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Removed and discarded : the contemporary legacy of the stolen generation / Cunneen, Chris ; Libesman, Terry REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Australian indigenous law reporter : vol. 7; no. 4., p. 1-20. - St. Leonards, NSW, Australia : Prospect Pub., 2002. - ISSN 1323-7756 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia |
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102. | Levesque, Roger J. R. : Sexual abuse of children, 1999 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Sexual abuse of children : a human rights perspective / Levesque, Roger J. R., x, 350 p.. - Bloomington, IN : Indiana U. P., 1999. ISBN 0-253-33471-3 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Arabia / Australia / Bangladesh / Burma / Cambodia / Canada / Ethiopia / France / Netherlands / Israel / Latin America / Nepal / New Zealand / Zambia / Senegal / Singapore / Sri lanka / Sudan / Sweden / Switzerland / South Africa / Taiwan / Turkey / Uganda / USA / Viet nam NOTE (GENERAL): Convention for the suppression of the traffic of persons and the exploitation and the prostitution of others; DEDAW; CEDAW; Genocide convention; CRC; ICCPR; ICESCR; Draft optional protocol to the United Nations convention on the rights of the child concerning the elimination of sexual exploitation and trafficking of children;
URL http://www.indiana.edu/~iupress/books/0-253-33471-3.shtml |
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103. | Dahlstrand, Lotta : Barns deltagande i familjerättsliga processer , 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Barns deltagande i familjerättsliga processer / Dahlstrand, Lotta, 328 p.. - Uppsala : Uppsala Universitet. Juridiska institutionen, 2004. ISBN 91-506-1743-5 LANGUAGE: SWE INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Sweden NOTE (GENERAL): CRC;
URL http://publications.uu.se/theses/abstract.xsql?isbn=91-506-1743-5 |
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104. | Harris-Short, Sonia : An "identity crisis" in the international law of human rights? , 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial An "identity crisis" in the international law of human rights? : The challenge of reproductive cloning / Harris-Short, Sonia REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): The international journal of children's rights : vol. 11; no. 4., p. 333-368. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2003. - ISSN 0927-5568 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Universal declaration onthe human genome and human rights; Additional protocol to the convention on human rights and medicine; GC-24 (CEDAW); ICCPR-23; ECHR-8-12; CRC-8; |
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105. | Bennett, T. W. : Customary law in South Africa, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Customary law in South Africa / Bennett, T. W., lv, 462 p.. - Cape Town : Juta , 2004. ISBN 0-7021-6361-9 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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106. | Rogers, Nicola : Free movement of persons in the enlarged European Union, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Free movement of persons in the enlarged European Union / Rogers, Nicola ; Scannell, Rick, liii, 685 p.. - London : Sweet and Maxwell, 2005. ISBN 0-42187570-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Part One: Fundamental principles of EU law. Part Two: Free Movement of EU Citizens and their Family Members. Part Three: Association Agreements with Third Countries. Part Four: Association Agreements with Central and Eastern European Countries. Part Five: Association Agreement with Turkey. Appendices. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; ECHR; EC-treaty; TEU; Treaty of Nice; ToA; EU charter of fundamental rights; Lome conventions (II-IV); Schengen convention; Refugee convention; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt |
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107. | Baines, Beverley (ed.) : The gender of constitutional jurisprudence, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The gender of constitutional jurisprudence / Baines, Beverley (ed.) ; Rubio-Marin, Ruth, xii, 342 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2005. ISBN 0-521-53027-X LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Toward a feminist constitutional agenda, by Beverly Baines, Ruth Rubio-Marin . 1. Speaking into a silence : embedded constitutionalism, the Australian Constitution, and the rights of women, by Isabel Karpin, Karen O'Connell. 2. Using the Canadian charter of rights and freedoms to constitute women, by Beverly Baines. 3. Emancipatory equality : gender jurisprudence under the Colombian Constitution, by Martha I. Morgan. 4. Gender equality and international human rights in Costa Rican constitutional jurisprudence, by Alda Facio, Rodrigo Jiménez Sandova, Martha I. Morgan. 5. Constituting women : the French ways, by Eric Millard. 6. Gender in the German Constitution, by Blanca Rodríguez Ruiz, Ute Sacksofsky. 7. India, sex equality, and constitutional law, by Martha C. Nussbaum. 