1. | LDCs, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph LDCs : building capacities for mainstreaming gender in development strategies /, 354 p.. - New York : United Nations. UNCTAD, 2002. LANGUAGE: ENG DOCUMENT SYMBOL: UNCTAD/LDC/Misc.74 INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (MEETINGS): Preparatory workshop for UNLDC-III, 21-23 March 2001, Cape Town, South Africa LIBRARY LOCATION: UN library |
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2. | Musalo, Karen : Steps forward and steps back, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Steps forward and steps back : uneven progress in the law of social group and gender-based claims in the United States / Musalo, Karen ; Knight, Stephen REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): International journal of refugee law : vol. 13; no. 1/2., p. 51-70. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2001. - ISSN 0953-8186 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: USA
URL http://www3.oup.co.uk/reflaw/hdb/Volume_13/Issue_01/ |
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3. | Kelley, Ninette : The convention refugee definition and gender-based persecution, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial The convention refugee definition and gender-based persecution : a decade's progress / Kelley, Ninette REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): International journal of refugee law : vol. 13; no. 4., p. 559-568. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2001. - ISSN 0953-8186 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
URL http://www3.oup.co.uk/reflaw/hdb/Volume_13/Issue_04/ |
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4. | Ankenbrand, Birthe : Refugee women under German asylum law, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Refugee women under German asylum law / Ankenbrand, Birthe REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): International journal of refugee law : vol. 14; no. 1., p. 45-56. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2002. - ISSN 0953-8186 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Germany
URL http://www3.oup.co.uk/reflaw/hdb/Volume_14/Issue_01/140045.sgm.abs.html |
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5. | Mullally, Siobhan : Gener, culture and human rights, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Gener, culture and human rights : reclaiming universalism / Mullally, Siobhan - (Human rights law in perspective), xlv, 260 p.. - Oxford : Hart publ., 2006. ISBN 1-84113-513-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Introduction. A. FEMINISM, DISCOURSE ETHICS AND HUMAN RIGHTS. B. DISCOURSE ETHICS, FEMINISM AND THE ‘CLASH OF CULTURES. 1 The Discourse of Human Rights: ‘An Active Enemy of Women’s Progress’? A. FEMINIST ETHICS OF CARE. 7 B. RADICAL FEMINISM OF CATHARINE MACKINNON. C. POSTMODERN FEMINISMS. Cornell’s Ethical Feminism . D. CONCLUDING REMARKS. 2 Alan Gewirth’s Community of Rights: Feminism, Liberalism and the Value of Community. A. THE PRINCIPLE OF GENERIC CONSISTENCY AND THE NORMATIVE STRUCTURE OF ACTION. B. THE ‘LONELY GEOMETRICIAN’ AND A LEGISLATING REASON. C. THE PGC AND CONFLICTING CULTURAL CLAIMS. D. CONCLUDING REMARKS. 3 Political Liberalism, Feminism and the Limits of an ‘Overlapping Consensus’. A. JUSTIFICATORY STRATEGIES: FROM A THEORY OF JUSTICE TO POLITICAL LIBERALISM. B. THE POLITICAL, THE NON-POLITICAL AND AN OVERLAPPING CONSENSUS. C. THE LAW OF PEOPLES AND THE DEFENCE OF DOMESTIC JURISDICTION. D. CONCLUDING REMARKS. 4 Nussbaum and the Human Capabilities Approach: Reconciling Feminism and Universalism?. A. THE HUMAN CAPABILITIES APPROACH, EQUALITY AND THE LIBERAL IDEAL OF AUTONOMY. B. CHALLENGING THE PUBLIC/PRIVATE DIVIDE. C. THE LIMITS OF AN OVERLAPPING CONSENSUS . D. CONCLUDING REMARKS. 5 Discourse Ethics, Feminism and the Return to the Universal. A. FEMINISM, DISCOURSE ETHICS AND UNIVERSALISM. B. DISCOURSE ETHICS, HUMAN RIGHTS AND THE COSMOPOLITAN ORDER . C. NEGOTIATING JUST MULTICULTURAL ARRANGEMENTS . D. CONCLUDING REMARKS. 6 Opting out of Women’s Human Rights: Reservations to Human Rights Treaties and the Defence of Culture. A. THE RESERVATIONS DIALOGUE: THE ORTHODOX RESPONSE . B. CEDAW AND THE RESERVATIONS DIALOGUE . C. FEMINISM, ANTI-ESSENTIALISM AND THE ‘DEFENCE OF CULTURE’ . D. A DUAL-TRACK APPROACH TO THE PROBLEM OF RESERVATIONS . E. CONCLUDING REMARKS. 