1. | Mawani, Nurjehan : Introduction to the immigration and refugee board of Canada guidelines on gender-related persecution, 1993 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Introduction to the immigration and refugee board of Canada guidelines on gender-related persecution / Mawani, Nurjehan REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): International journal of refugee law : vol. 5; no. 2., p. 240-247. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 1993. - ISSN 0953-8186 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: China NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR-3-5; Refugee convention |
|
2. | Luopajärvi, Katja : Kvinnlig könsstympning som könsbetingad förföljelse, 2000 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: unpublished document Kvinnlig könsstympning som könsbetingad förföljelse / Luopajärvi, Katja, 92 p. . - Åbo : Åbo Akademi. Rättsvetenskapliga institutionen, 2000. LANGUAGE: SWE INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Sweden / Finland / Canada / USA / Australia NOTE (THESIS): Master's thesis in public international law, 2000, [T] NOTE (GENERAL): Refugee convention; Cartagena declaration on refugees; LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: seminarierummet |
|
3. | Hocking, Barbara Ann : Confronting the possible eugenics of the past through modern pressures for compensation, 2000 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Confronting the possible eugenics of the past through modern pressures for compensation / Hocking, Barbara Ann REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Nordic journal of international law : vol. 69; no. 4., p. 501-512. - Hague : Kluwer Law, 2000. - ISSN 0902-7351 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Compensation is a primary legal mechanism to provide recompense for harm. It is a feature of both common (Anglo-Celtic) law and of civil (European) law systems. In both systems it deals with harms that occur across the world. It has featured in particular in claims for product liability, vehicle accident and workplace accident related harm. This form of claim is common to both the common law and the civil law system, although each system of law has developed distinctive features. While there are differences between the common law and the civil law jurisdictions in this context, there have been distinctive, new, and common, features to emerge from the concept of compensation over the past decade. Chief among these is the search for a unifying principle of compensation, one that can encompass the most recent pressure upon this area of law: compensation that reflects reparation for wrongs now the subject of broad human rights and humanitarian concern. Such wrongs include criminal actions by the state, and breaches of duty of care by state bodies leading to abuse and neglect of children. This paper will canvass some recent cross-jurisdictional cases with a view to establishing commonalities in the quest for a global shift from compensation to reparation. It looks in particular at compensation in the context of earlier governmental policies that have since been considered to contain or imply notions of eugenics. In keeping with two earlier papers published in this journal, the paper notes that while this is a matter of international concern, there can be a constructive comparative focus in examining both Australia and Sweden. The primary concern of the paper is to raise issues that concern the future of genetic research, placing that future in a reflective past context. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Sweden / Australia |
|
4. | Gardam, Judith G. : Women, armed conflict and international law, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Women, armed conflict and international law / Gardam, Judith G. ; Jarvis, Michelle, xv, 290 p.. - Hague : Kluwer Law, 2001. ISBN 90-411-1640-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Women, Armed Conflict and International Law. 2. The Impact of Armed Conflict on Women. 3.International Humanitarian Law, Women and Armed Conflict. 4. A Gender View of the Shaping of IHL. 5. UN Developments Concerning Women and Armed Conflict. 6. International Redress. 7. The Way Forward. A Final Word. Bibliography. Index. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Algeria / Angola / Argentina / Azerbaijan / Bangladesh / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Cambodia / Chechnya / Croata / Cyprus / east Timor / El Salvador / Georgia / Kenya / Kuwait / Namibia / Pakistan / Papa New Guinea / Peru / Philippines / Rwanda / Sierra Leone / Somalia / South Africa / Sri Lanka / Sudan / Uganda / Viet nam LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): Beijing platform of action; CEDAW; CEDAW-OP; CRC; DEDAW; Geneva conventions; Genocide convention; Hague conventions; ICESCR; Nuremberg charter; Ottawa convention; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; UDHR; |
|
5. | Monitoring the EU accession process, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Monitoring the EU accession process : minority protection : country reports / - (EU accession monitoring program), 548 p.. - Budapest : Central European U. P., 2001. ISBN 1-891385-19-4 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Bulgaria / Czech Republic / Estonia / Hungary / Latvia / Lithuania / Poland / Romania / Greece / Slovakia / Slovenia NOTE (GENERAL): Race equality directive (EU); CERD-14; ECHR-14; ICCPR-26; European convention on nationality; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; European charter for regional or minority languages; Framework convention for the protection of national minorities; EU charter of fundamental rights; ECHR-6; TEU; Treaty of Nice; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt |
|
6. | Promoting women's rights as human rights, 1999 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Promoting women's rights as human rights / - (Studies on women in development ; 2), vi, 145 p.. - New York : United Nations, 1999. ISBN 92-1-120003-2 LANGUAGE: ENG DOCUMENT SYMBOL: E.00.II.F.53 ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART ONE : Report of the Expert Group meeting on promoting women's rights as human rights. PART TWO : Conclusions and recommendations, follow-up action and general statement of the xpert group meeting. PART THREE : Country reports INDEX WORDS:
|
|
