1. | Advancing safe motherhood through human rights, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Advancing safe motherhood through human rights / - (Occasional papers ; 5), 176 p.. - Geneva : WHO, 2001. LANGUAGE: ENg INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Protocol of San Salvador-15; CRC-24; CEDAW; ICESCR;
URL http://www.who.int/reproductive-health/publications/RHR_01_5_advancing_safe_motherhood/index.html |
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2. | Broken promises, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Broken promises : human rights, accountability and maternal death in Nigeria / , 84 p.. - New York, NY : Center for Reproductive Rights and Women, 2008. ISBN 1-890671-33-9 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
URL http://reproductiverights.org/sites/crr.civicactions.net/files/documents/pub_nigeria2.pdf |
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3. | Hunt, Paul (ed.) : Maternal mortality, human rights and accountability, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Maternal mortality, human rights and accountability / Hunt, Paul (ed.) ; Gray, Tony, xxvii, 226 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2013. ISBN 978-0-415-53458-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Foreword, by Navanethem Pillay Preface, Clemens Nathan. PART 1: CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS:. 1. Maternal Mortality: An Overview, by Francisco Songane. 2. Citizen Monitoring to Promote the Right to Health Care and Accountability, by Dr. Ariel Frisancho Arroyo. 3. The Role of Indicators and Benchmarks in Reducing Maternal Mortality: the Case of the Emergency Obstetric Care Indicators, by Samantha Lobis. 4. What Are Maternal Death Audits? A Sri Lankan Case Study, by Dr. Hiranthi Wijemanne. 5. The Role of National and International Courts: Human Rights Litigation as a Strategy to Hold States Accountable for Maternal Deaths, by Ximena Andion Ibañez. 6. The Role of National Human Rights Institutions in Monitoring Human Rights: A Case Study of the Kenya National Commission on Human Rights, by Commissioner Winfred Lichuma. 7. A Human Rights Based Approach to Maternal Mortality in the United States, by Nan Strauss and Rachel Ward. 8. Enhancing International Accountability for Maternal Mortality and Morbidity: The Work of Civil Society at the United Nations Human Rights Council, by Sandeep Prasad. 9. Postscript: Towards Ending Preventable Maternal Deaths, by Dr. Flavia Bustreo. PART II: ADDITIONAL RESOURCE MATERIAL MORTALITY, HUMAN RIGHTS AND ACCOUNTABILITY, USING EXTRACTES FROM KEY DOCUMENTS:. 10. Human Rights, Constructive Accountability and Maternal Mortality in the Dominican Republic: A Commentary (2003), by L. P. Freedman. 11. Accountability and the Right to the Highest Attainable Standard of Health (2008), by Helen Potts. 12. Towards Transformative Accountability: Applying a Rights-based Approach to Fulfil Maternal Health Obligations (2010), by Alicia Ely Yamin. 13. Human Rights Council Resolution 11/8, Preventable Maternal Mortality and Morbidity and Human Rights (2009). 14. Report of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights on Preventable Maternal Mortality and Morbidity and Human Rights (2010). 15. Concise Technical Guidance on the Application of a Human Rights Based Approach to the Implementation of Policies and Programmes to Reduce Preventable Maternal Morbidity and Mortality (2012), Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. 16. Global Strategy for Women’s and Children’s Health (2010), United Nations Secretary-General, by Ban Ki-moon. 17. A Review of Global Accountability Mechanisms for Women’s and Children’s Health (2011), The Partnership for Maternal, Newborn and Child Health. 18. Working Group on Accountability for Results: Final Paper (2011), Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health. 19. Keeping Promises, Measuring Results (2011), Commission on Information and Accountability for Women’s and Children’s Health. 20. Realising Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights in Kenya: A Myth or Reality? Report of the Public Inquiry into Violations of Sexual and Reproductive Health Rights in Kenya (2012), Kenya National Commission on Human Rights. 21. The Role of Litigation in Ensuring Women’s Reproductive Rights: An Analysis of the Shanti Devi Judgement in India (2012), by Jameen Kaur. 22. Human Rights Accountability for Maternal Death and Failure to Provide Safe Legal Abortion: The Significance of Two Ground-Breaking CEDAW Decisions (2012), Eszter Kismödi, Judith Bueno De Mesquita, Ximena Andión Ibañez, Rajat Khosla, Lilian Spúlveda INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW; CERD; CRC; ICCPR; Millennium declaration; |
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4. | Hellum, Anne (ed.) : Women's human rights, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Women's human rights : CEDAW in international, regional and national law / Hellum, Anne (ed.) ; Sinding Aasen, Henriette, xxii, 675 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U.P., 2013. ISBN 978-1-107-03462-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents.. Introduction, Anne Hellum and Henriette Sinding Aasen. PART I. Potential Added Value of the CEDAW:. 1. The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination of Women, by Andrew Byrnes. 2. The United Nations Working Group on the Issue of Discrimination against Women in Law and Practice, by Fareda Banda. 3. CEDAW: a holistic approach to women's equality and freedom, by Rikki Holtmaat. 4. CEDAW as a legal framework for transnational discourses on gender stereotyping, by Simone Cusack. 5. From CEDAW to the American Convention: elucidation of women's right to a life's project and protection of maternal identity within inter-American human rights jurisprudence, by Cecilia Bailliet. 6. Pulling apart? Treatment of pluralism in CEDAW and in Maputo protocol, by Celestine Nyamu Musembi. PART II. Actual Added Value of the CEDAW: Socio-Economic Rights:. 7. Engendering socio-economic rights, by Sandra Fredman. 8. 'Women's rights are human rights!' The practice of the United Nations Human Rights Committee and the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, by Fleur van Leeuwen. 9. Property and security: articulating women's rights to their homes, by Ingunn Ikdahl. 10. Maternal mortality and women's right to health, by Henriette Sinding Aasen. PART III. The CEDAW in National Law:. 11. The implementation of the CEDAW Convention in Australia: success, trials, tribulations and continuing struggle, by Andrew Byrnes. 12. The Canadian experience with the CEDAW: all women's rights are human rights – a case of treaties synergy, by Lucie Lamarche. 13. India's CEDAW story, by Madhu Mehra. 14. Judicial education on the Convention on Elimination of Discrimination against Women in Nepal, by Kabita Pandey. 15. From ratification to implementation: 'domesticating' CEDAW in state, government and society. A case study of Pakistan, by Shaheen Sardar Ali. 16. Zimbabwe and CEDAW compliance: pursuing women's equality in fits and starts, by Choice Damiso and Julie Stewart. 17. The CEDAW after all these years: firmly rooted in the Dutch clay? by Marjolein van den Brink. 18. CEDAW in the UK, by Sandra Fredman. 19. Domestication of the CEDAW in France: from paradoxes to ambivalences and back again, by Hélène Ruiz Fabri and Andrea Hamann. 20. Rise and fall of the CEDAW in Finland: time to reclaim its impetus, by Kevät Nousiainen and Merja Pentikäinen. 21. Making space and giving voice: CEDAW in Norwegian law, by Anne Hellum. Conclusions, by Anne Hellum and Henriette Sinding Aasen. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; ACHPR; Arab charter on human rights; AMR; ADRD; Beijing declaration and platform for action; Canadian charter of rights and freedoms; CEDAW; ICESCR; CAT; CERD; CRC; ECHR; ICCPR; UN charter; Vienna declaration and programme of action; |