8. Constitutional transformation, gender equality, and religious/national conflict in Israel : tentative progress through the obstacle course, by Ran Hirschl, Ayelet Shachar. 9. No nation can be free when one half of it is enslaved : constitutional equality for women in South Africa, by Saras Jagwanth, Christina Murray. 10. Engendering the constitution : the Spanish experience, by Ruth Rubio-Marin. 11. Gender equality from a constitutional perspective : the case of Turkey, by Hilal Elver. 12. Gender and the United States Constitution : equal protection, privacy, and federalism, by Reva B. Siegel. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / Canada / Colombia / Costa Rica / France / Germany / India / Israel / South Africa / Turkey / Spain / USA NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; CRC; ECHR;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/uk/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=052153027X |
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108. | Stark, Barbara : International family law, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International family law : an introduction / Stark, Barbara, 278 p.. - Burlington, VT : Ashgate, 2005. ISBN 0-7546-2347-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Introduction: why study international family law?. Marriage. Partnerships other than marriage. Adoption. Divorce/marital status. Divorce/maintenance and support. Divorce/property distribution. Reproductive rights and abortion. Visitation. Child custody and abduction. Child support. Domestic violence. Human rights for the family and human rights of individuals within the family. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): African charter on the rights and welfare of the child, CEDAW, ECHR, CRC, ICCPR, ICESCR, Hague convention on the protection of children and cooperation in respect of intercountry adoption
URL https://www.ashgate.com/shopping/title.asp?key1=&key2=&orig=results&isbn=0%207546%202341%206 |
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109. | Buck, Trevor : International child law, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International child law / Buck, Trevor, xxviii, 331 p.. - London : Cavendish publ., 2005. ISBN 1-85941-948-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents Children's Rights and Childhood; Introduction to International Law; United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child 1989; Child Labour; The Child in Europe; International Child Abduction; Inter-country Adoption; Conclusio INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Vienna declaration and programme of action; UDHR; CRC; UN charter; ESC; Stockholm declaration; ECHR; CRC-OP; CRC-2OP; European convention on the adoption of children; ICCPR; ICESCR; Hague convention on intercountry adoption; ToA; TEU; EU charter of fundamental rights; ACHPR; African charter on the rights and welfare of the child; AMR;
URL http://www.cavendishpublishing.com/html/moreinfo.asp?BookID=553&catid= |
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110. | Alen, A. ... [et al.] : The UN children's rights convention: theory meets practice, 2007 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The UN children's rights convention: theory meets practice : proceedings of the International interdisciplinary conference on children's rights, 18-19 May 2006, Ghent, Belgium / Alen, A. ... [et al.], xxx, 658 p.. - Antwerpen : Intersentia, 2007. ISBN 978-90-5095-640-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. I. CRITICAL REFLECTIONS ON CHILDRENS RIGHTS. RIGHTS IN CONTEXT; QUESTIONING UNIVERSALITY IN THE IMPLEMENTATION OF CHILDRENS RIGHTS USING JORDAN AS A CASE STUDY (2004), LINA HAMMAD. II. MONITORING OF THE CRC. THE APPLICATION OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD IN AFRICA: WHEN THE LAW IS TESTED BY THE REALITY, RAOUL KIENGE-KIENGE INTUDI. THE DOMESTIC FULFILMENT OF CHILDRENS RIGHTS: SAVE THE CHILDRENS EXPERIENCE IN THE USE OF RIGHTS-BASED APPROACHES, AYE AYE TUN, GUY CAVE, DUNCAN TROTTER and BILL BELL. CHILDRENS RIGHTS IN ACTION: USING THE CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD AS AN AUDITING TOOL, URSULA KILKELLY and LAURA LUNDY. STRENGTHENING THE PROMOTION, PROTECTION AND FULFILMENT OF CHILDRENS RIGHTS IN THE AFRICAN CONTEXT, JULIA SLOTH-NIELSEN. THE PROTECTION OF CHILDRENS RIGHTS BY THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS, MIEKE VERHEYDE. THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE INTERNATIONAL CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD IN FLANDERS (BELGIUM), JOOST VAN HAELST. III. IMPLEMENTATION OF THE CRC FROM AN NGO PERSPECTIVE. DEFENCE FOR CHILDREN INTERNATIONAL: OUR OBJECTIVES, OUR ACTIONS AND OUR PRIORITIES. A CASE STUDY OF DCI SECTIONS IN THE AFRICA REGION, LAURENCIO E. AKOHIN. TERRE DES HOMMES: THE APPLICATION OF THE CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD FROM THE POINT OF VIEW OF THE NGOS, BERNARD BOËTON. IV. HUMAN RIGHTS EDUCATION. ARE WE EDUCATING CHILDREN AS PEOPLE WITH RIGHTS OR JUST TALKING ABOUT IT?, KATARINA TOMASEVSKI. TOWARDS A TRANSDISCIPLINARY MODEL WITHIN CHILD AND YOUTH RIGHTS EDUCATION, RICHARD C. MITCHELL. THE RIGHT TO EQUAL ACCESS TO EDUCATION OF INTERNAL MIGRANT WORKERS CHILDREN IN CHINA, HAINA LU. THE RIGHT TO EDUCATION IN THE REPUBLIC OF IRELAND: TEACHING THE CELTIC TIGER, AOIFE DALY. EDUCATIONAL IMPLICATIONS OF THE CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD AND ITS IMPLEMENTATION IN EUROPE, PAULÍ DÁVILA BALSERA and LUIS MARÍA NAYA GARMENDIA. V. WORKING CHILDREN. THE STRUGGLE AGAINST CHILD LABOUR: A WINNABLE FIGHT, JOOST KOOIJMANS. WORKING CHILDRENS EXPERIENCES AND CHILDRENS RIGHTS, ANTONELLA INVERNIZZI. CURRENT CHALLENGES IN ANALYSING CHILD LABOUR IN ROMANIA, MARIA-CARMEN PANTEA. VI. ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL RIGHTS. A ROLE FOR THE COURTS IN ENSURING THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE SOCIO-ECONOMIC RIGHTS OF THE CHILD: OVERCOMING THE COUNTER-MAJORITARIAN OBJECTION, AOIFE NOLAN. THE CHILDS RIGHT TO PLAY: THE RIGHT TO BE A CHILD, JAN VAN GILS. A RIGHT TO TREATMENT FOR CHILDREN WITH A PSYCHIATRIC DISABILITY. A LEGAL ANALYSIS OF INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW, FIONA ANG. VII. CHILDRENS RIGHTS AND THE FAMILY. CHILDRENS RIGHTS IN RELATION TO THEIR FAMILY, NIGEL CANTWELL. CHILDRENS RIGHTS IN FAMILY COURT PROCEEDINGS, RUTH FARRUGIA. AUTONOMY RIGHTS VERSUS PARENTAL AUTONOMY, MEDA COUZENS. THE RIGHTS OF THE ADOPTED CHILD AND THE PUBLIC FAMILY POLICIES IN INTERCOUNTRY ADOPTION, SALOMÉ ADROHER BIOSCA. SILENT KNOWLEDGE: AN EXPLORATORY STUDY OF THE ISSUES IN ACTIVISM AGAINST INCEST ABUSE IN INDIA, NISHA. SYNERGIES AND TENSIONS BETWEEN WOMENS EMPOWERMENT AND CHILDRENS RIGHTS: A CRITICAL ASSESSMENT OF WOMENS SELF-HELP GROUPS IN ANDHRA PRADESH, INDIA, NICOLA JONES and MADHURI MUKHERJEE. VIII. JUVENILE JUSTICE. CHILDREN S RIGHTS IN JUVENILE JUSTICE: A HISTORICAL GLANCE, JEAN TRÉPANIER. BUILDING A BRIDGE BETWEEN PSYCHOLOGY AND LAW: THE CRIMINAL AND CIVIL LIABILITY AGE LIMITS AND THE CHILDS COGNITIVE AND MORAL DEVELOPMENT, NUNO FERREIRA. RIGHTS BASED RESTORATIVE JUSTICE: TOWARDS CRITICAL PRAXIS WITH YOUNG PEOPLE IN CONFLICT WITH THE LAW, SHANNON A. MOORE and RICHARD C. MITCHELL. THE RIGHT TO BE TREATED WITH HUMANITY: IMPLICATIONS OF ARTICLE 37(C) CRC FOR CHILDREN IN DETENTION, TON LIEFAARD. RESTORATIVE JUSTICE IN BELGIUM: FROM DREAM TO REALITY, ISABELLE DELENS-RAVIER. IX. IMPACT OF THE ECONOMIC, POLITICAL AND CULTURAL ASPECTS ON THE APPLICATION OF THE CRC. THE CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD PUT TO THE TEST BY POWER RELATIONS AND SOCIAL NORMS IN RURAL WEST AFRICA, GUY MASSART. REFERENCE POINTS IN THE LEGAL DISCOURSE ABOUT THE SEXUAL ABUSE OF MINORS, ISABELLE WATTIER. WORLDS APART FROM THE CRC: THE TALIBÉ CHILDREN ON THE STREETS OF DAKAR, AHMADOU TALL. X. CONCLUDING REMARKS. DOES PRACTICE ALSO WORK IN THEORY?, KARL HANSON. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRC |
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111. | Legislative history of the the Convention on the rights of the child, 2007 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Legislative history of the the Convention on the rights of the child : volumes I and II / ; Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, 937 p.. - New York : United Nations, 2007. ISBN 978-92-1-154177-9 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRC LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: Inst.ref.
URL http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Publications/LegislativeHistorycrc1en.pdf (vol. I) |
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112. | Lenzerini, Federico (ed.) : Reparations for indigenous peoples , 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Reparations for indigenous peoples : international and comparative perspectives / Lenzerini, Federico (ed.), xxvii, 650 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2008. ISBN 978-0-19-923560-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. I. INTERNATIONAL LAW, REPARATIONS FOR HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLES’ RIGHTS:. 1. Reparations for Indigenous Peoples in International and Comparative Law: An Introduction, Federico Lenzerini (University of Siena). 2. Reparation for Indigenous Peoples: Is International Law Ready to Ensure Redress for Historical Injustices?, Francesco Francioni (European Uni versity Institute—Florence). 3. Reparations for Indigenous Peoples: The Present Value of Past Wrongs, Dinah Shelton (George Washington University Law School). 4. The Trail of Broken Dreams: The Status of Indigenous Peoples in International Law, Federico Lenzerini (University of Siena). 5. Indigenous Peoples, Afro-Indigenous Peoples and Reparations, Gerald Torres (Law School, University of Texas). 6. Indigenous Peoples and Psychosocial Reparation: The Experience with Latin American Indigenous Communities, Nieves Gómez (ECAP—Guatemala). II. REPARATIONS FOR INDIGENOUS PEOPLES: INTERNATIONAL, REGIONAL AND DOMESTIC PRACTICE:. 7. Reparations for Indigenous Peoples: Global International Instruments and Institutions, Claire Charters (Victoria University of Wellington). 8. Reparations for Cultural Loss, Ana F Vrdoljak (European University Institute—Florence). 9. In Praise of Guilt: How the Yearning for Moral Purity Blocks Reparations for Native Americans, David C Williams (Indiana University School of Law ). 