7. | The medical profession & human rights , 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The medical profession & human rights : handbook for a changing agenda /, xxxiii, 561 p.. - London : Zed, 2001. ISBN 1-85649-612-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Introduction: A Changing Agenda. 1. Medical Ethics and Professional Standards. 2. Ethics, Morals Rights and Needs. 3. Why Abuse Occurs. 4. Torture, Cruel and Degrading Treatment. 5. Prison Doctors. 6. The Forensic Doctor. 7. Capital and Corporal Punishment. 8. Trade in Organs. 9. Research and Experimentation on Humans. 10. Neutrality. 11. Doctors and Weapons. 12. The Abuse of Institutionalised Patients. 13. Health as a Human Rights Objective. 14. Human Rights of Vulnerable Women and Children. 15. Doctors and Asylum Seekers. 16. Rehabilitation. 17. Truth or Justice. 18. Teaching Ethics and Human Rights. 19. The Role of Professional Associations. 20. Recommendations. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): World charter of medicine; |
|
8. | Scales-Trent, Judy : Racial purity laws in the United States and Nazi Germany, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Racial purity laws in the United States and Nazi Germany : the targeting process / Scales-Trent, Judy REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Human rights quarterly : vol. 23; no. 2., p. 259-307. - Baltimore, MA : John Hopkins Univ., 2001. - ISSN 0275-0392 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
URL http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/human_rights_quarterly/v023/23.2scales_trent.html#I |
|
9. | Dörmann, Knut : Elements of war crimes under the Rome statute of the International Criminal Court, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Elements of war crimes under the Rome statute of the International Criminal Court : sources and commentary / Dörmann, Knut ; with contributions by Louise Doswald-Beck ; Kolb, Robert, lv, 524 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2002. ISBN 0-521-81852-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction. 2. Legal value of the elements of crime. 3. General Introduction adopted by the PrepCom. 4. Introduction to elements of war crimes listed in Art. 8 of the Rome Statute. 5. Article 8 Paragraph 2 (a) ICC Statute: GRAVE BREACHES OF THE 1949 GENEVA CONVENTIONS. 6. Article 8 Paragraph 2 (b) ICC Statute: OTHER SERIOUS VIOLATIONS OF THE LAWS AND CUSTOMS APPLICABLE IN INTERNATIONAL ARMED CONFLICT. 7. Article 8 Paragraph 2 (c) ICC Statute: VIOLATIONS OF COMMON ARTICLE 3 OF THE 1949 GENEVA CONVENTIONS. 8. Article 8 Paragraph 2 (e) ICC Statute: OTHER SERIOUS VIOLATIONS OF THE LAWS AND CUSTOMS APPLICABLE IN ARMED CONFLICTS NOT OF AN INTERNATIONAL CHARACTER; Annexes; Table of case law INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): The statute of the ICC; Geneva conventions; Agenda for peace;
URL http://titles.cambridge.org/catalogue.asp?isbn=0521818524 |
|
10. | Fox, Jonathan : Patterns of discrmination, grievances and political activity among Europe's Roma, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Patterns of discrmination, grievances and political activity among Europe's Roma : a cross -sectional analysis / Fox, Jonathan REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Journal on ethnopolitics and minority issues in Europe (=JEMIE) : Winter 2001/2., 25 p.. - Flensburg : European Centre for Minority Issues, 2001. - ISSN 1617-5247 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
|
|
11. | Dauvergne, Catherine : Chinese fleeing sterilisation, 1998 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Chinese fleeing sterilisation : Asutralia's response against a Canadian backdrop / Dauvergne, Catherine REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): International journal of refugee law : vol. 10; no. 1/2., p. 77-96. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 1998. - ISSN 1464-3715 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Canada / Australia NOTE (GENERAL): Refugee convention;
URL http://www3.oup.co.uk/reflaw/hdb/Volume_10/Issue_1/ |
|
12. | McLean, Sheila (ed.) : Medical law and ethics, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Medical law and ethics / McLean, Sheila (ed.) - (International library of essays in law andlegal theory : second series), xxiii, 577 p.. - Aldershot : Ashgate, 2002. ISBN 0-7546-2003-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS: PART I : NEGLIENCE/CONSENT: 1.Marjorie Maguire Shultz (1985) : From Informed Consent to Patient Choice: A New Protected Interest. 2. Gerald Robertson (1981): Informed Consent to Medical Treatment. 3. Danuta Mendelson (1996): Historical Evolution and Modern Implications of Concepts of Consent to and Refusal of, Medical Treatment in the Law of Trespass. 4. Allen Buchanan (1978) : Medical Paternalism. PART II : REPRODUCTION: 5. Ronald Dworkin (1993): The Morality of Abortion. 6. Sheila A.M. McLean (1990): Abortion Law: Is Consensual Reform Possible?. 7. David W. Meyers (1970): Compulsory Sterilization and Castration. 8. Margaret Brazier (1999): Regulating the Reproduction Business?. 9. Susan S. Mattingly (1992) : The Maternal-Fetal Dyad: Exploring the Two-Patient Obstetric Model. 10. Dawn E. Johnsen (1986) The Creation of Fetal Rights: Conflicts with Women's Constitutional Rights to Liberty, Privacy and Equal Protection. 11. George J. Annas (1988): She's Going to Die: The Case of Angela C. 12. J.K. Mason (2000): Unwanted Pregnancy: A Case of Retroversion?. PART III : HUMAN EXPERIMENTATION AND RESEARCH: 13. Henry K. Beecher (1966): Ethics and Clinical Research. 14. Alastair V. Campbell (1989) : A Report from New Zealand: An Unfortunate Experiment. 15. Ian Kennedy (1998) : Research and Experimentation. PART IV : DEATH AND DYING: 16. Helga Kuhse (1999): Some Reflections on the Problem of Advance Directives, Personhood and Personal Identity. 17. John A. Robertson (1991): Second thoughts on Living Wills. 18. Joanne Lynn and Joan M. Teno (1993): After the Patient Self-determination Act: The Need for Empirical Research on Advance Directives. 19. Linda L. Emanuel and Ezekiel J. Emanuel (1993): Decisions at the End of Life: Guided by Communities of Patients. 20. Ann Sommerville (1996): Are Advance Directives Really the Answer? And What Was the Question?. 21. John Keown (1995): Euthanasia in The Netherlands: Sliding down the Slippery Slope?. 22. John Griffiths (1995): Assisted Suicide in The Netherlands: The Chabot Case. 23. Jonathan Glover (1977): Not Striving to Keep Alive. Name index. INDEX WORDS:
URL https://www.ashgate.com/shopping/title.asp?key1=&key2=&orig=results&isbn=0%207546%202003%204 |
|
13. | Crawley, Heaven : Refugees and gender, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Refugees and gender : law and process / Crawley, Heaven, xxxvi, 379 p.. - Bristol : Jordan Publishing, 2001. ISBN 0-85308-690-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Chapter 1 : Refugee Women and the Asylum Determination Process. Introduction The experiences of refugee women The international framework for protection The concepts of 'gender' and 'gender related persecution' Reconciling universal human rights and cultural relativism National and international initiatives Chapter 2 : A Theoretical Overview : Feminist critiques of international refugee law The public/private dichotomy The concept of 'politics' Gender, nationalism and the State Chapter 3 : A Gendered Framework for the Analysis of Asylum Claims : Content versus interpretation Framework for the analysis The meaning of 'serious harm' The failure of State protection Establishing the Refugee Convention ground Chapter 4 : Women's Political Participation and Resistance : Women and politics Serious harm The failure of State protection Refugee Convention grounds Chapter 5 : Gendered Social Mores and the Concept of 'Honour' : Gender, sexuality and the concept of 'honour' Serious harm The failure of State protection Refugee Convention grounds Chapter 6 : Violence Within the Family : Definitions of violence within the family Serious harm The failure of State protection Refugee Convention grounds Sources of information and support Chapter 7 : Reproductive Rights Including Forced Sterilisation and Abortion : The concept of reproductive rights Serious harm The failure of State protection Refugee Convention grounds Sources of information and support Chapter 8 : Sexual Orientation : Sexual orientation as the basis of an asylum claim Serious harm The failure of State protection Refugee Convention grounds Sources of information and support Chapter 9 : Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) : The practice of female genital mutilation (FGM) FGM as the basis of an asylum claim Serious harm The failure of State protection Refugee Convention grounds Sources on information and support Chapter 10 : Procedural and Evidential Issues : Current procedures Derivative status or independent claim? Finding out about women's experiences Credibility Supporting evidence The standard of proof A note on the appeals process Campaigning APPENDICES Appendix 1 UNHCR EXCOM Resolutions on Refugee Women Appendix 2 CIRB Guidelines on Women Refugee Claimants Fearing Gender-Related Persecution (Canada) (November 1996) Appendix 3 RWLG Gender Guidelines for the Determination of Asylum Claims in the UK (July 1998) Appendix 4 ADIMA Guidelines on Gender Issues for Decision-Makers (Australia) (July 1996) Appendix 5 European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) (4 November 1950) Appendix 6 IAA Asylum Gender Guidelines (November 2000) Appendix 7 International Instruments and Where to Obtain them Appendix 8 Relevant Extracts from the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), the UN Declaration on the Elimination of Violence and the UN Platform for Action Appendix 9 The Michigan Guidelines on the International Protection Alternative (April 999) Appendix 10 Asylum Directorate Instructions on the Meaning of 'Particular Social Group' Appendix 11 Addressing Claims Based on Sexual Orientation (CCR) Appendix 12 Gender-Sensitive Techniques for Interviewing Women Refugees (UNHCR) USEFUL ADDRESSES AND CONTACT INFORMATION SOURCES OF INFORMATION AND SUPPORT ON THE INTERNET BIBLIOGRAPHY INDEX INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / Canada / United Kingdom / France / Germany / Rwanda / Former Yugoslavia / Turkey NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW; ECHR; |
|
14. | Dinstein, Yoram : The conduct of hostilities under the law of international armed conflict, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The conduct of hostilities under the law of international armed conflict / Dinstein, Yoram, xx, 275 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2004. ISBN 0-521-83436-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I. The General Framework: 1. The sources; 2. The semantics; 3. Inter-state armed conflicts; 4. Military necessity and humanitarian considerations; 5. Humanitarian law and human rights; 6. Dissemination; PART II. Lawful Combatancy: 7. Combatants and civilians; 8. Lawful and unlawful combatants; 9. The entitlement to prisoners of war status under customary international law; 10. The Legal Position under Protocol I of 1977; 11. A case study: the war in Afghanistan; 12. Mercenaries; 13. Armed merchant vessels; PART III. Prohibited Weapons: 14. Introduction; 15. The principle prohibiting unnecessary suffering; 16. Explicit prohibitions and restrictions of certain weapons; 17. The status of nuclear weapons; 18. Development of new weapons; PART IV. Legitimate Military Objectives: 19. The principle of distinction and military objectives; 20. The definition of military objectives by nature, location, purpose and use; 21. General problems relating to the scope of military objectives; 22. Defended and undefended localities in land warfare; 23. Special problems relating to sea warfare; 24. Special problems relating to air warfare; PART V. The Protection of Civilians and Civilian Objects from Attack: 25. Definitions; 26. Direct attacks against civilians; 27. Indiscriminate attacks; 28. The principle of proportionality; 29. Legitimate collateral damage; 30. Precautions in attack; 31. Cessation of protection and ‘human shields’; 32. Starvation of civilians; PART VI. Measures of Special Protection: 33. Persons entitled to special protection; 34. Cultural property and places of worship; 35. Medical units; 36. Works and installations containing dangerous forces; PART VII. Protection of the Environment: 37. Introduction; 38. The international legal texts; 39. The dissimilarities between the ENMOD convention and protocol I; 40. A case study: setting fire to oil wells in the Gulf War; 41. Conclusion; PART VIII. Other Methods and Means of Warfare: 42. Perfidy and ruses of war; 43. Espionage; 44. Seizure and destruction of enemy property; 45. Belligerent reprisals; 46. War crimes, command responsibility and defences: 47. The definition of war crimes; 48. The Distinction between war criminals and unlawful combatants; 49. Command responsibility; 50. Admissible and inadmissible defences; General conclusions; Index. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Yugoslavia / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Czechoslovakia / Congo / France / Israel / Italy / Japan / Jordan / Korea / Kuwait / Lebanon / Malaysia / Singapore / United Kingdom / Serbia-Montenegro LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Falkland Islands Kosovo
