1. | Lahmann, Henning : The Israeli Approach to Detain Terrorist Suspects and International Humanitarian Law, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial The Israeli Approach to Detain Terrorist Suspects and International Humanitarian Law : the Decision Anonymous v. State of Israel / Lahmann, Henning REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Zeitschrift für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht [=ZaöRV] : 69/2., p. 347-364. - Heidelberg : Max-Planck-Institut für ausländisches öffentliches recht und Völkerrecht, 2009. - ISSN 0044-2348 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Geneva conventions (IV); |
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2. | Human rights in criminal justice systems , 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights in criminal justice systems : proceedings of the 9th informal Asia-Europe meeting (ASEM)seminar on human rights, Strasbourg, France, 18-20 February 2009 /, 208 p.. - Singapore : Asia-Europe Foundation, 2010. ISBN 978-981-08-6153-7 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Organized by the Asia-Europe Foundation, the Raoul Wallenberg Institute, and the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs;. ECHR; CAT; CAT-OP; ICCPR; ICCPR-14;
URL http://www.asef.org/index.php?download=cHJvamVjdHMvZG9jdW1lbnRzLzE4MzM%3D |
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3. | Pickering, Sharon : Women, borders and violence, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Women, borders and violence : current issues in asylum, forced migration and trafficking / Pickering, Sharon, xi, 133 p.. - Heidelberg : Springer, 2011. ISBN 978-1-4419-0270-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: vii Contents 1. Women and Extra Legal Border Crossing. 2. The Journey to the Border: Continuums of Crossing. 3. Border Policing in the Borderlands: Policing Politically Active Women on the Thai–Burma Border. 4. A Gate at the Border?. 5. Policing the Border Within: Sex Trafficking and the Regulation of Sex Work. 6. Women, Borders, and Violence. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Refugee convention; Trafficking protocol;
URL http://www.springer.com/social+sciences/criminology/book/978-1-4419-0270-2 |
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4. | Cancado Trindade, Antonio Augusto : The access of individuals to international justice, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The access of individuals to international justice / Cancado Trindade, Antonio Augusto - (Collected courses of the Academy of European Law ; vol. XVIII/1), xxix, 236 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2011. ISBN 978-0-19-958096-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Introduction:. 1: The Historical Recovery of the Human Person as Subject of the Law of Nations. 2: The Exercise of the Right of Access to International Justice: The Right of International Individual Petition. 3: Access to Justice at International Level and the Right to an Effective Domestic Remedy. 4: The Interrelatedness between the Access to Justice (Right to an Effective Remedy) and the Guarantees of the Due Process of Law. 5: Acess to International Justice in Relation to the Interaction between International Law and Domestic Law. 6: Access to Justice: The Safeguard and Preservation of the Integrity of International Jurisdiction. 7: New Developments in the Notion of ''Potential Victim'': The Preventive Dimension of Protection. 8: The Protection of Victims in Situations of Great Adversity or Defencelessness - I. 9: The Protection of Victims in Situations of Great Adversity or Defencelessness - II. 10: Access to Justice of Victims of Massacres and Crimes of State. 11: The Overcoming of Obstacles to Direct Access to Justice. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; AMR; ICESCR-OP; ADRD; CERD; Genocide convention; Convention of the reduction of statelessness; Declaration and programme of action; Declaration of basic principles of justice for victims of crime and abuse of power; Declaration of Cartagena on refugees; Declaration of San José on refugees and displaced persons; ECHR; ECPT; ESC; Framework convention for the protection of national minorities; Geneva conventions; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); Inter-American convention to prevent and punish torture; Migrant workers convention; Mexico declaration and plan of action; Pact of San José; CEDAW; CRC; CAT; ICCPR; ICESCR; ICCPR-OP; UN millennium declaration; UDHR; Vienna convention on consular relations; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