10. Repairing Reparations in the American Indian Nation Context, Sarah Krakoff (University of Colorado Law School) and Kristen Carpenter (Univers ity of Denver Sturm College of Law ). 11. Indigenous Peoples of Canada and their Efforts to Achieve True Reparations, Bradford W Morse (University of Ottawa). 12. Reparations for Indigenous Peoples in the Case Law of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Gabriella Citroni (University of Milano-Bicocca) and Karla I Quintana Osuna (Harvard University). 13. Reparations for Indigenous Peoples in Two Selected Latin American Countries, Marzia Rosti (University of Milan). 14. Reparations for Indigenous Peoples in Europe: The Case of the Sámi People, Stefania Errico (University Federico II of Naples) and Barbara Ann Hocking (Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane). 15. Reparations and Africa’s Indigenous Peoples, Nsongurua J Udombana (Central European University, Budapest). 16. International Law and Reparations for Indigenous Peoples in Asia Phutoli Shikhu Chingmak (Eleutheros Christian Society, Tuensang Nagaland, India). 17. Reparations for Masyarakat Adat in Indonesia: A Sombre Tale Adérito de Jesus Soares (East Timor National University. 18. Why the Persistent Absence of a Foundational Principle? Indigenous Australians, Proprietary and Family Reparations, Barbara Ann Hocking (Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane) and Margaret Stephenson (University of Queensland, Brisbane). 19. Reparations for Maori Grievances in Aotearoa New Zealand Catherine J Iorns Magallanes (Victoria University of Wellington). III. OPERATIONAL STRATEGIES AND BEST PRACTICES FOR ENSURING REPARATION FOR INDIGENOUS PEOPLES´:. 20. Reparations for Neglect of Indigenous Land Rights at the Intersection of Domestic and International Law— the Maya Cases in the Supreme Court of Belize, S James Anaya (Rogers College of Law, University of Arizona). 21. Conclusive Notes: Defi ning Best Practices and Strategies for Maximizing the Concrete Chances of Reparation for Injuries Suffered by Indigenous Peoples, Federico Lenzerini (University of Siena). INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Argentina / Australia / Belize / Botswana / canada / Chile / Colombia / Denmark / India / Indonesia / Italy / Japan / Malaysia / New Zealand / Nigeria / Norway / Philippines / South AFrica / Sweden / United Kingdom / USA NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; ACHPR; ICESCR; ECHR; ICCPR; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); UDHR; |
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113. | Ronen, Ya'ir (ed.) : The case for the child, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The case for the child : towards a new agenda / Ronen, Ya'ir (ed.) ; Greenbaum, Charles W., xxii, 334 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2008. ISBN 978-90-5095-406-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION TO A NEW AGENDA FOR CHILDREN: FROM MIXED SUCCESS IN THE PAST TO FUTURE PROGRESS, Yair Ronen and Charles W. Greenbaum. PART I. CONCEPTUAL UNDERPINNINGS: THE BEST INTERESTS OF THE CHILD:. CHAPTER 2. RETHINKING CHILDHOOD: THE INCLUSION OF CHILDRENS VOICE, Anne B. Smith. CHAPTER 3. AN INTRODUCTORY NOTE ON LAWS RESPONSIVENESS TO THE CHILDS SUFFERING AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF A NEW AGENDA FOR CHILDREN, Yair Ronen. CHAPTER 4. THE BEST INTERESTS OF THE CHILD AND SPOUSAL LAWS, Shahar Lifshitz. CHAPTER 5. MATCHING HUMAN DIGNITY WITH THE UN CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD, Judith Karp. PART II.WELFARE PERSPECTIVES AND THE NEW AGENDA FOR THE CHILD:. CHAPTER 6.CHILD WELFARE AS A NEW AGENDA FOR THE CHILD, Susan Brooks. CHAPTER 7.S RIGHTS AND THE CHILD WELFARE PARADIGM: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS, Tovah Lichtenstein. PART III. CHILDREN'S RIGHTS IN CULTURAL AND RELIGIOUS CONTEXTS:. CHAPTER 8.THE LIVES OF STREET YOUTH OF LATIN AMERICA: TOWARDS THE CONSTRUCTION OF A NEW AGENDA FOR DEVELOPMENTAL RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, Sílvia H. Koller and Marcela Raffaelli. CHAPTER 9.LEGAL STATUS OF THE JEWISH CHILD: THE INTERACTION BETWEEN LAW AND MORALITY, Yehiel S. Kaplan. CHAPTER 10.CHILD CUSTODY IN RABBINICAL COURTS: TRANSITION FROM RELIGIOUS OBLIGATION TO CULTURAL DUTY, Israel Z. Gilat and Shlomo Romi. PART IV. PROTECTING AND EMPOWERING THE CHILD:. CHAPTER 11.PROTECTION VERSUS AUTONOMY: THE CHILD ABDUCTION EXPERIENCE, Rhona Shuz. CHAPTER 12. REMOVING RIGHTS FROM ADOLESCENTS, Michael Freeman. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; |