URL http://titles.cambridge.org/catalogue.asp?isbn=0521834368 |
|
15. | Lida, Keisuke : Human rights and sexual abuse, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Human rights and sexual abuse : the impact of international human rights law on Japan / Lida, Keisuke REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Human rights quarterly : vol. 26; no. 2., p. 428-453. - Baltimore, Maryland : The John Hopkins U. P., 2004. - ISSN 0275-0392 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRC;
URL http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/human_rights_quarterly/toc/hrq26.2.html (full text) |
|
16. | Werle, Gerhard : Principles of international criminal law, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Principles of international criminal law / Werle, Gerhard ; in cooperation with Florian Jessberger ... [et al.], xxii, 485 p.. - Hague : T.M.C. Asser Press, 2005. ISBN 90-6704-202-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Part One: Foundations:. A. Historical Evolution. I. The Versailles Peace Treaty. II. The Law of Nuremberg and Tokyo. 1. The Nuremberg Charter and Trial. a) Creation of the Nuremberg Tribunal. b) Provisions of the Nuremberg Charter. c) The Nuremberg Judgment. d) Contemporary and Current Assessments . 2. The Tokyo Charter and Trial. 3. Control Council Law No. 10. III. International Criminal Law During the Cold War. IV. The United Nations ad hoc Tribunals. 1. The Yugoslavia Tribunal. 2. The Rwanda Tribunal. V. The ICC Statute and the International Criminal Court. 1. Previous Efforts to Create a Permanent International Criminal Court. 2. The Conference of Plenipotentiaries in Rome. 3. Significance of the ICC Statute. B. Concepts, Tasks and Legitimacy. I. The Notions of “International Criminal Law” and “Crimes Under International Law”. II. Protected Interests. III. The “International Element” of Crimes Under International Law. IV. Purposes of Punishment. V. The Principle of Legality in International Criminal Law (Nullum Crimen, Nulla Poena Sine Lege). C. International Criminal Law and the International Legal Order. I. International Criminal Law and State Responsibility. II. Crimes Under International Law and Other International Crimes. III. International Criminal Law, Supranational Criminal Law, Co-operation in Criminal Matters, and Extraterritorial Jurisdiction. IV. International Criminal Law and Protection of Human Rights. 1. Protection of Human Rights Through International Criminal Law. 2. The Function of Human Rights in Limiting International Criminal Law. V. International Criminal Law and the Law of International Criminal Procedure. D. Sources and Interpretation. I. Sources of Law. 1. International Treaties. 2. Customary International Law. 3. General Principles of Law. II. Subsidiary Means for Determining the Law. III. Individual Sources. 1. ICC Statute, Elements of Crimes, Rules of Procedure and Evidence. 2. The ICTY and ICTR Statutes. 3. The Nuremberg and Tokyo Charters. 4. Control Council Law No. 10. 5. Geneva Conventions, Genocide Convention, Hague Regulations. 6. Decisions of International Courts and Tribunals. 7. Resolutions of the UN General Assembly and the UN Security Council, and Reports of the UN Secretary-General. 8. International Law Commission Drafts and Comments. 9. Drafts and Comments of International Scholarly Associations. 10. Decisions of National Courts. 11. National Legislation. 12. Military Manuals. IV. Interpretation. V. Determining the Law Through the International Criminal Court. E. Universal Jurisdiction, the Duty to Prosecute, and Amnesty. I. Universal Jurisdiction and the Power to Prosecute and Punish. II. The Duty to Prosecute. 1. The Duty to Prosecute by the State of Commission. 2. Do “Third States” Have a Duty to Prosecute? III. Amnesties and Truth Commissions. F. Enforcement. I. Direct and Indirect Enforcement. II. National and International Criminal Justice Systems. III. International Criminal Law in Action. 1. The International Criminal Court. 2. The Yugoslavia Tribunal. 3. The Rwanda Tribunal. G. Domestic Implementation. I. The Need for Implementation. II. Options for Implementation. 1. Complete Incorporation. a) Direct Application. b) Reference. c) Copying. 2. Non-Incorporation – Applying “Ordinary” Criminal Law. 3. Modified Incorporation. 4. Combinations. III. Forms of Incorporation. 1. Amendment of Existing Laws. 2. Self-Contained Codification. IV. Interpretation of International Criminal Law in a Domestic Context. V. The (German) Code of Crimes Against International Law. 1. Historical Background. 2. Aims. 3. Structure. 4. General Principles. 5. Genocide. 6. Crimes Against Humanity. 7. War Crimes. 8. Violations of Supervisory Responsibility 87 261 9. Aggression. 10. Universal Jurisdiction. Part Two: General Principles. A. Towards a General Theory of Crimes Under International Law. I. The Concept of Crimes Under International Law. II. The Context of Organized Violence (International Element) 94 278 III. The Structure of Crimes Under International Law. 1. Step One: Material Elements. 2. Step Two: Mental Element. 3. Step Three: Grounds for Excluding Responsibility. 4. Requirements for Prosecution. B. Material Elements. I. Conduct. II. Consequence and Causation. III. Circumstances. C. Mental Element. I. International Case Law. II. Article 30 of the ICC Statute. 1. Structure. 2. Standard Requirements: “Intent and Knowledge”. a) Intent as Regards the Criminal Conduct. b) Intent and Knowledge as Regards the Consequences of the Conduct. c) Knowledge as Regards the Circumstances of the Crime. 3. Departures From the Standard Requirements. a) Sources of Other Provisions Within the Meaning of Article 30. aa) “Otherwise provided” in the ICC Statute. bb) “Otherwise provided” in the Elements of Crimes and in Customary International Law. b) Effects of Other Provisions Within the Meaning of Article 30. aa) Affirmation and Clarification . bb) Expansion of Criminal Liability. cc) Narrowing of Criminal Liability. Table of Contents. 