7 Debating Gender in Ireland (1): Family Values . A. GENDER, FAMILY AND NATION-BUILDING. B. SEPARATE SPHERES: ‘LIFE WITHIN THE HOME’. C. RIGHTS DISCOURSE AND FAMILY LAW REFORM. D. RIGHTS DISCOURSE AND LIFE WITHIN THE HOME . E. CONCLUDING REMARKS. 8 Debating Gender in Ireland (2): Reproductive Rights. A. THE ABORTION DEBATE: RE-PARTITIONING THE STATE . B. FROM ‘ETHNOS’ TO ‘DEMOS’. C. CONCLUDING REMARKS. 9 Women, Human Rights and Cultural Claims in Pakistan . A. THE ROLE OF ISLAM IN PAKISTAN’S CONSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK . xii Contents B. THE SEPARATE SPHERE OF MUSLIM PERSONAL LAW. C. ISLAMISATION: ‘CHADOR AUR CHARDIWARI’. D. NEGOTIATING CONFLICTING CLAIMS: THE ROLE OF HUMAN RIGHTS DISCOURSE. E. CONCLUDING REMARKS. 10 Debating Gender Equality in India: Feminism and Multicultural Dilemmas. A. SHAH BANO, COMMUNAL POLITICS AND FEMINIST DILEMMAS. B. REINSTATING THE TIES THAT BIND: THE AFTERMATH OF SHAH BANO. C. IS MULTICULTURALISM ‘BAD FOR WOMEN’?: A RIGHTS-BASED RESPONSE. D. CONCLUDING REMARKS. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Albania / Algeria / Bosnia-Herzegovia / Canada / Ireland / Chile / China / Czechoslovakia / Denmark / Egypt / Hungary / Ireland / Israel / Netherlands / Pakistan / Poland / Sweden / Turkey / United Kingdom / USA / Switzerland / Sudan NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; CEDAW; ECHR; ICCPR; UDHR; CRC; |
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6. | Sunder, Madhavi : Gender and feminist theory in law and society, |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Gender and feminist theory in law and society / Sunder, Madhavi - ( International library of essays in law and society), xxiii, 532 p.. ISBN 978-0-7546-2623-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents: PART I : Theory:. 1. Method: Feminism, Marxism, method and the state: an agenda for theory, Catharine A. MacKinnon. 2. Foreword: justice engendered, Martha Minow. Critique:3. Race and essentialism in feminist legal theory, Angela P. Harris. PART II Applications:. Sex and Sexuality:. 4. Reconceptualizing sexual harassment, Vicki Schulz. 5. Theorizing yes; an essay on feminism, law and desire, Katherine M. Franke. Multicultural Rights in Liberal Democracies:. 6. Feminism v. multiculturalism, Leti Volpp. Women's rights in the developing world: 7. In defense of universal values, Martha C. Nussbaum. 8. Piercing the veil, Madhavi Sunder. PART III CODA:. 9. Take a break from feminism?, Janet Halley. INDEX WORDS:
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7. | Nincic, Miroslav : Race, gender, and war, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Race, gender, and war / Nincic, Miroslav ; Nincic, Donna J. REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Journal of peace research : vol. 39; no. 5., p. 547-568. - London : SAGE, 2002. - ISSN 0022-3433 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: USA |
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8. | Amnéus, Diana (red.) : Mänskliga rättigheter - från forskningens frontlinjer, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Mänskliga rättigheter - från forskningens frontlinjer = Human rights - from the frontiers of research / Amnéus, Diana (red.) ; Gunner, Göran - (Studia theologica holmiensia ; nr. 7), 313 p.. - Uppsala : Iustus förlag, 2003. - ISSN 1401-1557 ISBN 91-7678-545-9 LANGUAGE: SWE, ENG ABSTRACT: Diana Amnéus & Göran Gunner: Inledning / Introduction. 1. Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na’im: Towards a More People-Centered Human Rights Movement. 2. David Miller: Human Rights in a Multicultural World. 3. Anna T. Höglund: Feminismens paradox – Kampen för gruppen kvinnors rättigheter och för varje kvinnas rätt att vara individ. 4. Kerstin Lökken: ”Vi måste resa oss upp!” – om rätten att tala och erkännas i det offentliga samtalet. 5. Elisabeth Gerle: Participatory Democracy and Human Rights for Women in Globalization – New Possibilities and Challenges. 6. Eva Evers Rosander: Genus, islam och mänskliga rättigheter: Exempel från Marocko och Senegal. 7. Mohammad Fazlhashemi: Islamisk demokrati eller muslimernas demokrati? Tankar om mänskliga rättigheter och globalisering bland muslimska intellektuella. 8. Jan Hjärpe: Himmel eller helvete? Diskussionen om självmordsattentatens religiösa legitimitet. 9. Paul W. Kahn: National Security and Human Rights after September 11. 10. Gregor Noll: Rätt, myt och politik: folkrättens våldsförbud i undantagets gränsland. 11. Brian Gorlick: The Institution of Asylum after 11 September. 12. Reinhold Fahlbeck: Ora et labora – Bed och arbeta. Om religionsfrihet i arbetslivet. 13. Birgitte Kofod Olsen: Biometrisk identifikation og integritetsbeskyttelse. 14. Hans Ingvar Roth: Några etiska aspekter på vetenskapliga framsteg och ny teknologiv. 15. Katarina Månsson: Human Rights Protection in Complex Peace Operations: A Comparative Study on Kosovo and East Timor. 16. Lisbeth Segerlund: The responsibility of corporations for human rights and social issues, NGO's and a development towrads a new regulatory framework?. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; ICCPR-OP; CEDAW;