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114. | Waas, Laura van : Nationality matters, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Nationality matters : statelessness under international law / Waas, Laura van - (School of human rights research series ; vol. 29), xi, 504 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2008. ISBN 978-90-5095-854-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS: PART 1 WHY STATELESSNESS? CHAPTER I NATIONALITY MATTERS: AN INTRODUCTION. 1 Research questions. 2 Research approach. CHAPTER II THE STATELESSNESS PHENOMONON AND A FIRST ENCOUNTER WITH THE INTERNATIONAL RESPONSE: 1 Discovering statelessness. 2 The worldwide severity of statelessness: magnitude and consequences. 3 The international response to statelessness. 4 A first concrete dilemma: defining statelessness. 5 Conclusion: why statelessness?. PART 2 PREVENTING STATELESSNESS CHAPTER III BACKGROUND TO PREVENTING STATELESSNESS: 1 The attribution of nationality: doctrines and competences. 2 International law and the attribution of nationality. 3 The 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness. 4 Purpose and method of part 2. CHAPTER IV ADDRESSING THE TECHNICAL CAUSES OF STATELESSNESS: 1 Jus sanguinis versus jus soli. 1.1 1961 Convention. 1.2 International human rights law. 2 Abandoned and orphaned children. 2.1 1961 Convention. 2.2 International human rights law. 3 Marriage (or divorce) and adoption. 3.1 1961 Convention. 3.2 International human rights law. 4 Loss, deprivation or renunciation of nationality. 4.1 1961 Convention. 4.2 International human rights law. 5 Conclusion. CHAPTER V ADDRESSING STATELESSNESS RESULTING FROM THE ARBITRARY DEPRIVATION OF NATIONALITY: 1 Discriminatory deprivation of nationality and "denial of citizenship". 1.1 1961 Convention. 1.2 International human rights law. 2 Illegal deprivation of nationality and the lack of due process. 2.1 1961 Convention. 2.2 International human rights law. 3 Conclusion. CHAPTER VI ADDRESSING STATELESSNESS IN THE CONTEXT OF STATE SUCCESSION: 1 State succession and the nationality of persons affected. 2 1961 Convention. 3 International (human rights) law. 4 Conclusion. CHAPTER VII ADDRESSING THE "NEW" CAUSES OF STATELESSNESS: 1 Birth and marriage registration. 1.1 Connecting statelessness to (deficient) birth and marriage registration. 1.2 International human rights law. 2 Migration. 2.1 Irregular migration. 2.1.1 Connecting statelessness to irregular migration. 2.1.2 International human rights law. 2.2 Trafficking in human beings and refugee situations. 2.2.1 Connecting statelessness to trafficking and refugee situations. 2.2.2 International human rights law. 3 Conclusion. CHAPTER VIII: INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE PREVENTION OF STATELESSNESS: 1 The value of the 1961 Co prevention of statelessnes 2 The role of internationa statelessness 3 Normative gaps in the pr and suggested remedies 4 Prospects for the implem prevention of statelessness. 5. Conclusion. PART 3 PROTECTING STATELESS PERSONS CHAPTER IX BACKGROUND TO PROTECTING STATELESS PERSONS 1 The substance of nationality: rights and duties 2 International law and the substance of nationality 3 The 1954 Convention relating to the Status of Stateless Persons 4 Purpose and method of part 3 CHAPTER X PROTECTING THE CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS OF STATELESS PERSONS 1 Non-nationals, non-discrimination and the enjoyment of civil and political rights 2 Freedom of movement 2.1 Internal freedom of movement 2.1.1 1954 Convention 2.1.2 International human rights law 2.2 International freedom of movement 2.2.1 1954 Convention 2.2.2 International human rights law 3 Right to legal personhood 3.1 1954 Convention 3.2 International human rights law 4 Access to courts 4.1 1954 Convention 4.2 International human rights law 5 Freedom of religion 5.1 1954 Convention 5.2 International human rights law 6 Right to property 6.1 1954 Convention 6.2 International human rights law. 7 Civil and political rights absent from the 1954 Statelessness Convention. 7.1 Freedom from arbitrary detention. 7.2 Freedom of opinion, expression and (political) assembly. 7.3 Right to participate in government. 7.4 Minority rights. 8 Conclusion. CHAPTER XI PROTECTING THE ECONOMIC, SOCIAL AND CULTURAL RIGHTS OF THE STATELESS: 1 Non-nationals, non-discrimination and the enjoyment of economic, social and cultural rights. 2 Right to work and labour-related rights. 2.1 1954 Convention. 2.2 International human rights law. 3 Freedom of association. 3.1 1954 Convention. 3.2 International human rights law. 4 Right to social security. 4.1 1954 Convention. 4.2 International human rights law. 5 Right to an adequate standard of living. 5.1 1954 Convention. 5.2 International human rights law. 6 Right to education. 6.1 1954 Convention. 6.2 International human rights law. 7 Right to intellectual property. 7.1 1954 Convention. 7.2 International human rights law. 8 Economic, social and cultural rights absent from the 1954 Statelessness Convention. 9 Conclusion. CHAPTER XII PROTECTING THE SPECIAL NEEDS OF THE STATELESS: 1 Naturalisation. 1.1 1954 Convention. 1.2 International (human rights) law. 2 Documentation. 2.1 1954 Convention. 2.2 International (human rights) law 3 Special needs absent from the 1954 Statelessness Convention. 4 Conclusion. CHAPTER XIII INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE PROTECTION OF STATELESS PERSONS: 1 The value of the 1954 Convention relating to the Status of Stateless Persons in the protection of stateless persons. 2 The role of international (human rights) law in the protection of stateless Persons. 3 Normative gaps in the protection of stateless persons under international Law. 4 Prospects for the implementation and enforcement of norms for the protection of stateless persons. 