4. The Context of the Crime and the Mental Element. 5. Recklessness and Dolus Eventualis. D. Individual Criminal Responsibility. I. Towards a Doctrine of Modes of Participation in International Criminal Law. 1. International Case Law and Customary Law. 2. ICC Statute. II. Commission. 1. Commission as an Individual. 2. Joint Commission. 3. Commission Through Another Person. III. Encouragement. 1. Ordering. 2. Instigation. IV. Assistance. 1. Assisting the (Primary) Perpetrator. 2. Assisting the Commission of a Crime by a Group. E. Superior Responsibility. I. Superior-Subordinate Relationship. 1. Military Commanders 131 377 2. Civilian Superiors 131 378 II. Mental Element 133 381 III. Failure to Take Necessary Measures 134 386 1. Preventive Measures 134 387 2. Repressive Measures 135 388 3. Necessary and Reasonable Measures 135 390 IV. Commission of a Crime as a Result of Violation of the Duty of Control 136 395 F. Grounds for Excluding Criminal Responsibility 138 401 I. Historical Development of Defenses in International Criminal Law 138 402 1. International Case Law 138 402 2. ICC Statute 139 405 II. Self-Defense 139 407 1. Self-Defense Situation 141 410 a) Use of Force 141 411 b) Defensible Interests 141 412 2. Self-Defense Measures 142 416 3. Mental Element 142 417 4. Individual Self-Defense and a State’s Right of Self-Defense 142 418 III. Necessity and Duress 143 420 1. Threat to Life or Limb 145 426 2. Necessary and Reasonable Measures 146 428 3. Intention of Averting a Threat 147 430 4. Balancing of Interests 147 431 5. Self-Induced Necessity 147 432 6. Limits on Duress and Necessity in Cases of Special Duty to Assume Danger 148 434 IV. Mistake 148 435 1. Mistake of Fact 150 439 2. Mistake of Law V. Superior Orders 152 448 1. Basic Positions 153 450 2. International Case Law and Customary International Law 154 454 3. Article 33 of the ICC Statute 156 460 VI. Mental Disease or Defect 157 463 VII. Intoxication 160 469 1. Destruction of the Capacity to Appreciate or Control Conduct 161 472 2. Exclusion of Responsibility for Voluntary Intoxication? 161 473 VIII. Other Grounds for Excluding Responsibility 163 477 G. Inchoate Crimes 165 485 I. Conspiracy 166 488 II. Planning and Preparation 167 491 III. Attempt 168 493 IV. Abandonment 169 500 H. Omissions 170 502 I. Official Capacity and Immunity 172 509 I. Immunity and International Criminal Law 172 510 II. Irrelevance of Official Capacity 174 515 III. (Limited) Immunity for Heads of State and Government, Foreign Ministers, and Diplomats 176 520 IV. Summary 178 526 J. Multiplicity of Offenses 178 527 I. International Case Law 179 530 II. Same Conduct 179 531 1. Cumulative Charging 180 534 2. Multiple Convictions 180 535 III. Sentencing 183 541 K. Requirements for Prosecution. Part Three: Genocide:. A. Introduction 188 555 I. The Phenomenon of Genocide 188 555 II. History of the Crime 190 560 III. Structure of the Crime 191 563 IV. Protected Interests 192 566 B. Material Elements 193 571 I. Protected Groups 193 571 1. Criteria for Group Classification 194 573 2. National Groups 196 580 3. Ethnic Groups 196 581 4. Racial Groups 197 582 5. Religious Groups II. Individual Acts 199 587 1. Killing 200 589 2. Causing Serious Bodily or Mental Harm 200 590 3. Inflicting Destructive Conditions of Life 201 593 4. Imposing Measures to Prevent Births 202 597 5. Forcibly Transferring Children 203 598 6. Is So-Called Ethnic Cleansing Genocide? 204 604 III. Destruction of the Group Required? 204 606 C. Mental Element 206 610 I. Intent and Knowledge (Article 30 of the ICC Statute) 206 611 II. Specific Intent to Destroy 207 615 1. The Term “Intent” 207 616 2. The Group as the Object of Destructive Intent 208 618 3. Evidentiary Issues 210 622 D. Incitement to Commit Genocide 211 623 I. Structure and Purpose of Punishment 211 623 II. Material Elements 211 626 III. Mental Element 212 627 E. Multiplicity of Offenses. Part Four: Crimes Against Humanity:. A. Introduction 216 633 I. The Phenomenon of Crimes Against Humanity 216 633 II. History of the Crime 216 635 III. Structure of the Crime 220 644 IV. Protected Interests 220 645 B. Contextual Element (Attack on a Civilian Population) 221 646 I. A Civilian Population as the Object of the Crime 221 647 II. Widespread or Systematic Attack 224 652 1. Attack 224 652 2. Widespread or Systematic Character 225 654 III. The “Policy Element” 226 658 1. ICC Statute 226 658 2. Customary International Law 229 666 IV. Perpetrators 230 668 V. Mental Element 230 669 C. Individual Acts 231 672 I. Killing 232 674 II. Extermination 234 678 III. Enslavement 236 683 1. Definition 237 685 2. Forced Labor 238 690 3. Trafficking in Persons 239 693 IV. Deportation or Forcible Transfer of Population 240 695 V. Imprisonment 243 704 Table of Contents VI. Torture 244 709 VII. Sexual Violence 247 721 1. Rape 248 723 2. Sexual Slavery 250 728 3. Enforced Prostitution 251 729 4. Forced Pregnancy 251 731 5. Enforced Sterilization 252 733 6. Other Forms of Sexual Violence 252 734 VIII. Persecution 253 735 1. Material Elements 254 738 2. Mental Element 257 745 a) Political, Racial or Religious Grounds 258 747 b) Other Grounds 258 749 IX. Enforced Disappearance 259 752 X. Apartheid 262 758 XI. Other Inhumane Acts 264 766 D. Multiplicity of Offenses 266 769 Part Five: War Crimes 267 772 A. Introduction 269 773 I. Historical Development 269 774 1. Laws of War and International Humanitarian Law 270 775 2. National Criminal Law to Implement International Humanitarian Law 276 795 3. International Criminal Law and International Humanitarian Law 278 800 II. International Humanitarian Law and Criminal Sanctions 279 803 III. War Crimes in Non-International Armed Conflict 282 811 IV. Protected Interests 285 817 V. Categories of War Crimes 285 819 B. Overall Requirements 286 822 I. Armed Conflict 286 822 1. Inter-State Conflict 287 824 2. Intra-State Conflict 288 825 3. Applicability of the Law of War Crimes Despite No Use of Force 290 831 II. International or Non-International Conflict 290 833 1. International Character of Inter-State Armed Conflicts 291 834 2. Intra-State Armed Conflicts of an International Character 291 835 a) Wars of National Liberation 291 836 b) Other Intra-State Conflicts 292 837 3. Mixed Armed Conflicts 293 842 III. Applicability of the Law of War Crimes, Rationae Temporis and Loci 294 