1. | Scibelli, Pasqua : Empowering prostitutes, 1987 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Empowering prostitutes : a proposal for international legal reform / Scibelli, Pasqua REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Harvard women's law journal : vol. 10(1)., p. 117-157. - Cambridge, MA : Harvard Law School, 1987. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: USA / Thailand LIBRARY LOCATION: ÅAB, HeinOnline Law Journal Library |
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2. | Karlsson, Maria : HIV/AIDS-pandemin i utvecklingsländerna och bristen på läkemedel-asymmetri mellan vissa mänskliga rättigheter och WTO:s regler om intellektuellt ägande, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: unpublished document HIV/AIDS-pandemin i utvecklingsländerna och bristen på läkemedel-asymmetri mellan vissa mänskliga rättigheter och WTO:s regler om intellektuellt ägande / Karlsson, Maria, 89 p.. - Åbo : Åbo Akademi. Rättsvetenskapliga institutionen, 2008. LANGUAGE: SWE INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (THESIS): Master's thesis in public international law, [2008], [T] NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; CEDAW; ICESCR; ICCPR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; UN charter; Doha declaration on the TRIPS; UDHR; Declaration on commitment on HIV/AIDS; LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: seminarierummet |
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3. | Ogunsanya, Kemi : Women transforming conflicts in Africa, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Women transforming conflicts in Africa : descriptive studies from Burundi, Cote d'Ivoire, Sierra Leone, South Africa and Sudan / Ogunsanya, Kemi - ( Occasional paper series ; vol. 2; no. 3), 52 p.. - Durban : ACCORD, 2008. - ISSN 1608-3954 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Status of women in these countries -- 2. Impact of conflict on women -- 3. Response of women to conflict -- 4. Participation of women in peace processes -- 5. Women and post-conflict reconstruction -- 6. Consolidation of democarcy -- 7. Conclusion: new challenges facing women -- INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Ivory Coast / Siera Leone / Sudan / Burundi / South Africa NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW; |
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4. | Gaining ground, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Gaining ground : a tool for advancing reproductive rights law reform /, 135 p. . - New York : Center for Reproductive Rights, 2006. ISBN 978-1-890671-32-7 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
URL http://www.reproductiverights.org/pdf/media_bo_GG_121306.pdf |
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5. | Engh, Ida-Eline : Developing capacity to realise socio-economic rights, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Developing capacity to realise socio-economic rights : the right to food in the context of HIV/AIDS in South Africa and Uganda / Engh, Ida-Eline, xxiii, 500 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2008. ISBN 978-90-5095-766-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: TABLE OF CONTENTS:. PART I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND:. CHAPTER 1. THE PROBLEM AND THE PURPOSE. CHAPTER 2. PROGRESSIVE REALISATION OF SOCIO-ECONOMIC RIGHTS. CHAPTER 3. FOCUS ON INDICATORS. PART II. CONCEPTS AND APPROACHES:. CHAPTER 4. FOOD SECURITY AND THE RIGHT TO FOOD. CHAPTER 5. THE CONTEXT OF HIV/AIDS. CHAPTER 6. ROLES, OBLIGATIONS AND CAPACITY IN HUMAN RIGHTS REALISATION. PART III. THE CAPACITY FRAMEWORK:. CHAPTER 7. IDENTIFYING ROLES AND OBLIGATIONS IN SOUTH AFRICA AND UGANDA. CHAPTER 8. AUTHORITY AND MANDATE. CHAPTER 9. ACCEPTANCE OF DUTY AND COMMITMENT TO OBLIGATIONS. CHAPTER 10. ACCESS TO AVAILABLE RESOURCES. CHAPTER 11. COMMUNICATION CAPACITY. CHAPTER 12. CAPACITY TO MONITOR AND EVALUATE. PART IV. CONCLUSION:. CHAPTER 13. TOWARDS A NEW UNDERSTANDING OF CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW; ICESCR; ICCPR;
URL http://www.intersentia.be/searchDetail.aspx?bookId=100447 |
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6. | Fredman, Sandra : Human rights transformed, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights transformed : positive rights and positive duties / Fredman, Sandra, xxiii, 261 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U.P., 2008. ISBN 978-0-19-953505-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. I. UNDERSTANDING POSITIVE RIGHTS:. 1. Human rights values refashioned:liberty, equality and solidarity. 2. The nature of the state: democracy, globalization and privatization. II. JUDGING AND ENFORCING: COURTS AND COMPLIANCE:. 3. The structure of positive duties. 4. Justiciability and the role of courts. 5. Achieving compliance:positive duties beyond the courts. III. SUBSTANTIVE RIGHTS AND POSITIVE DUTIES:. 7. Equality. 8. Socio-economic rights and positive duties. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Canada / Finland / India / Ireland / South Africa NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; EU charter of fundamental rights; ICCPR; ICESCR; Canadian charter of rights and freedoms; |
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7. | CIA above the law?, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph CIA above the law? : secret detentions and unlawful inter-state transfers of detainees in Europe = La CIA au-dessus des lois? : Détentions secretes et transferts illégaux de détenius en Europe /, 301 p.. - Strasbourg : Council of Europe, 2008. ISBN 978-92-871-6419-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Chronology of Council of Europe action. Part 1: Secret detentions and transfers of detainees in Europe. Reports of the Parliamentary Assembly. I. Alleged secret detentions and unlawful inter-state transfers of detainees involving Council of Europe member states (first report Marty) Summary. Adopted texts. Explanatory memorandum. I. Are human rights little more than a fair-weather option. II. The global “spider’s web. III. Specific examples of documented renditions. IV. Secret places of detention. V. Secret detentions in the Chechen Republic. VI. Attitude of governments. VII. Individual cases: judicial proceedings in progress. VIII. Parliamentary investigations. IX. Commitment to combating terrorism. X. Legal perspectives. XI. Conclusion. Appendices. II. Secret detentions and illegal transfers of detainees involving Council of Europe member states (second report Marty). Summary. Adopted texts. Explanatory memorandum. Introductory remarks – an overview. I. The “Dynamics of truth. II. Secret detentions in Council of Europe member states. III. Secret detention operations in Poland. IV. Secret detention operations in Romania. V. Human rights abuses involved in the CIA secret detention programme. VI. Secrecy and cover-up: how the United States and its European partners evade responsibility for CIA clandestine operations. VII. Secret detentions and renditions: the diminishing effect on respect for human rights worldwide. VIII. Need for consensus solutions to the HVD dilemma whilst ensuring respect for human rights. Appendices. Addendum to the report. 