5 Conclusion. PART 4 WHAT FUTURE FOR THE STATELESSNESS CONVENTIONS? CHAPTER XIV FINAL OBSERVATIONS: 1 Nationality and statelessness in the 21st century. 2 Prevention, protection and more. 3 Meeting the challenge of identification. 4 What future for the Statelessness Conventions? ANNEX 1 The 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness ANNEX 2 The 1954 Convention relating to the Status of Stateless Persons ANNEX 3 Schematic overview of the 1954 Statelessness Convention Summary INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Estonia / Latvia / Lithuania / Bangladesh / Congo / Burma / USSR / Ireland / Mauritania / Morocco / Nepal / netherlands / Sri lanka / Syria / Thailand / Ukraine / United Kingdom / Viet Nam / Zimbabwe NOTE (GENERAL): Convention on the reduction of statelessness; Convention relating to the status of stateless persons;
URL http://www.intersentia.be/searchDetail.aspx?back=reeks&reeksCode=&bookid=100848 |
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115. | Ang, Fiona ... [et al.] : Participation rights of children, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Participation rights of children : IAP children's rights network / Ang, Fiona ... [et al.], xvi, 255 p.. - Antwerpen : Intersentia, 2006. ISBN 90-5095-566-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: INTRODUCTION. PART I. PARTICIPATION OF CHILDREN – GENERAL OBSERVATIONS: CHAPTER 1. PARTICIPATION RIGHTS IN THE UN CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD, by FIONA ANG, EVA BERGHMANS, MARIE DELPLACE, VALENTINA STAELENS, CAROLINE VANDRESSE and MIEKE VERHEYDE. CHAPTER 2. REFLECTIONS ON THE CONCEPT OF PARTICIPATION, by LIEVE CATTRIJSSE and DR. ISABELLE DELENS-RAVIER. CHAPTER 3. TRANSCENDING DISCIPLINES: LEGAL PROFESSIONALS’ VIEWS ON PARTICIPATION, by FIONA ANG, EVA BERGHMANS, LIEVE CATTRIJSE, DR. ISABELLE DELENSRAVIER, MARIE DELPLACE, VALENTINA STAELENS, CAROLINE VANDRESSE and MIEKE VERHEYDE. PART II. PARTICIPATION IN DIFFERENT FIELDS: CHAPTER 1. PARTICIPATION RIGHTS OF CHILDREN AND INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW, by TINY VANDEWIELE. CHAPTER 2. PARTICIPATION OF ASYLUM-SEEKING AND REFUGEE CHILDREN, by EVA BERGHMANS. CHAPTER 3. PARTICIPATION IN THE JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM, by CAROLINE VANDRESSE. CHAPTER 4. PARTICIPATION AND PROTECTION OF CHILDREN AGAINST SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND TRAFFICKING AND PRODUCTION BY CHILDREN, by VALENTINA STAELENS. CHAPTER 5. THE IMPLEMENTATION OF PARTICIPATION RIGHTS IN THE FIELD OF FLEMISH CHILD MENTAL HEALTH, by FIONA ANG. CHAPTER 6. YOUTH PARTICIPATION, HELP AND PROTECTION, by DR. ISABELLE DELENS-RAVIER. CHAPTER 7. PARTICIPATION IN ADOPTION, b y MARIE DELPLACE. CHAPTER 8. PARTICIPATION AT SCHOOL, b y MIEKE VERHEYDE. CHAPTER 9. PARTICIPATION AND HUMAN RIGHTS EDUCATION: A GORDIAN KNOT?, by LIEVE CATTRIJSSE. CONCLUSION. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna declaration andprogramme of action; Montreal declaration; CRC;
URL http://www.intersentia.be/searchDetail.aspx?back=reeks&reeksCode=&bookid=6720 |
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116. | Clements, Luke (ed.) : Disabled people and the right to life, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Disabled people and the right to life : the protection and violation of disabled people's most basic human rights / Clements, Luke (ed.) ; Janet Read, xv, 272 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2008. ISBN 978-0-415-40714-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction : life, disability and the pursuit of human rights by Luke Clements and Janet Read. 2. Mending, not ending: cost-effectiveness analysis, preferences and the right to a life with disabiblities, by David Wasserman, Andrienne Asch and Jerome Bickenbach. 3. Deadly currents beneath calm waters: persons with disability and the right to life in Australia, by Philip French and Rosemary Kayess. 4. It's my life - it's my decision?: assisted dying versus assisted living, by Jane Cambell. 5. Disability rights and resuscitation: Do Not Attempt Reconciliation? b y Tom Shakespeare and Bryan Vernon. 6. Disability, human rights and re-distributive justice, som reflections from the North West Frontier province of Pakistan on popular perceptions of disabled people, by Shaheen Sardar Ali. 7. Human rights aspects of deaths of institutionalised people with disabilities in Europe, by Jan Fiala Oliver Lewis. 7. Demostrably awful: the right to life and the selective non-treatment of disabled babies and young children, by Janet Read and Luke Clements. 8. End-of-life decisions in neonatology and the right to life of the disabled newborn child: impressions from the Netherlands, by Jozeph H.H.M. Dorscheidt. 9. The right to life and the right to health of children with disabilities before courts: some Latin American examples, by Christian Courtis. 12. Access to care and the right to life of disabled children in Bulgaria, by Boika Rechel. 13. Unheard voices: human rights issues of disabled youngsters from Romanian institutions, by Mirela Saupe. 14. The classification of newborn children: consequences for survival, by Jonina Einarsdottir. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Argentina / Australia / Austria / Bulgaria / Colombia / Croatia / Estonia / Guinea-Bissau / Lithuania / Netherlands / Norway / Pakistan / Poland / Romania / Slovakia / Slovenia / Sweden / Switzerland NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; Convention on the rights of persons with disabilities (CRPD); CRC; ICESCR; ICCPR;