844 IV. The Nexus Between the Individual Act and the Armed Conflict 294 846 1. Perpetrator’s Position 295 848 2. Conduct of Private Persons 296 851 3. Perpetrator’s Motivation 297 853 V. Mental Element 297 854 1. Perpetrator’s Awareness of the Conflict 297 855 2. Wilfulness in the Law of War Crimes C. War Crimes Against Persons 298 859 I. Victims of War Crimes Against Persons 298 859 1. Persons Protected in the Geneva Conventions 299 860 a) Protected Persons in International Conflicts 299 861 b) Protected Persons in Non-International Conflicts 302 872 2. Persons Protected by Other Provisions 302 874 II. Killing 302 875 III. Killing and Wounding Persons Not Involved in Combat 304 879 IV. Offenses of Mistreatment 305 885 1. Torture 305 887 2. Causing Suffering or Injury to Health (International Conflict) 306 891 3. Mutilation 307 895 4. Biological, Medical or Scientific Experiments 308 898 5. Inhuman or Cruel Treatment 310 903 V. Sexual Violence 311 907 1. Rape 313 912 2. Other Serious Forms of Sexual Violence 313 914 VI. Humiliating and Degrading Treatment 314 917 VII. Compelled Service in Military Forces and Operations of War (International Conflict) 316 924 1. Compelled Service in the Forces of a Hostile Power 316 924 2. Compelled Participation in Operations of War 317 929 VIII. Slavery 318 932 IX. Forced Labor (International Conflict) 319 935 X. Punishment Without Regular Trial 320 938 1. International Conflict 320 938 2. Non-International Conflict 322 944 XI. Unlawful Confinement (International Conflict) 323 950 XII. Delay in Repatriation (International Conflict) 325 955 XIII. Hostage-Taking 325 958 XIV. Deportation or Forcible Transfer 327 963 1. International Conflict 327 964 2. Non-International Conflict 328 968 XV. Transfer of a Party’s Own Civilian Population (International Conflict) 329 971 XVI. Use of Child Soldiers 331 977 D. War Crimes Against Property and Other Rights 334 986 I. Offenses of Expropriation 334 987 1. Conduct 334 987 2. Object of the Conduct 335 990 3. Extent of Expropriation 336 994 4. Mental Element 337 996 5. Military Necessity 337 997 II. Offenses of Destruction 338 1000 1. Conduct 339 1002 2. Object and Extent of the Offense and Military Necessity 340 1003 3. Mental Element 340 1004 III. Encroachments on Other Rights 340 1005 E. Employing Prohibited Methods of Warfare 341 1008 I. Introduction 341 1008 Table of Contents 1. Attacks on Non-Military Targets 341 1008 2. Other Prohibited Methods 342 1012 II. Attacks on Civilian Populations 343 1015 III. Terror Against a Civilian Population 344 1019 IV. Attacks on Civilian Objects 345 1024 1. International Conflict 345 1024 2. Non-International Conflict 346 1027 V. Attacks on Specially Protected Objects 346 1029 VI. Attacks on Persons and Objects Using the Emblems of the Geneva Conventions 348 1035 VII. Attacks Causing Disproportionate Incidental Damage 349 1039 1. International Conflict 350 1040 2. Non-International Conflict 352 1048 VIII. Attacks on Undefended Non-Military Objects 352 1049 1. International Conflict 352 1049 2. Non-International Conflict 354 1053 IX. Perfidious Killing or Wounding 354 1054 1. International Conflict 354 1054 2. Non-International Conflict 356 1059 X. Improper Use of Insignia 357 1061 1. International Conflict 357 1061 a) Improper Use of Flags of Truce 358 1064 b) Improper Use of Enemy Flags, Insignia, and Uniforms 358 1066 c) Improper Use of Protective Emblems of the Geneva Conventions 359 1068 d) Improper Use of Protected Insignia of the United Nations 359 1070 e) Serious Consequences 360 1072 2. Non-International Conflict 360 1073 XI. Giving No Quarter 360 1074 XII. Starvation of the Civilian Population 362 1080 1. International Conflict 362 1081 2. Non-International Conflict 365 1088 XIII. Use of Human Shields 365 1090 1. International Conflict 365 1090 2. Non-International Conflict 367 1095 F. Use of Prohibited Means of Warfare 368 1096 I. Introduction 368 1097 II. International Conflict (ICC Statute) 369 1100 1. Use of Poison or Poisoned Weapons 369 1100 a) The Term “Poison” 370 1103 b) Poison Gas as Poison? 371 1105 c) Chemical and Biological Weapons of Mass Destruction 371 1106 2. Use of Poison Gas and Similar Substances 372 1107 3. Use of Prohibited Ammunition 373 1111 4. The Catch-All Offense of Article 8(2)(b)(xx) of the ICC Statute 374 1114 III. International Conflict (Customary International Law) 375 1116 1. Nuclear Weapons 375 1118 2. Chemical Weapons 376 1119 3. Biological Weapons 377 1122 4. Conventional Weapons 377 1125 IV. Non-International Conflict (Customary G. War Crimes Against Humanitarian Operations 380 1133 H. Multiplicity of Offenses 383 1144 Part Six: The Crime of Aggression 384 1147 A. The Prohibition of Aggression Under International Law 386 1151 I. Developments Prior to World War II 386 1151 II. Current Status 389 1158 B. Criminal Responsibility Under Customary International Law (War of Aggression) 390 1161 I. Nuremberg and the Criminality of Aggressive War 391 1162 II. Material Elements 394 1168 1. Aggressive War 394 1168 2. Other Acts of Aggression 396 1175 3. Perpetrators 397 1176 4. Criminal Acts 398 1178 III. Mental Element 399 1181 IV. Jurisdiction 400 1182 C. The Crime of Aggression in the ICC Statute – Prospects 400 1184 I. Definition of the Crime of Aggression 401 1187 II. The Role of the UN Security Council 402 1188 Appendix 1: Materials 405 A. ICC Statute 406 B. ICTY Statute 418 C. ICTR Statute 420 D. London Agreement 422 E. Nuremberg Charter 423 F. Tokyo Charter 424 G. CCL No. 10 425 H. Nuremberg Principles 427 I. (German) Code of Crimes Against International Law 428 Appendix 2: Table of Cases 435 Appendix 3: Table of Statutes and International Instruments 451 Appendix 4: Index 469 Appendix 5: International Criminal Law in the World Wide Web 483 Table of Contents INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): The statute of the ICC; The ICTR statute; The ICTY statute; Nuremberg charter; Statute of the Special Court for Sierra Leone; ACHPR; AMR; Convention for the protection of cultural property; CEDAW; Genocide convention; Convention on the prohibition of the development, production, stockpiling and use of chemical weapons and on their destruction; CRC; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ICCPR; CRC-OP; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; Slavery convention; Treaty of Versailles; UN charter; Vienna convention for the law of treaties; Vienna convention on consular relations; Vienna convention on diplomatic relations; |