URL http://www.iustus.se/html/contents/menu/03_katalog/bookshop/describtion/5459.pdf |
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9. | Dauvergne, Catherine : Making people illegal, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Making people illegal : what globalization means for migration and law / Dauvergne, Catherine. - repr.. - (Law in context), xi, 216 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U.P., 2008. ISBN 978-0-521-89508-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. 1. Introduction. 2. On being illegal. 3. Migration in the globalization script. 4. Making asylum illegal. 5. Trafficking in hegemony. 6. The less brave new world. 7. Citizenship unhinged. 8. Myths and giants: the influence of the EU and the US. 9. Sovereignty and the rule of law in global times. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Universal NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; Convention for the suppression of the traffic in persons and the exploitation of the prostitution of others; CEDAW; Refugee convention; ICCPR; Migrant workers convention; OAU refugee convention; TEU; ToA; Treaty of Lisbon; Vienna convention on the law of treaties;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/catalogue/catalogue.asp?isbn=9780521895088 |
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10. | Sheeran, Scott (ed.) : Routledge handbook of international human rights law, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Routledge handbook of international human rights law / Sheeran, Scott (ed.) ; Rodley, Nigel (ed.), xvi, 791 p.. - London : Routledge, 2013. ISBN 978-0-415-62073-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Scott Sheeran and Sir Nigel Rodley: The broad review of international human rights law. 2. Wiktor Osiatynski: The historical development of human rights. 3. Guglielmo Verdirame: Human rights in political and legal theory. 4. Michael Freeman: Universalism of human rights and cultural relativism. 5. Micheline Ishay: The evolving study of human rights: interdisciplinary and new directions. 6. Scott Sheeran: The relationship of international human rights law and general international law: hermeneutic constraint, or pushing the boundaries?. 7. Antony Anghie: International human rights law and a developing world perspective. 8. Radhika Coomaraswamy: The contemporary challenges to international human rights. 9. Bruno Stagno Ugarte: Human rights and foreign policy: syntheses of moralism and realism. 10. Andrew Clapham: The use of international human rights law by civil society organisations. 11. Michael O'Flaherty and Daria Davitti: International human rights in field operations: a fast developing human rights tool. 12. Francoise J. Hampson: The relationship between international humanitarian law and international human rights law. 13. William Schabas: International criminal law and tribunals and human rights. 14. Cornelis (Kees) Wouters: International refugee and human rights law: partners in ensuring international protection and asylum. 15. Sheldon Leader: Human rights and international trade. 16. Peter T. Muchlinski: International finance and investment and human rights. 17. Karen Hulme: International environmental law and human rights. 18. Evadné Grant: Customary law and human rights. 19. Alain Pellet: Reservations to treaties and the integrity of human rights. 20. Lee Swepston: The International Labour Organization and international human rights system. 21. Awn Shawkat Al-Khasawneh: The International Court of Justice and human rights. 22. Scott Sheeran and Catherine Bevilacqua: The UN Security Council and international human rights obligations: towards a theory of constraints and derogation. 23. Philip Leach: The European system and approach. 24. Clara Sandoval: The Inter-American system of human rights approach. 25. Frans Viljoen: The impact and influence of the African regional human rights system on domestic law. 26. Vitit Muntarbhorn: The South East Asian system for human rights protection. 