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5. | Dembour, Marie-Benedicte (ed.) : Are human rights for migrants, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Are human rights for migrants : critical reflections on the status of irregular migrants in Europe and the United States / Dembour, Marie-Benedicte (ed.) ; Kelly, Tobias, x, 249 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2011. ISBN 978-0-415-61906-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Description:. Human rights seemingly offer universal protection. However, irregular migrants have, at best, only problematic access to human rights. Whether understood as an ethical injunction or legally codified norm, the promised protection of human rights seems to break down when it comes to the lived experience of irregular migrants. This book therefore asks three key questions of great practical and theoretical importance. First, what do we mean when we speak of human rights? Second, is the problematic access of irregular migrants to human rights protection an issue of implementation, or is it due to the inherent characteristics of the concept of human rights? Third, should we look beyond human rights for an effective source of protection? Written is an accessible style, with a range of socio-legal and doctrinal approaches, the chapters focus on the situation of the irregular migrant in Europe and the United States. Throughout the book, nuanced theoretical debates are put in the context of concrete case studies. The critical reflections it offers on the limitations and possibilities of human rights protections for irregular migrants will be invaluable for students, scholars and practitioners. Contents Introduction, by Marie-Bénédicte Dembour and Tobias Kelly. PART I: Taking it as a given: The affirmation of the optimist:. 2. The Recognition of the Rights of Migrants within the UN Human Rights System: the First Sixty Years, by Stefanie Grant. 3. Irregular Migration and Frontier Deaths: Acknowledging a Right to Identity, by Stefanie Grant. PART II: Deliberating: The efforts of those who work the system:. 4. The Constitutional Status of Irregular Migrants: Testing the Boundaries of Human Rights Protection in Spain and the United States, by Cristina Rodriguez and Ruth Rubio Marin. 4. The Human Rights of Migrants as Legal tools and Discursive Principles for Re-Framing Individual Justice in Modern Constitutionalism, by Galina Cornelisse. PART III: Protesting: The outrage of the witness:. 5. ‘Not our problem’: Why the conditions of irregular migrants in detention are not considered a human rights issue in Malta, by Daniela De Bono. 6. The Calaisis area: transit zone or dead-end?, by Marie Martin. PART IV: Keeping one’s distance: The puzzlement of the sceptic:. 7. Human Rights and Immigration Detention in the UK, by Mary Bosworth. 8. The Legalisation of Human Rights and the Protection of Torture Survivors: Asylum, Evidence and Disbelief, by Tobias Kelly. 9. The Rights of the Person: a Constitutional Agenda Drawn from the US Experience, by Linda Bosniak. 10. Afterword, by Upendra Baxi. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Bosnia-Herzegovina / India / Iran / Libya / Malta / Mexico / Sri Lanka / United Kingdom / USA NOTE (GENERAL): AMR; CAT; CEDAW; ICESCR; Migrant workers convention; CRC; ECHR; ICCPR; CRPD; UDHR; |
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6. | Macken, Claire : Counter-terrorism and the detention of suspected terrorists, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Counter-terrorism and the detention of suspected terrorists : preventive detention and international human rights law / Macken, Claire - (Routledge research in terrorism and the law), xxii, 208 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2011 . ISBN 978-0-415-55051-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Preventive Detention – Background, History and Practice. 2. The Right to Personal Liberty in International Human Rights Law as a Legal Framework for the Consideration of State Preventive Detention Laws 3. The Preventive Detention of Suspected Terrorists Pursuant to a State of Emergency in International Human Rights Law. 4. Legitimate and Illegitimate Purposes of Preventive Detention. 5. The Way Forward – A Model Law for the Detention of Suspected Terrorists within a Criminal Law Framework. 6. Conclusions as to the Preventive Detention of Suspected Terrorists in International Law. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; ACHPR; AMR; UN charter; ICCPR; ICCPR-OP; ICESCR; UDHR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
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7. | Wilmshurst, Elizabeth : International law and the classification of conflicts, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International law and the classification of conflicts / Wilmshurst, Elizabeth, xxxix, 531 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2012. ISBN 978-0-19-965775-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I: 1: Elizabeth Wilmshurst: Introduction. 2. The nature of war and the character of contemporary armed conflict. 3. Classification of armed conflicts: relevant legal concepts. 4. Conflict classification and the law applicable to detention and the use of force. PART II : 5.: Steven Haines: Northern Ireland 1968-1998. 6. Louise Arimatsu: The Democratic Republic of the Congo 1993-2010. 7. Felicity Szesnat and Annie R. Bird: Colombia. 8. Francoise J. Hampson: Afghanistan 2001-2010. 9. Iain scobbie: Gaza. 10. Philip Leach: South Ossetia (2008). 11. Michael N. Schmitt: Iraq (2003 onwards). 12. Iain Scobbie : Lebanon 2006. 13. Noam Lubell: The war (?) agianst Al-Qaeda. 14. Michael N. Schmitt: Classification in future conflict. PART III: Conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Canada / Colombia / Germany / Israel / United Kingdom / USA NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; UDHR; ACHPR; AMR; Canadian charter of rights and freedoms; CAT; CEDAW; Ottawa convention; Refugee convention; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ICCPR; ICC statute; ICTY statute; |