|
17. | Multiple Discrimination, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Multiple Discrimination / - (Roma Rights : journal of the European Roma Rights Centre ; no. 2 (2009)), 76 p.. - Budapest : European Roma Rights Centre, 2009. - ISSN 1417-1503 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. The Challenge of Multiple Discrimination, by Rob Kushen. 1. Multiple Discrimination: Justice for the Whole Person, by Gay Moon. 2. Multiple Discrimination Between the EU Agenda and Civic Engagement: the Long Road of Intersectional Perspective, by Barbara Giovanna Bello. 3. Intersectionality Backlash: A Romani Feminist’s Response, by Alexandra Oprea. 4. (Intersectional) Discrimination as a Practice of Inequality, by Roman Kuhar. 5. Discrimination Against a Romani Woman Before the European Court of Human Rights , by Sara Gimenez and fernando rey Martinez. 6. It’s Hard Being an Old Roma in Bulgaria, by Angel getsov. 7. The Difference That Makes a Difference: We Need More Guts!, by Djordje Jovanovic. 8. ERRC Interviews Thomas Hammarberg, Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights. 9. Celebrities and Roma Rights, or, the Perils of Being Adopted by Madonna, by Rob Kushen and Catherine Twigg. 10. Coercive Sterilisation – an Example of Multiple Discrimination, by Lydia Gall. 11. Towards Substantive Equality, by Darya Alekseeva. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CERD; CEDAW; ECHR; ESC; UDHR; ICESCR; LIBRARY LOCATION: s Roma Rights |
|
18. | Grover, Sonja C. : The European Court of Human Rights as a pathway to impunity for international crimes, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The European Court of Human Rights as a pathway to impunity for international crimes / Grover, Sonja C., xxv, 298 p.. - Heidelberg : Springer, 2010. ISBN 978-3-642-10797-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I: Selected Factors Facilitating Impunity for International Crimes Through the European Court of Human Rights. PART II: The European Court of Human Rights’ Reluctance to Classify European Convention Violations as International Crimes Even When Those Violations Likely Constitute ‘Genocide’ or ‘Crimes Against Humanity’ in Times of Peace or in Immediate Post-conflict Periods. PART III: The European Court of Human Rights’ Reluctance to Classify European Convention Violations as International Crimes Even When Those Violations Likely Constitute ‘War Crimes’ or ‘Crimes Against Humanity in Times of Armed Conflict’. PART IV: The Importance of Moral Legitimacy in International Human Rights Court Rulings. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; Geneva conventions; ECHR; AMR;
URL http://www.springer.com/law/international/book/978-3-642-10797-9 |
|
19. | Nersessian, David L. : Genocide and political groups, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Genocide and political groups / Nersessian, David L., xxiv, 329 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2010. ISBN 978-0-19-958890-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Introduction:. 1: Defining a Crime Without a Name. 2: Conduct Elements. 3: Fault Elements. 4: Human Groups and Genocide. 5: Political Genocide and Customary International Law. 6: The Role of Other International Crimes. 7: The Case for a Crime of Political Genocide. 8: The Way Forward: Rethinking the Crime of Crimes. Concluding Thoughts INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Bangladesh / Cambodia / Estonia / Ethiopia / France / germany / Nicaragua / Poland / Romania / Spain / United Kingdom / USA NOTE (THESIS): Dr.iur. (thesis); Univ. of Oxford, 2010, [T] NOTE (GENERAL): Genocide convention; ICC statute; ECHR; CAT; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ICCPR; ICTR statute; ICTY statute; IMT charter; London agreement; Moscow declaration; Nuremberg charter; Refugee convention; UN charter; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
|
20. | Ruiter, Donja de : Sexual offenses in international criminal law, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Sexual offenses in international criminal law / Ruiter, Donja de, 390 p.. - Hague : International Courts Association, 2011. ISBN 978-90-5887-095-7 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN trafficking protocol; ICC statute; European convention against trafficking in human beings; Convention against transnational organized crime; Convention against transnational organized crime; Protocol against the smuggling of migrants by land, sea and air, supplementing the United Nations convention against transnational crime; Geneva conventions; Additional protocol (II) to the Geneva conventions; ICTR statute;
URL http://www.isbs.com/partnumber.asp?cid=28584&pnid=334974 |
|
21. | Wolf, Willem-Jan van der : Crimes against humanity and international criminal law, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Crimes against humanity and international criminal law / Wolf, Willem-Jan van der - (International criminal law series), xiv, 438 p.. - Hague : International Courts Association, 2011. ISBN 978-90-5887-081-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART 1: Definition of crimes against humanity. Part 2: Prohibited acts within the definition of crimes against humanity. PART 3: Jurisprudence of the ICTY. PART 4. Jurisprudence of the ICTR. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Hague convention (IV); Nuremberg charter; Tokyo charter; ICTY statute; ICTR statute; Genocide convention; Convention on the non-applicability of statutory limitations to war crimes and crimes against humanity; CAT; Statute of Special Court for Sierra Leone; ICC statute; |
|