URL http://www.routledgelaw.com/books/Disabled-People-and-the-Right-to-Life-isbn9780415407144 |
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117. | Peters, Anne ... [et al.] : Non-state actors as standards setters, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Non-state actors as standards setters / Peters, Anne ... [et al.], xx, 587 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2009. ISBN 978-0-521-11490-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: 1. Non-state actors as standard-setters: framing the issue in an interdisciplinary fashion, by Anne Peters, Lucy Koechlin and Gretta Fenner. PART I. New Actors and Processes in Contemporary Standard-Setting:. 2. Local and regional non-state actors on the margins of public policy in Africa, by Dieter Neubert; 3. Conceptualising the use of public-private partnerships as a regulatory arrangement in critical information infrastructure protection, by Dan Assaf; 4. Standard-setting at the cutting edge: an evidence-based typology for multi-stakeholder initiatives, by Lucy Koechlin and Richard Calland; 5. New standards for and by private military companies?, by Lindsey Cameron; 6. Governance matters VII: aggregate and individual governance indicators 1996–2007, by Daniel Kaufmann, Aart Kraay and Massimo Mastruzzi; 7. Contending with illicit power structures: a typology, by Michael Miklaucic. PART II. The Legitimacy and Accountability of Actors and Standards:. 8. Democratic governance beyond the state: the legitimacy of non-state actors as standard-setters, by Steven Wheatley; 9. Legitimacy, accountability and polycentric regulation: dilemmas, trilemmas and organisational response, by Julia Black; 10. Accountability of transnational actors: is there scope for cross-sector principles?, by Monica Blagescu and Robert Lloyd; 11. Non-state environmental standards as a substitute for state regulation?, by Marcus Schaper; 12. Limiting violence – culture and the constitution of public norms: with a case study from a stateless area, by Till Förster. PART III. The Authority and Effectiveness of Actors and Standards:. 13. Standard-setting for capital movements: reasserting sovereignty over transnational actors?, by Peter Hägel; 14. Certification as a new private global forest governance system: the regulatory potential of the forest stewardship council, by Stéphane Guéneau; 15. Private standards in the north - effective norms for the south?, by Eva Kocher; 16. International corporate social responsibility standards: imposing or imitating business responsibility in Lithuania?, by Egle Svilpaite; 17. Legal pluralism under the influence of globalisation: a case study of child adoption in Tanzania, by Ulrike Wanitzek; 18. Towards non-state actors as effective, legitimate, and accountable standard-setters, by Anne Peters, Till Förster and Lucy Koechlin. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Africa / Cameroon / Central Asia / Colombia / Denmark / Estonia / France / Germany / Latin America / Liberia / Mali / Lithuania / Mexico / Nigeria / North America / Russian Federation / Tanzania / United Kingdom / USA / Zanzibar NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; African Union convention; CBD; Geneva conventions; CRC; Ottawa convention; Framework convention on climate change; Palermo convent Tripartite declaration of principles;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521114905 |
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118. | Forsythe, David P. (editor in chief) : Encyclopedia of human rights , 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Encyclopedia of human rights : volume 1 : Afghanistan - Democracy and right to participation / Forsythe, David P. (editor in chief), xxxi, 496 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2009. ISBN 978-0-19-533402-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: ARTICLES:. 1. Afganistan, by Christa Meindersma. 2. African Union : Banjul charter, by Rachel Murray. 3. AIDS/HIV, by Amy S. Patterson. 4. Algerian war, by Rita Maran. 5. American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), by William J. Aceves. 6. American revolution, by Ari Kohen and Sara W. Lunsford. 7. Idi Amin Dada Oumee, by Susan Dicklitch. 8. Amnesty International, by Peter R. Baehr. 9. Angola, by Ana Leao. 10. Kofi Annan, by Coutney B. Smith. 11. Anti-Slavery International, by Claude E. Welch. 12. Louise Arbor, by William A. Schabas. 13. Armenians in the Ottoman empire, by Peter Balakian. 14. Art and images, by Caroline Turner. 15. Article 19, by Peter Noorlander. 16. Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), by Kenneth Christie. 17. Aung San Suu Kyi, by Monique Skidmore. 18. José Ayala Lasso, by Alfred de Zayas. 19. Baha'i Faith, by Brian D. Lepard. 20. Balkan wars, by Bozo Repe. 21. Simone de Beauvoir, by Sonia Kruks. 22. Belgian Congo, by Adam Hochschild. 23. Peter benenson, by Kirsten Sellars. 