1. Dissenting opinion by the delegation of Poland to the Parliamentary Assembly. 2. Dissenting opinin by the delegation of Romania to the Parliamentary Assembly. Part 2: Legal obligations of Council of Europe member states in respect of secret detention facilities and inter-state transport of prisoners. Opinion of the European Commission for Democracy through Law (Venice Commission). Introduction. Section I: The legal regime: A. General principles. B. Human rights law. C. International humanitarian law. D. General principles of civil aviation. E. Military bases. F. Article V of the NATO Treaty. Section II: The international legal obligations of Council of Europe member states: A. Council of Europe member states’ obligations in respect of arrests by foreign authorities on their territory. B. Council of Europe member states’ obligations in respect of alleged secret detention facilitiesC. Council of Europe member states’ obligations in respect of inter-state transfers of prisoners. Conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ECPT; CAT; LIBRARY LOCATION: CoE-2008
URL http://book.coe.int/EN/ficheouvrage.php?PAGEID=36&lang=EN&produit_aliasid=2323 |
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8. | Westra, Laura : Environmental justice and the rights of unborn and future generations, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Environmental justice and the rights of unborn and future generations : law, environmental harm and the right to health / Westra, Laura, xii, 326 p.. - London : Earthscan, 2006. ISBN 978-1-84407-366-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Part I: The Rights of the First Generation: 1. The Child's Rights to Health and the Environment, and the Role of the World Health Organization 2. The Status of the Preborn in Civil Law Instruments. 3. The Status of the Child and the Preborn in Common Law Instruments and Cases. 4. Supranational Governance: The European Court of Human Rights, and the WTO-WHO Conflict. Part II: Ecojustice and Future Generations' Rights: 5. The Impact of Consumerism and Social Policy on the Health of the Child 6. Future Generations' Rights: Linking Intergenerational and Intragenerational Rights in Ecojustice. 7. Ecojustice and Consideration for the Future: The Persistence of Ecofootprint Disasters. 8. Ecojustice and Industrial Operations: Irreconcilable Conflict or Possible Coexistence?. 9. Developmental and Health Rights of Children in Developing Countries: Towards a Model Legislation for the Rights of the Child to Health. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; LIBRARY LOCATION: Miljörätt SHELF CODE: Arbetsmaterial |
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9. | Dodds, Felix (ed.) : Human and environmental security, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human and environmental security : an agenda for change / Dodds, Felix (ed.) ; Pippard, Tim. - repr.., xxv, 270 p.. - London : Earthscan, 2006. ISBN 978-1-84407-214-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Part I: Peace and Security: 1. 'A More Secure World: Our Shared Responsibility' - The Report of the High Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change. 2. The Peacebuilding Commission: Linking Security and Development. 3. Human Security and the War on Terror. 4. Achieving Nuclear Non-proliferation: A New Zealand Perspective. 5. Women, War and Peace: Mobilizing for Security and Justice in the 21st Century. Part II: Sustainable Human Development: 6. Globalization, Poverty and Security. 7. Trade and Security in an Interconnected World. 8. Climate Change: Emerging Insecurities. 9. Migration, Development and Security. 10. Securing a Healthier World. 11 Biodiversity and Security. 12. Food Security. 13. Water Security: What Role for International Water Law? 14. Urban Safety: A Collective Challenge for Sustainable Human Settlements Development. Part III: Global Governance : 15. America as Empire: Global Leader or Rogue Power? 16. The Emergence and Role of Regional Governance. 17. Human and Environmental Rights: The Need for Corporate Accountability. 18. Reforming Environmental Governance. 19. Democracy in an Uncertain World. INDEX WORDS:
LIBRARY LOCATION: Miljörätt SHELF CODE: Arbetsmaterial |
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10. | At risk, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph At risk : rights violations of HIV-positive women in Kenyan health facilities /, 72 p.. - New York, NY : Center for Reproductive Rights and Women, 2008. ISBN 1-890671-37-1 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kenya
URL http://reproductiverights.org/sites/crr.civicactions.net/files/documents/At%20Risk.pdf |
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11. | Niemelä, Pekka : The politics of responsibility to protect, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The politics of responsibility to protect : problems and prospects / Niemelä, Pekka - (The Erik Castrén research reports 2008 ; 25), iii, 143 p.. - Helsinki : University of Helsinki. Faculty of Law, 2008. - ISSN 1457-5965 ISBN 978-952-10-5172-2 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter-2; |
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12. | Grönholm, Pauliina [toim.] : Sota, rauha ja naiset, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Sota, rauha ja naiset / Grönholm, Pauliina [toim.]. - 2 p.., 47 p.. - Helsinki : Suomen UNIFEM - Finlands UNIFEM ry, 2003. LANGUAGE: FIN INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Julkaisu perustuu Elisabeth Rehnin ja Ellen Johnson Sirleafin englanninkieliseen raporttiin "Women, war and peace: the independent experts' assesstment on the impact of armed conflict on women and women's role in peace-building". |
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13. | Sloth-Nielsen, Julia (ed.) : Children's rights in Africa, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Children's rights in Africa : a legal perspective / Sloth-Nielsen, Julia (ed.) , x, 352 p.. - Aldershot : Ashgate, 2008. ISBN 978-0-7546-4887-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Part I:. 1. Children's rights and the law in African context: an introduction, Julia Sloth-Nielsen. 2. The regional system of protection of human rights in Africa, 'Dejo Olowu. 3. The African regional system for the protection of children's rights, Amanda Lloyd. 4. Domestication of children's rights in national legal systems in African context: progress and prospects, Julia Sloth-Nielsen. 5. African customary law and children's rights: intersections and domains in a new era, Chuma Himonga. 6. Combating child poverty: the role of economic, social and cultural rights, Danwood M. Chirwa. Part II:. 7. Child participation in Africa, Louise Ehlers and Cheryl Frank. 8. Restorative justice in child justice systems in Africa, Ann Skelton. 9. The impact of international law on children's rights on juvenile justice law reform in the African context, Godfrey O. Odongo. 10. The protection of children from all forms of violence – African experiences, Daksha Kassan. 11. The protection of refugee children under the African human rights system: finding durable solutions in international law, Thoko Kaime. 