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8. | Costa, Karen Da : Extraterritorial application of selected human rights treaties, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Extraterritorial application of selected human rights treaties / Costa, Karen Da - (Graduate Institute of international and development studies ; vol. 11), x, 324 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2013. ISBN 978-90-04-22837-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of contents:. INTRODUCTION. 1. ORIGINS OF THE CURRENT DEBATE. 2. OBJECT AND METHOD OF THE PRESENT INVESTIGATION. 3. ARE STATES BOUND BY HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES WHEN THEY OPERATE ABROAD?. A. MAIN ARGUMENTS SUPPORTING THE TERRITORIAL APPLICATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES. B. MAIN ARGUMENTS SUPPORTING THE EXTRATERRITORIAL APPLICATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS TREATIES. CHAPTER 1: THE INTERNATIONAL COVENANT ON CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS ON THE INTERPRETATION OF INTERNATIONAL TREATIES:. 1. WORDING AND ORIGINS. 2. HISTORY OF THE PROCEEDINGS. A. SPATIAL SCOPE OF THE COVENANT DURING THE INITIAL PHASE (1947-1948). B. RELEVANT DEVELOPMENTS DURING THE DRAFTING PHASE (1949-1954). C. RELEVANT DEVELOPMENTS DURING THE DELIBERATION PHASE (1954-1966). CONCLUSION: EXTRATERRITORIALITY IN THE PREPARATORY WORK OF THE ICCPR 3. THE JURISDICTIONAL CLAUSE OF THE ICCPR INTERPRETED BY MONITORING BODIES PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS. A. QUASI-JUDICIAL BODIES: THE POSITION OF THE HUMAN RIGHTS COMMITTEE. B. JUDICIAL BODIES: THE POSITION OF THE INTERNATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE. C. FURTHER INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS MECHANISMS: UN SPECIAL PROCEDURES CONCLUSION. CHAPTER 2: THE SPATIAL REACH OF THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN RIGHTS. INTRODUCTION. 1. WORDING AND ORIGINS OF ARTICLE 1 ECHR. 2. EUROPEAN COMMISSION OF HUMAN RIGHTS: ‘AUTHORITY AND CONTROL OVER PERSONS’. A. CASES RELATED TO DIPLOMATIC AND CONSULAR AUTHORITIES. B. CASES INVOLVING ARREST OR DETENTION OF PERSONS ABROAD. C. FURTHER EXERCISE OF PUBLIC POWERS ABROAD. D. CASES INVOLVING THE PRESENCE OF TROOPS ABROAD. CONCLUSION. 3. CASES BEFORE THE EUROPEAN COURT OF HUMAN RIGHTS. A. CASES BEFORE BANKOVIC'. B. THE BANKOVIC' CASE. C. FIRST CASES AFTER BANKOVIC'. D. LATER CASES AFTER BANKOVIC'. CHAPTER 3: THE CONVENTION AGAINST TORTURE. 1. A DIFFERENT TREATY COVERING AN ABSOLUTE RIGHT. 2. EXTENT OF STATES PARTIES’ OBLIGATIONS. A. STATES’ MAIN OBLIGATION UNDER THE CONVENTION AGAINST TORTURE. B. PREPARATORY WORK OF THE CONVENTION AGAINST TORTURE. 3. DOUBTS RAISED ON THE GEOGRAPHICAL EXTENT OF APPLICATION OF THE CAT. A. THE POSITION OF THE UNITED KINGDOM. B. THE POSITION OF THE UNITED STATES. C. THE POSITION OF THE COMMITTEE AS REFLECTED IN ITS FURTHER PRACTICE. CONCLUSION. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Austria / Belgium / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Cambodia / Canada / Costa rica / Cyprus / Denmark / France / Haiti / Iran / Iraq / Israel / Italy / Japan / Jordan / Kenya / Kuwait / Lebanon / Morocco / Netherlands / Palestine / Peru / Philippines / Poland / Romania / Russian Federation / Somalia / sweden / Switzerland / Turkey / Uganda / USA / Uruguay / USSR / Yugoslavia LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; CAT; ECHR; ICCPR; ICESCR;
URL http://www.brill.com/extraterritorial-application-selected-human-rights-treaties |
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9. | Sluiter, Göran ... [et al.] : International criminal procedure, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International criminal procedure : principles and rules / Sluiter, Göran ... [et al.], xxxvii, 1681 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U.P., 2013. ISBN 978-0-19-965802-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Håkan Friman, Suzanna Linton, Göran Sluiter, Sergey Vasiliev, Salvatore Zappalà: Introduction. I: GENERAL FRAMEWORK OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL PROCEDURE, by Lorenzo Gradoni, Dustin Lewis, Frederic Mégret, Sarah M.H. Nouwen, Jens David Ohlin, Astrid Reisinger-Coracini, Salvatore Zappalà. 2: Margaret deGuzman and Willian Schabas: Initiation of Investigation and Selection of Cases. 3: Karel de Meester, Kelly Pitcher, Rod Rastan, Göran Sluiter: Investigation, Coercive Measures, Arrest and Surrender. 4: Helen Brady, Matteo Costi, Håkan Friman, Fabricio Guariglia, Carl-Friedrich Stuckenberg: Charges. 5: Guido Acquaviva, Nancy Combs, Mikaela Heikkilä, Suzannah Linton, Yvonne McDermott, Sergey Vasiliev: Trial Process. 6: Gideon Boas, John Jackson, Barbara Roche, B. Don Taylor III: Appeals, Reviews, and Reconsideration. 7: Fergal Gaynor, Dow Jacobs, Mark Klamberg, and Vladimir Tochilovsky: The Law of Evidence. 8: Nina Jørgensen and Alexander Zahar: Deliberation, Dissent, Judgment. 9: Till Gut, Stefan Kirsch, Daryl Mundis, Melinda Taylor: Defence Issues. 10: Anne-Marie de Brouwer and Mikaela Heikkilä: Victim Issues: Participation, Protection, Reparation, and Assistance. 11: J. Iontcheva-Turner and Thomas Weigend: Negotiated Justice. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / Belgium / Canada / France / Germany / Ireland / Israel / Italy / Malawi / Netherlands / Singapore / South Africa / Spain / Switzerland / United Kingdom / USA NOTE (GENERAL): AMR; ACHPR; ECHR; ICCPR; ICC statute; ICTR statute; ICTY statute; IMT charter; UDHR; Genocide convention; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; LIBRARY LOCATION: VIB