22. | European yearbook of minority issues, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph European yearbook of minority issues : volume 10, 2011 / ; Edited by the European Centre for Minority Issues and The European Academy Bozen/Bolzano, 724 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2013. ISBN 978-90-04-25634-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: ARTICLES:. A. General Articles Section:. 1. The Role of Law in the Minority Discourse in the Middle East, by Joshua Castellino and Kathleen Cavanaugh. 2. Current and Future Challenges for International Minority Protection, by Francesco Palermo. 3. Are the Copenhagen Criteria Undermined by the Lisbon Treaty?, by Kyriaki Topidi. 4. Linguistic Rights in a Former Empire: Minority Languages and the Russian Higher Courts, by Federica Prina. 5. Implications of Kosovo Independence for the Doctrine of Constitutional Self-determination, by Boshko Stankovski. 6. Do Professional Linguistic Requirements Discriminate? A Legal Analysis: Estonia and Latvia in the Spotlight Dimitry Kochenov, by Vadim Poleshchuk and Aleksejs Dimitrovs. 7. Soft Solutions to a Hard Problem: Justiciable Minority Rights?, by Geoff Gilbert. B. SPECIAL FOCUS: ROMA:. Remarks on the Romani Movement and Inclusion Policies, by Dieter W. Halwachs. 1. (Self)Definition of the Roma / Defining Roma:. a. Scholarship and the Politics of Romani Identity: Strategic and Conceptual Issues, by Yaron Matras. b. Identifying “Roma” or Constructing “the Other? Slovak Romani Men and Women in Processes of Identification, by Barbara Tiefenbacher. 2. “Roma Issues” in Jurisprudence:. a.The Council of Europe and the Rescue of Roma as a Paradigmatic Case of Failed Integration? Abstract Principles versus Protection in Concreto, by Kristin Henrard. b. The Roma: A‘Socially Disadvantaged Group’ or a ‘National Minority? Unravelling the Dichotomy through the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities, by Roberta Medda-Windischer. 3. Political Frameworks, Institutions and Participation:. a. The European Union and the Roma: An Analysis of Recent Institutional and Policy Developments, by Peter Vermeersch. b. The Roma Issue in the European Multilevel System: Ideas, Interests and Institutions behind the Failure of Inclusion Policies, by Yana Kavrakova. c. Solidarity, Citizenship, Democracy: The Lessons of Romani Activism, by Marton Rovid. d. European Framework for National Roma Policies and the Roma in the Western Balkans, by Stephan Muller. e. Segregation and the Roma, by Rumyan Russinov. PART II: REPORTS:. A. International Developments:. a. Protecting Minority Rights through an Individual Rights Mechanism: The Strasbourg Court and some Significant Developments to June 2012, by Bill Bowring. b. Review of the Monitoring Process of the Council of Europe Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities, by Charlotte Altenhoener. c. Developments in the Field of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages in 2011, by Vesna Crnic-Grotic. d. The Activities of the OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities January 2011 to December 2011, by Stephanie Marsal and Jennifer Croft. e. The European Union and Minorities in 2011, by Gabriel N. Toggenburg and Karen McLaughlin. f. United Nations Practice in Minority Issues, by Michele Buteau, Belen Rodriguez de Alba and Aleksandra Plesko. B. National Developments:. a. National Reunifi cation beyond Borders: Diaspora and Minority Politics in Hungary since 2010, by Szabolcs Pogonyi. b. Recent Legal Developments in Sweden: What Effect for Finnish and Meankieli Speakers?, by Heidi Ost. c. The Return of Property to Community Foundations in Turkey: The Legislative Decree, by Mine Yildirim. d. The Reform of the Romanian Education System and its Impact on National Minorities, by Sergiu Constantin. e. Fascist Legacies: The Controversy over Mussolini’s Monuments in South Tyrol, by Gerald Steinacher. f. The Language Issue in the Context of Minorities’ and Identity Policies in Montenegro, by Sofiya Zahova. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Estonia / Latvia LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): AMR; ACHPR; ADRD; Proposed American declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; Budapest summit declaration; CAT; ICCPR; ICCPR-OP; CEDAW; CERD; ICESCR; CRC; Charter of Paris; Copenhagen document; CSCE final act; CSCE Vienna document; ECHR; ECHRP-12; European charter for regional or minority languages; ECPT; Framework convention for the protection of national minorities; Convention on the protection and integration of indigenous and tribal populations (ILO convention no. 107); Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); Lund recommendations; Oslo recommendations; UDHR; Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Vienna declaration and programme of action; LIBRARY LOCATION: S European yb...
URL http://www.brill.com/products/reference-work/european-yearbook-minority-issues-volume-10-2011#TOC_1 |
|
23. | Gilbert, Jereme : Nomadic peoples and human rights, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Nomadic peoples and human rights / Gilbert, Jereme - (Routledge research in human rights law), xxiv, 248 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2014. ISBN 978-0-415-52696-8 INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Algeria / Australia / Bangladesh / Brazil / Burkina Faso / Canada / Chad / China / eritrea / Ethiopia / Finland / France / India / Jordan / Kenya / Malaysia / Niger / Norway / Russian Federation / Rwanda / Somalia / sudan / Tanzania / Uganda NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; CERD; Convention on biological diversity; CEDAW; CRC; Dana declaration on mobile peoples and conservation; Declaration onthe rights of indigenous peoples; Declaration on the rights of persons belonging to minorities; ESC; ECHR; Framework convention for the protection of national minorities; ICCPR; ICESCR; UDHR; |
|
24. | Equal rights review, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Equal rights review : intersectionality, vol. 16 (2016) /, 239 p. - London : The Equal Rights Trust, 2016. - ISSN 1757-1650 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Jade Glenister: Good intentions: can the 'protective custody' of women amount to torture?. 2. Se-shauna Wheatle: The constitutionality of the 'homosexual advance defence' in the Commonwealth Caribbean. 3. Gerard Quinn: Reflections on the value of intersectionality to the development of non-discrimination law. 4. Ben Smith: Intersectional discrimination and substantive equality: a comparative and theoretical perspective. 5. Ivona Truscan and Joanna Bourke-Martignoni: International human rights law and intersectional discrimination. 6. Siobhan Curran: Intersectionality and human rights law: an examination of the coercive sterilisation of Romani women. 7. Shreya Atrey: Through the looking glass of intersectionality: making sense of Indian discrimination jurisprudence under Article 15. 8. Johanne Bouchard and Patrice Meyer-Bisch: Intersectionality and interdependence of human rights: same or different?. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Caribbean countries / India |