12. Children at both ends of the gun: child soldiers in Africa, Benyam D. Mezmur. 13. Implementing the girl child's right to education in selected countries in Africa, Lea Mwambene. 14. Trafficking of children in Africa: an overview of research, international obligations and existing legal provisions, Jacqui Gallinetti and Daksha Kassan. 15. Intercountry adoption from an African perspective, Trynie Davel. 16. HIV/Aids and children's rights in law and policy in Africa: confronting Hydra head on, Julia Sloth-Nielsen and Benyam D. Mezmur. 17. The hidden ones: children with disabilities in Africa and the right to education, Helene Combrinck. 18. Worst forms of child labour: a view from out of Africa, Jacqui Gallinetti. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Africa / Sudan / Ghana / Lesotho / Malawi / Madagascar / Namibia / Nigeria / Mozamique / Rwanda / South Africa / Uganda / Tanzania / Zambia / Zimbabwe NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; CRC; ICCPR; ICESCR; CERD; CEDAW; UDHR; Refugee convention; African charter on the rights and welfare of the child;
URL http://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=637&calcTitle=1&title_id=8836&edition_id=9861 |
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14. | Yusuf, Abdulqawi A. (ed.) : African yearbook of international law : vol. 15, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph African yearbook of international law : vol. 15 : Special theme : realising economic and social rights in Africa : innovations, challenges and prospects / Yusuf, Abdulqawi A. (ed.), viii, 338 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2008. ISBN 978-90-04-17432-0 LANGUAGE: ENG, FRE ABSTRACT: Introduction, by Obiora Chinedu Okafor. 1. The Implementation Gap in the Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights Field: A Critical Cross-Examination of the Agenda of the United Nations, by Pierre Sob. 2. Beyond Officialdom: Fallacies and Hypocrisy in Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Discourse and Implementation in Nigeria,by Dakas C. J. Dakas. 3. Beyond Naming and Shaming: Methodological Imperatives of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights Advocacy, by Bonny Ibhawoh. 4. Moving Beyond Rights in the Realisation of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: Challenges in Contemporary Africa, by Amy Tsanga. 5. The Protection and Enforcement of Socio-Economic Rights in Africa: Lessons from the South African Experience, by John Cantius Mubangizi. 6. Justifiability or Judicialization: Circumventing Armageddon Through the Enforcement of Socio-Economic Rights, by Chima C. Nweze. 7. Litigating the Right to Health Before the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights: The Record so Far,by Judy A. Oder. 8. Enforcing Social and Economic Constitutional Guarantees Before the Courts: The South African and Indian Experiences, by Anashri Pillay. 9. Regional Protection of Women’s Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in Africa: The Women’s Protocol and the African Union, by Mosope Fagbongbe. 10. Neo-Liberal Economic Reforms and the Realisation of Social and Economic Rights in Africa, by Paul D. Ocheje. 11. Impunity or Accountability in the Extractive Industries: Regulation, Reform, or Resistance?, by Jeanne M. Woods. 12. The Rights to “The Highest Attainable Standard of Health”: Trade Agreements and the Rights to Health in Africa, by Obijiofor Aginam. 13. Toxic Waste Dumping and the Enjoyment of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in Africa, by Cyril Uchenna Gwam. NOTES AND COMMENTS:. 1. Un instrument de lutte contre les pandémies internationales : le Règlement Sanitaire International n°2, par Badr Zerhdoud. 2. Quelques réflexions sur les lois du 12 février 2007 portant modification du code pénal sénégalais et mise en oeuvre du Statut de la Cour pénale internationale, par Raphaël Tiwang Watio. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Nigeria / South Africa / Ghana / Angola / Belgium / Botswana / Burkina / Burundi / Cameroon / Canada / Chad / Chine / Congo / Ivory Coast / Denmark / Equatorial Guinea / Eritrea / Ethiopia / Europe / France / Gambia / Guinea-Bissau / India / Italy / Japan / Liberia / Libya / Malawi / Namibia / Nigeria / Rwanda / Senegal / Sierra Leone / Somalia / Spain / Sudan / Swaziland / Switzerland / Tanzania / Tunisia / Uganda / USA / Zambia / Zimbabwe NOTE (GENERAL): ICESCR; ACHPR; GC-3(ICESCR); ICCPR; African charter on the rights and welfare of the child; Geneva conventions; CEDAW; CRC; CAT; AMR; |
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15. | Listening to the children, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Listening to the children : child workers in the shadow of AIDS /, v, 101 p.. - Nairobi : UNICEF, 2001. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Ethiopia / Kenya / Lesotho / Mozambique / Tanzania / Uganda |
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16. | Ross, Susan Deller : Women's human rights, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Women's human rights : the international and comparative law casebook / Ross, Susan Deller, xxxi, 665 p.. - Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0-8122-4067-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Women's status and CEDAW. 2. Equality doctrines and gender discrimination: the evolving jurisprudence of the UN Human Rights Committee and the U.S. Supreme Court. 3. The interrelationship of the ICCPR and the ICESCR and the Human Rights Committee's evolving equal protection doctrine. 4. Conflicting human rights under international law: freedom of religion versus women's equality rights. 5. Enforcing women's international human rights under regional treaties: the American convention on human rights and the African charter on human and peoples' rights. 6. Enforcing women's international human rights under regional treaties: the European convention for the protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms. 7. Economic empowerment and employment discrimination: Europe and the United States compared. 8. The special treatment versus equal treatment debate. 9. CEDAW in practice. 10. Enforcing women's international rights at home: international law in domestic courts. 11. Strategies to combat domestic violence. 12. Strategies for ending female genital mutilation and footbinding: Western imperialism or women's human rights?. 13. Gender and polygny - religion, culture and equality in marriage. 14. Women's reproductive rights. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Africa / Austria / Australia / Bangladesh / Belgium / Brazil / Burundi / Cameroon / Cambodia / Chile / Canada / Chad / China / Congo / Costa Rica / Ivory Coast / Croatia / Denmark / Djibouti / Egypt / El Salvador / Ecuador / Eritrea / Ehiopia / Finland / Gambia / Germany / Ghana / Greece / Guatemala / Guinea / Guinea-Bissau / Hungary / India / Indonesia / Iraq / Ireland / Iran / Israel / Italy / Jamaica / Japan / Kenya / Kurdistan / Kuwait / Latvia / Liberia / Libya / Malawi / Malaysia / Mali / Mauritius / Monaco / Morocco / Mozambique / Nepal / New Zeland / Nicaragua / Nigeria / Norway / Pakistan / Paraguay / Peru / Philippines / Poland / Russian Federation / Rwanda / Sierra Leone / Somalia / South Africa / South Korea / Spain / Sri Lanka / Sudan / Swaziland / Sweden / Switzerland / Syria / Taiwan / Tanzania / Thailand / Togo / Tunisia / Turkey / Uganda / Ukraine / United Kingdom / United Arab Emirates / Uruguay / Viet Nam / Zambia / Zimbabwe / Yemen NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR; ICESCR; CEDAW; UDHR; UN charter; ECHR; ACHPR; CAT; |