URL http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/product/9780199658022.do#.Uba90neAk_w |
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10. | Cole, David (ed.) : Secrecy, national security and the vindication of constitutional law, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Secrecy, national security and the vindication of constitutional law / Cole, David (ed.) ; Fabbrini, Federico ; Vedaschi, Arianna, xi, 358 p.. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Publ., 2013. ISBN 978-1-78195-385-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents: Foreword Martin Scheinin CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction, by David Cole, Federico Fabbrini and Arianna Vedaschi. PART I: SECRECY AND COURTS:. 2. Terrorism and Security: Back to the Future?, by Lord Justice (retired) Stephen Sedley. 3. Oversight of National Security Secrecy in the United States, by Stephen Schulhofer. 4. Secrecy vs. Openness: Counterterrorism and the Role of the German Federal Constitutional Court, by Mindia Vashakmadze. 5. Formalism and State Secrets, by Sudha Setty. PART II: SECRECY AND LEGISLATURES:. 6. Direct and Indirect Access to Intelligence Information: Lessons in Legislative Oversight from the United States and Canada, by Kathleen Clark and Nino Lomjaria. 7. Arcana Imperii and Salus Rei Publicae: State Secrets Privilege and the Italian Legal Framework, by Arianna Vedaschi. PART III: SECRECY AND DETENTION:. 8. Managing Secrecy and its Migration in a Post-9/11 World, by Kent Roach. 9. National Security, Secret Evidence and Preventive Detentions: The Israeli Supreme Court as a Case Study, by Shiri Krebs. 10. Secrecy and Control Orders: The Role and Vulnerability of Constitutional Values in the United Kingdom and Australia, by Andrew Lynch, Tamara Tulich and Rebecca Welsh. 11. Comparative Advantages: Secret Evidence and ‘Cleared Counsel’ in the United States, the United Kingdom and Canada, by David Cole and Stephen I. Vladek. PART IV: SECRECY AND CRIMINAL TRIALS:. 12. The Normalization of Anonymous Testimony, by Jason Mazzone and Tobias Fischer. 13. Terrorists on Trial: An Open or Closed Case?, by Clive Walker. 14. In/Visible Courts: Military Tribunals as Other Spaces, by Ori Aronson. PART V: SECRECY AND ADMINISTRATIVE MEASURES:. 15. Administrative Counter-Terrorism Measures – A Strategy to Circumvent Human Rights in the Fight Against Terrorism?, by Tuomas Ojanen. 16. Secret Evidence in EU Security Law: Special Advocates before the Court of Justice?, by Cian C. Murphy. 17. Global Sanctions, State Secrets and Supranational Review: Seeking Due Process in an Interconnected World, by Federico Fabbrini. 18. Secrecy Regulation by the European Union Inside Out, by Deirdre Curtin. 19. Concluding Remarks, by Justice (retired) Lech Garlicki. Index INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / Canada NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; Canadian charter of rights and freedoms; |
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11. | Juss, Satvinder S. (ed.) : Contemporary issues in refugee law, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Contemporary issues in refugee law / Juss, Satvinder S. (ed.) ; Harvey, Colin, xi, 324 s.. - Cheltenham, UK : Edward Elgar, 2013. ISBN 978-1-78254-765-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Introduction, by Satvinder Singh Juss and Colin Harvey. PART I: OF REFUGEE ‘CRISIS’, NORMATIVE ‘SOFT LAWS’ AND ‘HUMAN RIGHTS’:. 1. Refugee Law as Perpetual Crisis, by Catherine Dauvergne. 2. The UNHCR Handbook and the Interface between ‘Soft Law’ and ‘Hard Law’ in International Refugee Law, by Satvinder Singh Juss. 3. Is Humanity Enough? Refugees, Asylum Seekers and the Rights Regime, by Colin Harvey. PART II: OF THE ADVENT OF NEW REFUGEES:. 4. A Child Rights Framework for Assessing the Status of Refugee Children, by Jason M. Pobjoy. 5. Protecting Trafficked Persons from Refoulement: Re-examining the Nexus, by Susan Kneebone. 6. Draft Dodger/Deserter or Dissenter? Conscientious Objection as Grounds for Refugee Status, by Penelope Mathew. 7. Gender Asylum Law: Providing Transformative Remedies?, by Siobhán Mullally. PART III: OF THE SECURITIZATION, EXCLUSION AND INTERNAL RELOCATION OF REFUGEES:. 8. The Securitization of Asylum and Human Rights in Canada and the European Union, by Idil Atak and François Crépeau. 9. Ethics and the Exclusion of Those who are ‘Not Deserving’ of Convention Refugee Status, by James C. Simeon. 10. Internal Relocation Alternative in Refugee Status Determination: Is the Risk/Protection Dichotomy Reality or Myth? A Gendered Analysis, by Rebecca Wallace. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; CRC; CAT; Refugee convention; Convention against transnational organised crime; UDHR; |
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12. | Grabenwarter, Christoph : European convention on human rights, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph European convention on human rights : commentary / Grabenwarter, Christoph, xix, 555 p.. - München : Beck Verlag, 2014. ISBN 978-3-406-60321-1 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR;