24. Steve Biko, by Mark Sanders. 25. Osama Bin Laden and Al Qaeda, by Mahmood Monshipouri. 26. Botswana and Lesotho, by Robert K. Hitchcock. 27. Boutros Boutros-Ghali, by Anthony F. Lang. 28. Brazil, by Anthony W. Pereira. 29. B'Tselem, by Jasmin Habib. 30. Burma (Myanmar), by Moniques Skidmore and Trevor Wilson. 31. Burundi, by René Lemarcahnd. 32. Business and human rights, by Scott Pegg. 33. Cambodia, by Lilian A. Barria. 34. Care international, by Allison Burden. 35. Jimmy Carter, by Kirsten Sellars. 36. Carter Center, by Steven H. Hochman. 37. René Cassin, by Mark Weston Janis. 38. Catholicism, by William J. Wagner. 39. Nicolae Ceaussescu, by Patrice C. McMahon. 40. Center for Justice & Accountability, by beth van Schaack. 41. Central America in the 1980s., by Chandra Lehka Sriram. 42. Chechnya, by Catherine Osgood. 43. Children's convention, by Samantha Besson and Joanna Borke-Martignoni. 44. Chile in the Pinochet era, by Darren Hawkins. 45. China: the famine of the 1960s, by Andrew Wedeman. 46. China : Tiananmen massacre, by Ann Kent. 47. Civil and political rights: international covenant and political rights, by David Weissbrodt. 48. Collective/group rights, by A. Belden Fields. 49. Colombia, by William Avilés. 50. Colonialism, by Bonny Ibhawoh. 51. Commonwealth of Nations, by Timothy Shaw. 52. Communitarianism and community, by Brian Orend. 53. Conflict among human rights norms, by Eva Brems. 54. Confuciianism, by Summer B. Twiss. 55. Constitutions and human rights, by Rett R. Ludwikowski. 56. Costa Rica, by Alison Brysk. 57. Crimes against humanity, by Jordan J. Paust. 58. Criminal justice : international criminal justice, by David P. Forsythe. 59. Cuba under Castro, by Mayra Gomez. 60. Culture and human rights, by Yvonne M. Donders. 61. Customary international law, by Connie de la vega. 62. Cyprus from 1964, by James Ker-Lindsay. 63. Romeo Dallaire, by Howard B. Tolley. 64. darfur, by Linda S. Bishai. 65. Carla del Ponte, by Heikelina Verrijn Stuart. 66. Democracy and right to participation, by Peter R. Baehr. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Philippines / Indonesia / Viet Nam / Singapore / Malaysia / Thailand / Slovenia / Croatia / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Botswana / Lesotho / Burma / Cambodia / Guatemala / El Salvador / Nicaragua / Honduras / Chile / China NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR; AMR; ACHPR; Doha declaration on the TRIPS agreement and public health; Declaration of the rights of man and of the citizen; UN charter; UDHR-19; CRC; LIBRARY LOCATION: VIB |
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119. | Buck, Trevor (ed.) : International child law, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International child law / Buck, Trevor (ed.). - 2. ed.., xvii, 358 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2011. ISBN 978-0-415-48717-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Childhood and Children's Rights. 2. Introduction to International Law Sources and Institutions. 3. United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child 1989. 4. Child Labour. 5. International Parental Child Abduction. 6. Inter-Country Adoption. 7. Sexual Exploitation. 8. Children and Armed Conflict. 9. Indigenous Children's Rights INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; CRC-OP; ECHR; Hague convention; |
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120. | Realising Children's Rights, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Realising Children's Rights : Multidisciplinary, Comparative and Practical Perspectives papers from the United Kingdom-India Education and Research Initiative conferences / REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Essex Human Rights Review : vol. 7; no. 1., 205 p.. - Colchester, Uk : University of Essex. Human Rights Centre, 2010. - ISSN 1756-1957 ISBN 978-1-874635-46-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I: Realising Children's Rights in the Criminal Justice System:. 1. Youth Justice in the United Kingdom, by Eamonn Carrabine. 2. Construction of Criminality and Children, by Ved Kumari. 3. Towards a Mixed Economy of Youth Justice, by Pam Cox. PART II: Comparative Approaches in Adoption and Child Protection:. 4. Identifying Domestic Mechanisms for Rights Protections in an Intercountry Adoption Setting: A comparison of Guatemala, South Africa and India, by Sarah Sargent. 5. Child Protection Strategies in the United Kingdom and India, by Nishtha Desai. PART III: Violence against Children:. 6. Maternal Abusers: Underlying concerns for children, by Jackie Turton. 7. In their own Defence: Violence against girls, and girls as human rights defenders, by Fernne Brennan and John Packer. 8. Colloquium Report: Violence against girls, and girls as human rights defenders, by Brett Dodge. PART IV: Strategies for Empowering Children:. 9. Girls and Boys as Human Rights Defenders: The importance of peer support, by Netta Cartwright. 10. The Girl Child Empowerment Strategy, by Betty Makoni. 11. Interview with Carolyn Hamilton INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: United Kingdom / South Africa / Guatemala / India NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; |