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17. | Bob, Clifford (ed.) : The international struggle for new human rights, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The international struggle for new human rights / Bob, Clifford (ed.) - ( Pennsylvania studies in human rights), vi, 194 p.. - Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0-8122-4131-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: 1. Introduction : Fighting for new rights / Clifford Bob. 2. Orphaned again? Children born of wartime rape as a non-issue for the human rights movement / R. Charli Carpenter. 3. "Dalit rights are human rights" : untouchables, NGOs, and the Indian state / Clifford Bob. 4. Applying the gatekeeper model of human rights activism : the U.S.-based movement for LGBT rights / Julie Mertus. 5. From resistance to receptivity : transforming the HIV/AIDS crisis into a human rights issue / Jeremy Youde. 6. Disability rights and the human rights mainstream : reluctant gate-crashers? / Janet E. Lord. 7. New rights for private wrongs : female genital mutilation and global framing dialogues / Madeline Baer and Alison Brysk. 8. Economic rights and extreme poverty : moving toward subsistence / Daniel Chong. 9. Local claims, international standards, and the human right to water / Paul J. Nelson. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; ICESCR; CRC; |
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18. | Guha-Khasnobis, Basudeb (ed.) : Food insecurity, vulnerability and human rights failure, 2007 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Food insecurity, vulnerability and human rights failure / Guha-Khasnobis, Basudeb (ed.) ; Acharya, Shabd S. ; Davis, Benjamin, xxv, 368 p.. - New York : Palgrave Macmillan, 2007. ISBN 978-0-230-55357-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Preface:. PART I: VULNERABILITY TO HUNGER: CAUSES AND REMEDIES:. 1. National Food Policies impacting on Food Security: The Experience of a Large Populated Country - India, by S. S. Acharya. 2.Food Security in the South Pacific Island Countries with Special Reference to the Fiji Islands, by K. L. Sharma. 3. Food Security in the SADC Region: An Assessment of National Trade Strategy in the Context of the 2001-03 Food Crisis, by A. Charman & J. Hodge. 4. On the Edge: The Role of Food-Based Safety Nets in Helping Vulnerable Households Manage Food Insecurity, by L. Brown & U. Gentilini. 5. The Public Distribution Systems of Foodgrains and Implications for Food Security: A Comparison of the Experiences of India and China, by Z.-Y. Zhou & G. Wan. PART II: GENDER AND HUNGER: THE LINKS:. 6. Gender, HIV/AIDS and Rural Livelihoods: Micro-Level Investigations in Three African Countries, by J. Curry, E. Wiegers, A. Garbero, S. Stokes & J. Hourihan. 7. Gender, Local Knowledge and Lessons Learnt in Documenting and Conserving Agrobiodiversity, by Y. Lambrou & R. Laub. 8. Gender Differentiation in the Analysis of Alternative Farm Mechanization Choices on Small Farms in Kenya, by J. Wanjiku, J.U. Manyengo, W. Oluoch-Kosura & J. T. Karugia. 9. Women and Food Security in South Asia: Current Issues and Emerging Concerns; by N. Ramachandran. PART III: HUNGER AS ENTITLEMENT FAILURE: THE RIGHT TO FOOD:. 10. Entitlement Failure from a Food Quality Perspective: The Life and Death Role of Vitamins and Minerals in Humanitarian Crises, by P. Webb & A. Thorne-Lyman. 11. The Right to Food as a Fundamental Human Right: FAO's Experience, by I.Rae, J. Thomas & M. Vidar. 12. Realizing the Right to Food in South Asia, by P. Bhargava & M. Balana. 13. Rights-Based Approach to Development: Lessons from the Right to Food Movement in India, by B. Guha-Khasnobis & S. Vivek. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Africa / India / China |
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19. | Ferstman, Carla (ed.) : Reparations for victims of genocide and crimes against humanity, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Reparations for victims of genocide and crimes against humanity : systems in place and systems in the making / Ferstman, Carla (ed.) ; Goetz, Mariana ; Stephens, Alan, vii, 575 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2009. ISBN 978-90-04-17449-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Preface (Judge Elizabeth Odio Benito). Introduction, (Carla Ferstman, Mariana Goetz and Alan Stephens). Part I: Reparations for Victims – Key Themes and Concepts:. 1. Victims’ Rights to a Remedy and Reparation: the New United Nations Principles and Guidelines (Professor Theo Van Boven); 2. Reparation Programmes: A Gendered Perspective (Anne Saris and Katherine Lofts); 3. Massive Trauma and the Healing Role of Reparative Justice (Yael Danieli, Ph.D.). Part II: Reparations and the Holocaust:. 4. The Claims Conference and the Historic Jewish Efforts for Holocaust-Related Compensation and Restitution (Gideon Taylor, Greg Schneider and Saul Kagan); 5. The Swiss Banks Holocaust Settlement (Judah Gribetz and Shari C. Reig). Part III: The Internationalised Context of ‘Mass Claims’:. 6. Overcoming Evidentiary Weaknesses in Reparation Claims Programmes - The Mass Claims Context (Heike Niebergall); 7. International Mass Claims Processes and the ICC Trust Fund for Victims (Edda Kristjánsdóttir); 8. The United Nations Compensation Commission (Linda A. Taylor). Part IV: Reparations and International and Regional Courts:. 9. Bringing Justice to Victims? Responses of Regional and International Human Rights Courts and Treaty Bodies to Mass Violations (Dr. Lutz Oette); 10. The Concepts of ‘Injured Party’ and ‘Victim’ of Gross Human Rights Violations in the Jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights: A Commentary on their Implications for Reparations (Clara Sandoval-Villalba); 11. Reparation for Gross Violations of Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law at the International Court of Justice (Conor McCarthy); 12. Reparations and the International Criminal Court (Carla Ferstman and Mariana Goetz). Part V: Pursuing Extraterritorial Reparations Claims – Lawyers’ Perspectives:. 13. The Prosecution of International Crimes and the Role of Victims’ Lawyers (Luc Walleyn); 14. Compensation for the Victims of Chemical Warfare in Iraq and Iran (Liesbeth Zegveld); Part VI: Reparations in National (Territorial) Contexts: 15. Reparations and Victim Participation: A Look at the Truth Commission Experience (Cristián Correa, Julie Guillerot and Lisa Magarrell); 16. The Argentinean Reparations Programme for Grave Violations of Human Rights Perpetrated During the Last Military Dictatorship (1976-1983) (Andrea Gualde and Natalia Luterstein); 17. Reparations for Victims in Colombia: Colombia´s Law on Justice and Peace (Julián Guerrero Orozco and Mariana Goetz); 18. Policy Challenges for Property Restitution in Transition - The Example of Iraq (Peter Van der Auweraert); 19. Reparations in Dayton’s Bosnia and Herzegovina (Carla Ferstman and Sheri P. Rosenberg); 20. Goats & Graves: Reparations in Rwanda’s Community Courts (Lars Waldorf); 21. Still Not Talking: The South African Government's Exclusive Reparations Rolicy and the Impact of the R30,000 Financial Reparations on Survivors (Oupa Makhalemele); Conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; AMR; CERD; CEDAW; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; International convention for the protection of all persons from enforced disappearance; ICCPR; ICCPR-OP; Nairobi declaration on women's and girls' right to a remedy and reparation; ICC statute; UDHR; CAT; |