URL http://www.hartpub.co.uk/BookDetails.aspx?ISBN=9781849461917 |
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13. | Smyth, Ciara : European asylum law and the rights of the child, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph European asylum law and the rights of the child / Smyth, Ciara, x, 250 p.. - London : Routledge, 2014. ISBN 978-0-415-85501-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction to European asylum law. 2. Introduction to the rights of the child and their relationship to European asylum law. 3. The right of the child to seek and quality for international protection. 4. The right of the child to be heard. 5. The right of the child to protection and care. 6. Certain socio-economic rights of the child. 7. The right of the child to liberty. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; Refugee convention; ICCPR; ICESCR; ECHR; TEU; EU charter of fundamental rights LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt |
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14. | van Kempen, P.H.P.H.M.C. (ed.) : Criminal law and human rights, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Criminal law and human rights / van Kempen, P.H.P.H.M.C. (ed.) - (The International library of essays on criminal law), xxxiii, 455 p.. - Farnham : Ashgate, 2014. ISBN 978-1-4094-6098-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Andrew Ashwort (2006): Four threats to the presumption of innocence. 2. Douglass Cassel (2008): Pretrial and preventive detention of suspected terrorists: Options and constraints under international law. 3. Andrew E. Taslitz (2007): Privacy as struggle. 4. Stefan Trechsel (1997): Why must trials be fair?. 5. John Jackson (2009): Re-conceptualizing the right of silence as an effective fair trial standard. 6. Richard D. Friedman (1998): Confrontation: the search for basic principles. 7. Miriam Guy-Arye and Florian Jessberger (2011): The protection of human dignity in interrogations: may interrogative torture ever be tolerated? Reflections in light of recent German and Israeli experiences. 8. Ian Dennis (2000): Rethinking double jeopardy: justice and finality in criminal process. 9. Fernando Felipe Basch (2007): The doctrine of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights regarding states' duty to punish human rights violations and its dangers. 10. Jerome Hall (1937): Nulla poena sine lege. 11. Michel Rosenfeld (2003): Hate speech in constitutional jurisprudence: a comparative analysis. 12. Piet Hein van Kempen (2012): Freedom of religion and criminal law: a legal appraisal. From the principle of separation of church and state to the principle of pluralist democracy. 13. Michaël Fischer (1998): The human rights implications of a 'cultural defence'. 14. Dirk van Zyl Smit (2006): Life imprisonment: recent issues in national and international law. INDEX WORDS:
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15. | Pickering, Sharon (ed.) : The Routledge handbook on crime and international migration, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The Routledge handbook on crime and international migration / Pickering, Sharon (ed.) ; Ham, Julie (ed.), xxix, 417 p.. - London : Routledge, 2015. ISBN 9780415823944 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Sharon Pickering and Julie Ham: Introduction. 1. Rebecca Wickes and Michelle Sydes: Immigration and crime. 2. Marjorie S. Zatz and Hilary Smith: Understanding immigration, crime and victimization in the United States: patterns and paradoxes in tradition. 3. Amber L. Beckley, Johan Kardell and Jerzy Sarnecki: Immigration and crime in Sweden. 4. Ben Bowling and James Sheptycki: Global policing, mobility and social control. 5. Karine Côté-Boucher: Bordering citizenship in 'an open and generous society': the criminalization of migration in Canada. 6. Mary Bosworth and Sarah Turnbull: Immigration detention, punishment and the criminalization of migration. 7. Thomas Ugelvik: The incarceration of foreigners in European prisons. 8. Michael Grewcock: Reinventing 'the stain': bad character and criminal deportation in contemporary Australia. 9. Dean Wilson: Border militarization, technology and crime control. 10. Leanne Weber: Deciphering deportation practices across the Global North. 11. Francesco Vecchio and Alsion Gerard: Surviving the politics of illegality. 12. Claudia Tazreiter: (Un)knowing and ambivalence in migration: temporary migration status and its impacts on the everyday life of insecure communities. 13. Julie Ham: Intuiting illegality in sex work. 14. Lea Sitkin: The state's contradictory response to the exploitation of immigrant workers: the UK case. 15. Julie P. Stumpf: Crimmigration: encountering the leviathan. 16. Ana Aliverti: Criminal immigration law and human rights in Europe. 17. Catherine Dauvergne: War crimes and asylum in Canada: reflections on the Ezokola decision and the barriers courts face in protecting refugees. 18. Gabriella Sanchez: Human smuggling facilitators in the US Soutwest. 19. Sonja Milivojevic: Stopped in the traffic, not stopping the traffic; gender, asylum and anti-trafficking interventions in Serbia. 20. Marie Segrave: Labour trafficking and illegal markets. 21. Karen Joe Laidler and Maggy Lee: Border trading and policing of everyday life in Hong Kong. 22. Penny Green, Kristian Lasslett and Angela Sherwood: Enclosing the commons: predatory capital and forced evictions in Papua New Guinea and Burma. 23. Doris Marie Provine and Marjorie S. Zatz: Borders, crime and justice. 24. Jude McCulloch and Jacqui True: Shifting borders: crime, borders, international relations and criminology. 25. Sharon Pickering, Mary Bosworth and Katja Franko Aas: The criminology of mobility. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / Burma / Canada / Hong Kong / Papua New Guinea / Serbia / Sweden / United Kingdom / United States LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR Inst.ref. |
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16. | João Guia, Maria (ed.) : Immigration detention, risk and human rights, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Immigration detention, risk and human rights : studies on immigration and crime / João Guia, Maria (ed.) ; Koulish, Robert (ed.) ; Mitsilegas, Valsamis (ed.), xvii, 293 p.. - Heidelberg : Springer, 2016. ISBN 978-3-319-24688-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Robert Koulish: Sovereign bias, crimmigration and risk. 2. Michael Flynn: Sovereign discomfort: can liberal norms lead to increasing immigration detention?. 3. Valsamis Mitsilegas: Immigration detention, risk and human rights in the law of the European Union: lessons from the Returns Directive. 4. Marloes Anne Vrolijk: Immigration detention and non-removability before the European Court of Human Rights. 5. Galina Cornelisse: Immigration detention: an instrument in the fight against illegal immigration or a tool for its management?. 6. Dr. Charles Gosme: Trapped between administrative detention, imprisonment, and freedom-in-limbo. 7. Larissa Leite: Immunity from criminal prosecution and consular assistance to the foreign detainee according the international human rights law. 8. Elspeth Guild: Understanding immigration detention in the UK and Europe. 9. Mary Boswoth, Andriani Fili and Sharon Pickering: Women's immigration detention in Greece: gender, control and capacity. 10.Steven De Ridder and Maartje van der Woude: Changing practices regarding the implementation of entry bans in Belgian migration policy since 1980. 11. José Angel Brandariz Garcia: Crimmigation politics and the great recession: analysis of the Spanish case. 12. Katia Cardoso: "Immigrants as detainees": some reflections based on abyssal thinking and other critical approaches. 13. Mark Noferi: Mandatory immigration detention for U.S. crimes: the noncitizen presumption of dangerousness. 14. Christina M. Fialho: Let us in: an argument for the right to visitation in U.S. immigration detention. 15. Gabriel Haddad Teixeira: Who wants to go to Arizona? A brief survey of ciminalization of immigration law in the U.S. context. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Belgium / Brazil / Greece / Spain / United Kingdom / United States |
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17. | Augustin, Julian : Fie Rückführungsrichtlinie der Europäischen Union, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Fie Rückführungsrichtlinie der Europäischen Union : Richtliniendogmatik, Durchführungspflichten, Reformbedarf / Augustin, Julian, xxi, 591 p.. - Berlin : Berliner Wissenschafts-Verlag (BWV), 2016. ISBN 978-3-8305-3579-9 LANGUAGE: GER ABSTRACT: ERSTES KAPITEL:. !. Pflichten aus einer EU-Richtlinie. 2. Durchführungsbedarf. 3. Die Auslegung von Richtlinienbestimmungen. ZWEITES KAPITEL:. 1. Gegenstand der Richtlinie (Art. 1 RüFüRL). 2. Anwendungsbereich (Art. 2 und Art. 4 Abs. 4 RüFüRL). 3. Begriffsbestimmungen (Art. 3 RüFüRL). 4. Günstigere Bestimmungen (Art. 4 Abs. 1 bis 3 RüFüRL) 5. Richtlinienbestimmung des Art. 5 RüFüRL. 6. Rückkehrentscheidung (Art. 6 RüFüRL). 7. Freiwillige Ausreise (Art. 7 und Art. 3 Nr. 8 RüFüRL). 8. Abschiebung (Art. 8 RüFüRL) 9. Abschiebungsaufschub (Art. 9 RüFüRL) 10. Modifikationen zugunsten unbegleiteter Minderjähriger (Art. 10 RüFüRL) 11. Wiedereinreiseverbot (Art. 11 RüFüRL). 12. Formvorschriften (Art. 12 RüFûRL). 13. Rechtsbehelfe (Art. 13 RüFüRL). 14. Garantie bis zur Rückkehr (Art. 14 RüFûRL). 15. Inhaftnahme für die Zwecke der Abschiebung (Art. 15 und Art. 17 Abs. 1 RüFüRL). 16. Haftbedingungen (Art. 16, 17 Abs. 2 bis 5 RüFûRL). 17. Spezielle Regelungen für Notlagen (Art. 18 RüFüRL). 18. Berichterstattung durch die EU-Kommission (Art. 19). 19. Fristen für die legislative Durchführung (Art. 20). 20. Durchführungspflichten der Art. 21 bis 23 RüFüRL. DRITTES KAPITEL:. 1. Konkrete inhaltliche Änderungsvorschläge. 2. Deklaratorische Änderungsvorschläge. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Directive 2008/115/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 16 December 2008 on common standards and procedures in Member States for returning illegally staying third-country nationals |
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18. | Zeegers, Krit : International criminal tribunals and human rights law, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International criminal tribunals and human rights law : adherence and contextualization / Zeegers, Krit, xii, 434 p. - The Hague : T.M.C. Asser Press, 2016. ISBN 978-94-6265-101-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction. 2. Human rights obligations of the ICTs under international law. 3. Human rights obligations of the ICTs based on their internal law and practice. 4. The right to privacy and investigative measures. 5. The right to liberty and provisional release. 6. The right to be tried without undue delay. 7. Adherence and contextualization: towards a methodological framework for the interpretation and application of human rights norms. 8. Summary and conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