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20. | Gargarella, Roberto (ed.) : Courts and social transformation in new democracies, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Courts and social transformation in new democracies : an institutional voice for the poor? / Gargarella, Roberto (ed.) ; Domingo, Pilar ; Roux, Theunis, xiv, 311 p.. - Aldershot : Ashgate Publ., 2008. ISBN 978-0-7546-4783-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Introduction, by Pilar Domingo. PART 1: Theory:. 1. Theories of democracy, the judiciary and social rights, by Roberto Gargarella. 2. Courts and social transformation: an analytical framework, by Siri Gloppen. 3. The changing role of law and courts in Latin America: from an obstacle to social change to a tool of social equity, by Javier A. Couso. PART 2: Case Studies:. 4. Social rights as middle-class entitlements in Hungary: the role of the constitutional court, by András Sajó. 5. The record of the South African constitutional court in providing an institutional voice for the poor: 1995-2004, by Jackie Dugard and Theunis Roux. 6. The Enforcement of social rights by the Colombian constitutional court: cases and debates, by Rodrigo Uprimny Yepes. 7. Courts and social transformation in India, by R. Sudarshan. 8. Judicial enforcement of social rights: perspectives from Latin America, by Christian Courtis. 9. Brazilian courts and social rights: a case study revisited, by José Reinaldo de Lima Lopes. 10. Courts under construction in Angola: what can they do for the poor?, by Elin Skaar and José Octávio Serra Van-Dúnem. 11. Weak courts, rights and legal mobilisation in Bolivia, by Pilar Domingo. Courts, rights and social transformation: concluding reflections, by Roberto Gargarella, Pilar Domingo and Theunis Roux. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Angola / Argentina / Africa / Bolivia / Brazil / Chile / Colombia / Costa Rica / Czech Republic / Ecuador / France / El Salvador / Germany / Honduras / Hungary / India / Mexico / Poland / Peru / Latin America / Russian Federation / Slovenia / South Africa
URL http://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=637&calcTitle=1&title_id=8218&edition_id=9554 |
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21. | Gauri, Varun (ed.) : Courting social justice, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Courting social justice : judicial enforcement of social and economic rights in the developing world / Gauri, Varun (ed.) ; Brinks, Daniel M., xvii, 363 p. . - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2008. ISBN 978-0-521-87376-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. 1. Introduction: the elements of legalization, and the triangular shape of social and economic rights, by Varun Gauri and Daniel M. Brinks. 2. Litigating for social justice in post-apartheid South Africa: a focus on health and education, by Jonathan Berger. 3. Accountability for social and economic rights in Brazil, by Florian F. Hoffmann and Fernando R.N.M. Bentes. 4. Courts and socio-economic rights in India, by Shylashri Shankar and Pratap Bhanu Mehta. 5. The impact of economic and social rights in Nigeria: an assessment of the legal framework for implementing education and health as human rights, by Chidi Anselm Odinkalu. 6. The implementation of the rights to health care and education in Indonesia, by Bivtri Susanti. 7. A new policy landscape: legalizing social and economic rights in the developing world, by Daniel M. Brinks and Varun Gauri. 8. Transforming legal theory in the light of practice: the judicial application of social and economic rights to private orderings, by Helen Hershkoff. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Nigeria / Brazil / India / Indonesia / South Africa NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; ACHPR; ICCPR; ICESCR; |
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22. | Bösl, Anton ... [et al.] : Monitoring regional integration in Southern Africa, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Monitoring regional integration in Southern Africa : yearbook, volume 8-2008 / Bösl, Anton ... [et al.], iv, 383 p.. - Stellenbosch, SA : TRALAC, 2008. ISBN 978-0-9814221-2-1 ABSTRACT: Introduction:Monitoring the process of regional integration in Southern Africa in 2008, by Anton Bösl, Willie Breytenbach, Trudi Hartzenberg, Colin McCarthy, Klaus Schade . Chapter 1: Trade integration, production networks and the services sector: implications for regional trade agreements in Eastern and Southern Africa, by Nicolette Cattaneo. Chapter 2: Regional transport challenges within the Southern African Development Community and their implications for economic integration and development, by Tsitsi Mutambara. Chapter 3: SADC trade integration - the effect of trade facilitation on sectoral trade: a quantitative analysis, by Sonja Kurz, Thomas Otter and Felix Povel. Chapter 4: SACU, China and India: the implication of FTAs for Botswana, Lesotho Namibia and Swaziland (BLNS), by Ron Sandrey and Hans Grinsted Jensen. Chapter 5: Developing a balanced framework for foreign direct investment in SADC: a decent work perspective, by Daniela Zampini. Chapter 6: Strengthening SADC institutional structures - capacity development is the key to the SADC Secretariat's effectiveness, by Leda Giuffrida and Helmut Müller-Glodde. Chapter 7: Making regional economic community laws enforceable in national legal systems - constitutional and judicial challenges, by Richard Frimpong Oppong. Chapter 8: The SADC Tribunal: a legal analysis of its mandate and role in regional integration, by Oliver C. Ruppel and Francois-X. Bangamwabo. Chapter 9: The role of parliament in regional integration - the missing link, by Barney Karuuombe. Chapter 10: Peacekeeping and regional integration in Africa, by Willie Breytenbach. Chapter 11: How countries of the Southern African Development Community (SADC) can use the World Trade Organisation and the European Community flexibilities for better access to affordable HIV/AIDS medicines, by Stephen S. Kingah, Stefaan Smis and Fredrik Söderbaum. Chapter 12: Land reform in Zimbabwe: context, process, legal and constitutional issues and implications for the SADC region, by Memory Dube and Rob Midgley. Chapter 13: Measuring regional trade integration in Southern Africa, by Rigmar Osterkamp. Chapter 14: Fundraising or common foreign policy? 30 Years of SADC Consultative Conference, by Martin Adelmann. INDEX WORDS:
LIBRARY LOCATION: s Monitoring.. |
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23. | Forsythe, David P. (ed. in Chief) : Encyclopedia of human rights : volume 2, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Encyclopedia of human rights : volume 2 : Democracy promotion - John Humphrey / Forsythe, David P. (ed. in Chief), 506 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2009. ISBN 978-0-19-533402-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: ARTICLES:. 1. Democracy promotion, by Peter Burnell. 2. Democratic Republic of Congo, by Emi zet F. Kisangani. 3. Right to development, by William F. Felice. 4. Disability rights overview, by Aart Hendriks and Maria Ventegodt Liisberg. 5. Disability rights:convention on the rights of persons with disabilities, by Arlene S. Kanter. 6. Discrimination and older persons, by David Weissbrodt. 7. Doctors without borders, by Katherine Derderian, Gorik Ooms and Liesbeth Schockaert. 8. Due process, rule of law and habeas corpus, by David Weissbrodt. 9. Henry Dunant, by Francois Bugnion. 10. East Asian values, by Ian Neary. 11. Shirin Ebadi, by Mahmood Monshipouri. 12. Economic sanctions, by George A. Lopez. 13. Economic, social and cultural rights, by Barbara Stark. 14. Right to education and human rights education, by Richard Pierre Claude. 15. Egypt from Nasser to the present, by Riccardo Rossano. 16. Emergency situations, by Rodrigo Labardini. 17. Martin Ennals, by Hans Thoolen. 18. Environment, by Svitlana Kravchenko. 19. Eritrea, by Dan Connell. 20. Ethiopia, by Siegfried Pausewang and Günther Schröder. 21. Ethnic cleansing, by jennifer Jackson Preece. 22. European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, by Alastair McAuley. 23. European convention on human rights and fundamental freedoms (Council of Europe), by Donald W. Jackson. 24. European social charter, by Robin Churchill. 25. European Union, by Frederic Mégret. 26. European Union charter of fundamental rights, by Mielle Bulterman. 27. Female genital mutilation and female genital cutting, by Hope Lewis. 28. Film, by Carolyn Patty Blum and Alicia Blum-Ross. 29. Right to food and adequate standard of living, by George Kent. 30. Foreign policy, by Peter R. Baehr. 31. Forensic science, by Melissa Connor. 32. Foundations and human rights, by Mona Younis. 33. La francophone, by Emmanuel Decaux. 34. Arvonne Fraser, by David Weissbrodt. 35. Donald Fraser, by David Weissbrodt. 36. Freedom house, by Leonard R. Sussman. 37. French revolution, by Jennifer Ngaire Heuer. 38. Gender violence, by Sally Engle Merry. 39. Genocide, by William A. Schabas. 40. German unification, by Wolfgang S. Heinz. 41. Global justice and human rights, by Saladin Meckled-Garcia. 42. Globalization, by Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann. 43. Richard J. Goldstone, by Kathleen A. Cavanaugh. 44. Mikhail Gorbachev, by Neil Robinson. 45. Guatemala, by Roddy Brett. 46. Haiti, by Mike Levy. 47. Vaclan havel, by James F. Pontuso. 48. Right to health and health care, by Brigit Toebes. 49. Helsinki accord and CSCE/OSCE, by Patrice C. McMahon. 50. Hinduism, by Jack Donnelly. 51. History of human rights, by Paul Gordon Lauren. 52. Adolf Hitler, by Gerhard L. Weinberg. 53. Holocaust, by Deborah E. Lipstadt. 54. Hong Kong, by Linda J. Butenhoff. 55. Right to housing and shelter, by Giulia Paglione. 56. Housing rights:norms and implementation, by Bret Thiele. 57. Humanitarian intervention : overview, by Eric A. Heinze. 58. Humanitarian intervention:policy making, by Fred Grünfeld. 59. Humanitarian law, by Hans-Peter Gasser. 60. Human rights first, by Anne Travers. 61. Human Rights Watch, by Claude E. Welch. 62. Human security, by Gerd Oberleitner. 63. Human trafficking, by Howard B. Tolley. 64. John Humphrey, by John Hobbins. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; ICCPR; ICESCR; Declaration on the right to development; UN charter; CRPD; ACHPR; CEDAW; CERD; CRC; Geneva conventions; ECHR; LIBRARY LOCATION: VIB |
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24. | South African yearbook of international law, 2007 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph South African yearbook of international law : volume 32, 2007 /, 551 p.. - Pretoria : University of South Africa, 2007. - ISSN 0379-8895 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Global good governance and good global governance, by Ferreira-Snyman and G. M. Ferreira. 2. The African peer-review mechanism and the promotion of democracy and good political governance in Africa, by André Mbata B. Mangu. 3. Good governance in international law:an Indian perspective, by KG Balakrishnan. 4. International and regional requirements for good governance and the rule of law, by Michele E. Olivier. 5. Good governance, non-state actors and international law: a cautionary note, by John King and Lauren Piera. 6. Expanding international law to non-state actors (the corporation), by Diego Quiroz. 7. The 'war on terror' in Africa in international law and state practice, by André Thomashausen. 8. Strengthening international law's capacity to govern through multilayered strategic partnerships, by Charlotte Ku. 9. Will the Cotonou agreement succeed where Lomé I-IV have failed?, by Hennie Strydom. 10. Non-state actors in inter-state litigation:beneficiaries or blameworthy?, by Natalie Klein. 11. Accountability for human rights abuses:thaking the universality, indivisibility, interdependence and interrelatedness of human rights seriously, by Evadne Grant. 12. Non-state actors in the context of refugee determination processes, with particular reference to the position of women, by Rebecca MM Wallace. 13. Governance and indigenous minorities in Australia, by Greg Marks. 14. International intellectula property norm setting:democratising the World Intellectual Property Organization?, by Coenraad Visser. 15. Environmental criteria as condition for space activities of non-state entities?, by Mahulena Hoffmann. 16. Northern NGOs, southern NGOs and international environmental law: the common interest of humankind is the interest of northern mankind!, by Werner Schoultz. 17. Environmental governance and the accountability of non-state actors in Africa: a rights-based approach, by Dejo Olowu. 18. Managing global change for sustainable development:technology, community and multilateral environmental agreeements, by Duncan French. 19. Reparation for victims of war and non-state actors?, by Rainer Hofmann. 20. Outsourcing and themilitary: implications for international humanitarian law, by MG Cowling. 21. Non-state actors and human rights in non-international armed conflicts, by Natalia Szablewska. 22. Brazil-South Africa:South-south cooperation for sustainable development, by Susana Camargo Vieira. 23. The impact of intellectual property law and policy on sustainable development, by Tana Pistorius. 24. Corporates and the flexible mechanisms in the climate change regime: the privatisation of sustainable devleopment?, by Dire Tladi. 25. A global perespective on African corporate governance: the protection of stakeholders' interests, by Irene-Marie Esser. 