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19. | Fabbrini, Federico (ed.) : Constitutionalism across borders in the struggle against terrorism, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Constitutionalism across borders in the struggle against terrorism / Fabbrini, Federico (ed.) ; Jackson, Vicki C. (ed.), viii, 359 p. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Publishing, 2016. ISBN 978-1-78471-538-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Federico Fabbrini and Vicki C. Jackson: Introduction. 2. Martin Scheinin: United Nations law: substantive constitutionalism through human rights versus formal hierarchy through Article 103 of the Charter. 3. Erika de Wet: (Implicit) judicial favoring of human rights over United Nations Security Council sanctions: a manifestation of international constitutionalism?. 4. Karen Cooper and Clive Walker: Heroic or hapless? The legal reform of counter-terrorism financial sanctions regimes in the European Union. 5. Cian C. Murphy: The dynamics of transnational counter-terrorism law: towards a methodology, map, and critique. 6. Vicki C. Jackson: Translating rights across centuries: U.S. constitutional protection against unreasonable searches and seizures in a transnational era. 7. Akiko Ejima: Japanese efforts to have a secrecy law and a 'National Security Council': a runner who is one lap behind? Or good things come to those who wait?. 8. Kim Lane Scheppele: The deep dilemma of evidence in the global anti-terror campaign. 9. David Cole and Federico Fabbrini: Reciprocal privacy: towards a transatlantic agreement. 10. Jennifer Daskal: Transnational seizures: the constitution and criminal procedure abroad. 11. Brice Dickson: The extra-territorial obligations of European states regarding human rights in the context of terrorism. 12. Jonathan Hafetz: Detention at sea: the persistence of territorial constraints on constitutional rights. 13. Anna Su: The extraterritorial First Amendment. 14. Or Bassok: Missing in action: the human eye. 15. Stephen Ellmann: Unraveling the law of war. 16. Lech Garlicki: Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Japan / United States NOTE (MEETINGS): Conference of the Research Group on 'Constitutional Responses to Terrorism' of the International Association of Constitutional Law, Harvard Law School, March 2014 |
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20. | Costello, Cathryn : The human rights of migrants and refugees in European law, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The human rights of migrants and refugees in European law / Costello, Cathryn, 356 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2016. ISBN 978-0-19-964474-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Destination Europe. 2. The human rights of migrants and refugees in a pluralist setting. 3. Constructing migration status. 4. Human rights to family life and family migration. 5. Defining protection: refugeehood, non-refoulement, and human rights. 6. Access to protection. 7. Immigration detention. 8. Conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; Refugee convention |
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21. | Ghezelbash, Daniel : Refuge lost, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Refuge lost : asylum law in an interdependent world / Ghezelbash, Daniel, 207 p. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2018. ISBN 978-1-108-44141-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction. 2. Managing asylum-seeker flows in the twenty-first century. 3. Long-term mandatory immigration detention. 4. Maritime interdiction. 5. Extraterritorial processing. 6. International law. 7. Lessons for other jurisdictions INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / United States |
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22. | Nowak, Manfred : Torture, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Torture : an expert's confrontation with an everyday evil / Nowak, Manfred, 199 p. - Philadephia : University of Pennsylvania Press, 2018. ISBN 978-0-8122-4991-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: The phenomenon of torture in the twenty-first century. 1. The incomprehensibility of torture. 2. The role of a United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture. 3. Independent investigation of torture: methods. 4. States' methods to impede objective investigations. 5. Are fact-finding missions dangerous?. 6. Understanding toture and ill-treatment. 7. Inhuman detention conditions: worse than torture?. 8. Is corporal punishment torture?. 9. Is capital punishment torture?. 10. Is domestic violence or female genital mutilation torture?. 11. Torture in the twenty-first century. 12. Why torture?. 13. Is there ever a justification for torture?. 14. George Bush's war on terror. 15. Torture and enforced disappearance. Part II: Torture in individual states. 16. Georgia: plea bargaining as a substitute for torture?. 17. Mongolia: dealth penalty as a state secret. 18. Nepal: "a little bit of torture helps". 