26. The accountability of states for human rights abuses by non-state actors during preventive HIV vaccine efficacy trials in Africa, by Annelize Nienaber. 27. Women and the United Nations: who makes who matter?, by Math Noortmann. 28. Child trafficking and article 4 of the European convention for the protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms, by Patrick Vrancken. 29. Sovereign reliance on a state of necessity: always an acceptable defence?, by EC Schlemmer. 30. The refugees act: disparity between the judiciary's management of South Africa's legal obligations towrds refugees and that of the public servants entrusted with dealing with their affairs, by Margaret Beukes. 31. Southern African events of international significance -2006, by Margaret Beukes. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (MEETINGS): ILA conference 2007 : Good governance & non-state actors in international law:an African perspective, Pretoria, South Africa, [20070827-20070829],[c] NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; Protocol to the African charter on the rights of women; UN charter-41-42; ICCPR; EC treaty; AMR-44; ECHR-10-34; OAU convention on the prevention and combating of terrorism; CEDAW; Lomé I-IV; Cotonou agreement; Geneva conventions; ICESCR; Refugee convention; |
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25. | Forsythe, David (ed. in Chief) : Encyclopedia of human rights, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Encyclopedia of human rights : volume 5: Sri Lanka-Zimbabwe, topical outline of articles, directory of contributors, index / Forsythe, David (ed. in Chief) , 537 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2009. ISBN 978-0-19-533402-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: ARTICLES:. 1. Sri Lanka, by Chandra Lekha Sriram. 2. Joseph Stalin, by Lynne Viola. 3. Terrorism, by William J. Aceves. 4. Rights to thought, speech and assembly, by Paul L. McKaskle. 5. Tibet, by Christa Meindersma. 6. Jacobo Timerman, by Laura Glanc. 7. Tito, by Rudolf M. Rizman. 8. Torture convention against torture, by Howard B. Tolley. 9. Torture European convention on prevention of torture, by Malcolm D. Evans. 10. Torture international law, by Nigel S. Rodley. 11. Torture treatment organizations, by Lutz Oette. 12. Transitional justice, by Ruti G. Teitel. 13. Transitions to democracy and rule of law, by Albrecht Schnabel and Shale Horowitz. 14. Truth Commissions, by Teresa Godwin Phelps. 15. Desmond Tutu, by Steven D. Gish. 16. Uganda, by Susan Dicklitch. 17. United Kingdom, by Todd Landman. 18. United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), by Joel E. Oestrecih. 19. United Nations Commission on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, by Roger S. Clark. 20. United Nations Commission on Human Rights, by David Forsythe and Baekkwan Park. 21. United Nations Commission on the Status of Women, by Stephanie Farrior. 22. United Nations development programme, by Elizabeth A. Mandaville. 23. United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), by Roger A. Coate. 24. United Nations General Assembly, by M.J. Peterson. 25. United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, by Theo van Boven. 26. United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, by Geoff Gilbert. 27. United Nations Human Rights Council, by David P. Forsythe and Baekkwan Park. 28. United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, by Henry F. Carey. 29. United Nations Security Council, by Thomas G. Weiss. 30. United Nations Sub-Commission on Human Rights, by David Weissbrodt. 31. United States : international dimensions of the American civil rights movement, by Carol Anderson. 32. United States : race relations in the 1940s and 1950s and international human rights, by Carol Anderson. 33. United States: war on terrorism, by David P. Forsythe and John Gruhl. 34. Universal declaration of human rights, by Bård A. Andreassen. 35. Universal jurisdiction, by Gabor Rona. 36. Universality, by Jack Donnelly. 37. Theo van Boven, by Peter R. Baehr. 38. Max van der Stoel, by Peter R. Baehr. 39. Sergio Vieira de Mello, by Mona Rishmawi. 40. Vietnam, by Karin Buchmann. 41. Lech Walesa, by Stefania Szlek Miller. 42. Raoul Wallenberg, by Katarina Månsson. 43. Weapons of mass destruction, by Vera Gowlland-Debbas. 44. West Bank and Gaza, by David Kretzmer. 45. Elie Wiesel, by John K. Roth. 46. Simon Wiesenthal, by Alfred de Zayas. 47. Women convention on the elimination of discrimination against women. 48. Women, women's rights, by Barbara Stark. 49. Women: Women's Rights Groups in the Middle East, by Wanda Krause. 50. Women: Women's Rights in international criminal law, by Valerie Oosterveld. 51. Right to work, by Koen De Feyter and Ulises Ruiz Lopart Espinosa. 52. World Bank and International Monetary Fund, by Mac Darrow. 53. World Council of Churches, by Claude E. Welch. 54. World health Organization (WHO), by Carmen Huckel Schneider. 55. World Trade Organization, by Daniel B. Braaten. 56. Zimbabwe, by Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; UN charter; CRC; CEDAW; CEDAW-OP; ICESCR; ICESCR-OP; LIBRARY LOCATION: VIB |
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26. | Ruppel, Oliver C. : Children's rights in Namibia, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Children's rights in Namibia / Ruppel, Oliver C. - (i 101 243 375), xvi, 435 p.. - Windhoek : Konrad Adenauer Foundation, 2009. ISBN 978-99916-0-891-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Introduction Oliver C Ruppel The protection of children's rights in Namibia: Law and policy Lotta N Ambunda and Willard T Mugadza The protection of children's rights under international law from a Namibian perspective Oliver C Ruppel A major decision: Considering the age of majority in Namibia Rachel Coomer and Dianne Hubbard Work in progress: The Child Care and Protection Act in Namibia Lena N Kangandjela and Clever Mapaure The best interest of the child Yvonne Dausab Children's right to citizenship Faith Chipepera and Katharina G Ruppel-Schlichting Custody and guardianship of children Felicity !Owoses-/Goagoses Adoption: Statutory and customary law aspects from a Namibian perspective Oliver C Ruppel and Pombili L Shipila Child labour: A universal problem from a Namibian perspective Clever Mapaure Realising the right to education for all: School policy on learner pregnancy in Namibia Dianne Hubbard Customary practices and children with albinism in Namibia: A constitutional challenge? Ruusa N Ntinda Children in polygynous marriages from a customary perspective Prisca N Anyolo "A man is not a man unless ...": Male circumcision - A legal problem? Manfred O Hinz and Moudi Hangula. Restorative justice: The case for a Child Justice Act Stefan Schulz High Court of Namibia Vulnerable Witnesses' Project Annel M Silungwe Child suggestibility in the Namibian justice system Joab T Mudzanapabwe Understanding the perpetrators of violent crimes against children Veronica C de Klerk Access to information by orphans and other vulnerable children in the Ohangwena Region Chiku Mchombu Child trafficking, child prostitution and the potential dangers of the 2010 FIFA World Cup in South Africa Michael Conteh The Ombudsman for Children in Poland: A model for Namibia?Agata Rogalska-Piechota Accessibility of social assistance benefits in indigenous African communities from a South African perspective Gugulethu Nkosi In search of a focus: Methodological provocations in the quest for the recognition and implementation of children's rights and legal entitlements Julie Stewart INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (MEETINGS): 20. Nov. 2009 Kinderrechte in Namibia Hg. von Oliver C Ruppel 1 189 331 NOTE (THESIS): Oliver C Ruppel 5 201 347 NOTE (GENERAL): 978-99916-0-891-4 Am 20.11.1989 hat die die Generalversammlung der Vereinten Nationen die Kinderrechtskonvention angenommen. Inzwischen haben 193 Staaten die Konvention unterzeichnet und damit ihre Verantwortung für Kinder und den Schutz von deren unveräusserlichen Rechten auf Überleben, Entwicklung, Schutz und Beteiligung anerkannt. Am 20.11.2009 legt die KAS eine umfassende Publikation vor, die den Stand und die Entwicklung von Kinderrechten in Namibia aus verschiedenen Perspektiven analysiert. 