19. China: rehabilitation, reeducation, or brainwashing?. 20. Jordan: general intelligence as a cradle of torture. 21. Austria: the case of Bakary Jassey. 22. Paraguay: excellent follow-up. 23. Nigeria: notorius torture chamber in Lagos. 24. Togo: successfully releasing detainees. 25. Sri Lanka: Perfect PR strategy. 26. Indonesia: three "smoking guns". 27. Denmark and Greenland: the principle of normalization. 28. Moldova: torture in the form of trafficking in women. 29. Equatorial Guinea: systematic torture as government policy. 30. Uruguay: full coperation despite appalling conditions. 31. Kazakhstan: Potemkin villages. 32. Jamaica: structural violence instead of torture. 33. Papua New Guinea: traditional structures coexist with globalization. 34. Greece: the joint asylum and migration policy of the European Union, put to the test. Conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
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23. | Guild, Elspeth (ed.) : Extraordinary rendition, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Extraordinary rendition : addressing the challenges of accountability / Guild, Elspeth (ed.) ; Bigo, Didier (ed.) ; Gibney, Mark (ed.), 315 p. - London : Routledge, 2018. ISBN 978-0-8153-8780-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: The Feinstein Report and its broader implications. 1. Elspeth Guild: The US Senate Select Intelligence Committee report (Feinstein Report) on the CIA extraordinary rendition programme: perspectives from Europe. 2. Didier Bigo: Dramaturgy of suspicion and the emergence of a transnational guild of extraction of information by torture at a distance. 3. Crofton Black: Foreign 'liaison partners' and the CIA's economy of detention. PART II: Achieving accountability?. 4. Arianna Vedashi: Extraordinary renditions: a practice beyond traditional justice. 5. Barbara Grabowska-Moroz: The Polish roadmap to accountability: why the implementation of Al Nashiri and Abu Zubaydah judgments is so highly problematic. 6. Frances Webber: The UK: the role of rendition and torture in the battle to end judicial deference. 7. Eva Nanopoulos: Extraordinary rendition, secrecy and the UK Security Constitution. 8. Didier Bigo and Emmanuel-Pierre Guittet: The quest for absolution and immunity: justifying past and future torture in the name of democracy. PART III: (Re-)establishing the rule of law. 9. Mark Gibney: Extraordinary rendition, the American judiciary, and the failure of the 'territorial' approach in both international and domestic law. 10. Elspeth Guild and Didier Bigo: Democratic oversight and the CIA's extraordinary rendition programme in Europe. 11. Carla Ferstman: The International Criminal Court Prosecutor's preliminary examination on Afghanistan and possible impacts on accountability for secret detention and rendition. INDEX WORDS:
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24. | De Hert, Paul (ed.) : Convergences and divergences between international human rights, international humanitarian and international criminal law, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Convergences and divergences between international human rights, international humanitarian and international criminal law / De Hert, Paul (ed.) ; Smis, Stefaan (ed.) ; Holvoet, Mathias (ed.), xvi, 298 p. - Cambridge : Intersentia, 2018. ISBN 978-1-78068-640-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: CONVERGENCES AND DIVERGENCES BETWEEN INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW AND INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW STRICTO SENSU. 1. Patricia Pinto Soares and Gerhard Kreutzer: Catalytic, gap-filling or retardant effects of ICL on HRL: quid juris. 2. Damien Scalia: Use of human rights in international criminal law: influence or appearances of legitimacy?. 3. Maria Aksenova: The future of the International Criminal Court: a non-human rights body?. PART II: CONVERGENCES AND DIVERGENCES BETWEEN INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW AND TRANSNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW. 4. Amy Weatherburn: Strengthening action to end forced labour: the ILO Forced Labour Protocol and states' positive human rights obligations. 5. Valentina Milano: The international law of human trafficking: at the forefront of the convergence between transnational criminal law and international human rights law?. 6. Mirja Ciesiolka: International security and financial stability: resolving norm conflicts between anti-corruption and individual rights. PART III. CONVERGENCES AND DIVERGENCES BETWEEN INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW AND INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW. 7. Federica Favuzza: 'It was the best of times, it was the worst of times': a tale of detention in time of emergency. 8. Cedric De Koker: The European Court of Human Rights' approach to armed conflict and humanitarian law: ivory tower or pas de deux?. 9. Deborah Casalin: Prohibitions on arbitrary displacement in international humanitarian law and human rights: a time and a place for everything. 10. Vito Todeschini: Investigations in armed conflict: understanding the interaction between international humanitarian law and human rights law. Paul De Hert, Stefaan Smis and Mathias Holvoet: Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
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