53 223 363 CRC; CEDAW;
URL http://www.kas.de/proj/home/pub/8/2/year-2009/dokument_id-18139/index.html |
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27. | Leeuwen, Fleur van : Women's rights are human rights, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Women's rights are human rights : the practice of the United Nations Human Rights Committee and the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights / Leeuwen, Fleur van - (School of human rights research series ; vol. 36), xxi, 318 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2010. ISBN 978-90-5095-980-3 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW; ICCPR; ICESCR; ECHR; UDHR;
URL http://www.intersentia.be/searchDetail.aspx?back=reeks&reeksCode=&bookid=101248 |
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28. | Sarkar, Rumu : International development law, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International development law : ruleof law, human rights, & global finance / Sarkar, Rumu ; with a foreword by Professor Sir Elihu Lauterpacht, xxiii, 479 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2009. ISBN 978-0-19-539828-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Introduction. 1: Fin de Siecle Analysis. 2: Significant Historical Trends. 3: The Failures of the State. 4: The Failure of Ideology. Part I: The Rule of Law:. 1: The Rule of Law: Theoretical Principles. 2: International Development Law: Substantive Principles. 3: The Rule of Law: A Projectized Approach. 4: Is There a Human Right to Development?. Part II: International Financial Architecture:. 5: International Borrowing. 6: Privatization. 7: Emerging Capital Markets. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Africa / Asia / Australia / Bosnia / Cambodia / Chile / China / Czech Republic / Ecuador / Egypt / Germany / Hungary / India / Jamaica / Malaysia / Mali / Mexico / Moldova / Nigeria / Philippines / Poland / Peru / Romania / Russian Federation / Rwanda / Sierra Leone / South Africa / Sudan / Tanzania / Turkey / Uganda / Venezuela / Zimbabwe / Zaire LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; Charter of economic rights and duties of states; Dayton peace accord; ICCPR; ICESCR; UDHR; Declaration on the right to development; Kyoto protocol; Framework convention on climate change;
URL http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780195398281.do?keyword=sarkar&sortby=bestMatches |
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29. | Joseph, Sarah (ed.) : Research handbook on international human rights law, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Research handbook on international human rights law / Joseph, Sarah (ed.) ; McBeth, Adam - (Research handbooks in international law), xiv, 596 p.. - Cheltenham, Uk : Edward Elgar, 2010. ISBN 978-1-84720-368-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. 1. The United Nations and Human Rights, by Sarah Joseph and Joanna Kyriakakis. 2. Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: An Examination of State Obligations, by Manisuli Ssenyonjo. 3. Extraterritoriality: Universal Human Rights Without Universal Obligations?, by Sigrun I. Skogly. 4. Non-state Actors and International Human Rights Law, by Robert McCorquodale. 5. NGOs and Human Rights: Channels of Power, by Peter J. Spiro. 6. Human Rights in Economic Globalisation, by Adam McBeth. 7. Human Rights and Development, by Stephen P. Marks. 8. Gender and International Human Rights Law: The Intersectionality Agenda, by Anastasia Vakulenko. 9. Refugees and Displaced Persons: The Refugee Definition and ‘Humanitarian’ Protection, by Susan Kneebone. 10. International Criminal Law, by Elies van Sliedregt and Desislava Stoitchkova. 11. The Four Pillars of Transitional Justice: A Gender-Sensitive Analysis, by Ronli Sifris. 12. The International Court of Justice and Human Rights, by Sandesh Sivakumaran. 13. The Council of Europe and the Protection of Human Rights: A System in Need of Reform, by Virginia Mantouvalou and Panayotis Voyatzis. 14. The Inter-American Human Rights System: Selected Examples of its Supervisory Work, by Diego Rodríguez-Pinzón and Claudia Martin. 15. African Human Rights Law in Theory and Practice, by Magnus Killander. 16. The Political Economy and Culture of Human Rights in East Asia, by Michael C. Davis. 17. Islam and the Realization of Human Rights in the Muslim World, by Mashood A. Baderin. 18. Religion, Belief and International Human Rights in the Twenty-first Century, by Peter Cumper. 19. DRIP Feed: The Slow Reconstruction of Self-determination for Indigenous Peoples, by Melissa Castan. 20. Counter-Terrorism and Human Rights, by Alex Conte. 21. Human Rights Education: A Slogan in Search of a Definition, by Paula Gerber. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; African charter on the rights and welfare of the child; AMR; ADRD; UN charter; ICCPR; ECHR; CAT; CRC; CRPD; Declara tion of the rights of persons belonging to national or ethnic, religious and linguistic minorities; Declaration on indigenous peoples; ICESCR; Nuremberg charter; Vienna convention on consular relations; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: Inst.ref. |
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30. | Reilly, Niamh : Women's human rights, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Women's human rights : seeking gender justice in a globalizing age / Reilly, Niamh, xii, 203 p.. - Malden, MA : Polity Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0-7456-3700-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Chapter 1 -- Theorising transnational feminist advocacy in a globalising age. Chapter 2 -- Human Rights, Gender and Contested Meanings. Chapter 3 -- Women's Human Rights as Equality and Non- Discrimination. Chapter 4 -- Violence against Women and Reproductive and Sexual Health as Human Rights Issues. Chapter 5 -- Women's Human Rights in Conflict and Post-conflict Transformation. Chapter 6 -- Development, Globalisation and Women's Human Rights. Chapter 7 -- Fundamentalisms and Women's Human Rights. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW; ICESCR; DEDAW; ICCPR; CERD; |