27. Mervat Rishmawi: The League of Arab States and human rights. 28. Lorna McGregor: The relationship of the UN treaty bodies and regional systems. 29. Sir Nigel Rodney: Non-state actors and human rights. 30. Paul Hunt, Judith Bueno de Mesquita, Joo-Young Lee and Sally-Anne Way: Implementation of economic, social and cultural rights. 31. Malcolm Evans: The relationship of religion and human rights. 32. Martin Scheinin: Counter-terrorism and human rights. 33. Upendra Baxi: International development, global impoverishment and human rights. 34. Andrew Byrnes: Gender challenges for international human rights. 35. Ralph Wilde: The extraterritorial application of international human rights law on civil and political rights. 36. Dinah Shelton: Enforcement and remedies. 37. Megan Hirst: Victims' participation and reparations in international criminal proceedings. 38. Nadia Bernaz: Continuing evolution of the United Nations treaty bodies system. 39. Ted Píccone: The future of the United Nations special procedures. 40. Allehone M. Abebe: The role and future of the Human Rights Council. 41. Juan E. Méndez and Catherine Cone: Transitional justice. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; UDHR; Refugee convention; UN Charter; ECHR; ACHPR; Arab charter on human rights; ICESCR; CEDAW; CERD LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: Inst.ref. |
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11. | Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, Elena (ed.) : The Oxford handbook of refugee & forced migration studies, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The Oxford handbook of refugee & forced migration studies / Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, Elena (ed.) ; Loescher, Gil (ed.) ; Long, Katy (ed.) ; Sigona, Nando (ed.), 747 p.. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2014. ISBN 978-0-19-965243-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh, Gil Loescher, Katy Long and Nando Sigona: Introduction: Refugee and forced migration studies in transition. 2. Jérôme Elie: Histories of refugee and forced migration studies. 3. Guy S. Goodwin-Gill: The international law of refugee protection. 4. Matthew J. Gibney: Political theory, ethics, and forced migration. 5. Alexander Betts: International relations and forced migration. 6. Dawn Chatty: Anthropology and forced migration. 7. Finn Stepputat and Ninna Nyberg-Soerensen: Sociology and forced migration. 8. Karen Jacobsen: Livelihoods and forced migration. 9. Michael Collyer: Geographies of forced migration. 10. Oliver Bakewell: Encampment and self-settlement. 11. Loren B. Landau: Urban refugees and IDPs. 12. James Milner: Protracted refugee situations. 13. Walter Kälin: Internal displacement. 14. Nicholas Van Hear: Refugees, diasporas, and transnationalism. 15. Stephan Scheel and Vicki Squire: Forced migrants as 'illegal' migrants. 16. Jane McAdam: Human rights and forced migration. 17. Gil Loescher: UNHCR and forced migration. 18. Susan Akram: UNRWA and Palestinian refugees. 19. Michael Barnett: Refugees and humanitarianism. 20. Randall Hansen: State controls: borders, refugees, and citizenship. 21. Anne Hammerstad: The securitization of forced migration. 22. Volker Türk and Rebecca Dowd: Protection gaps. 23. Alice Edwards and Laura van Waas: Statelessness. 24. Simon Russell and Vicky Tennant: Humanitarian reform: from coordination to clusters. 25. Sarah Kenton Lischer: Conflict and crisis induced displacement. 26. Christopher McDowell: Development created population displacement. 27. Roger Zetter and James Morrissey: The environment-mobility nexus: reconceptualizing the links between environmental stress, (im)mobility, and power. 28. Bridget Anderson: Trafficking. 29. Nando Sigona: The politics of refugee voices: representation, narratives, and memories. 30. Jason Haart: Children and forced migration. 31. Elena Fiddian-Qasmiyeh: Gender and forced migration. 32. Claudio Bolzman: Older refugees. 33. Marsha Mirza: Disability and forced migration. 34. Alastair Ager: Health and forced migration. 35. David Hollenbach, SJ: Religion and forced migration. 36. Terence Wright: The media and representation of refugees and other forced migrants. 37. Katy Long: Rethinking 'durable' solutions. 38. Lucy Hovil: Local integration. 39. Laura Hammond: 'Voluntary' repatriation and reintegration. 40. Joanne van Selm: Refugee resettlement. 41. Martin Gottwald: Burden sharing and refugee protection. 42. Marion Fresia: Forced migration in West Africa. 43. Jonathan Crush and Abel Chikanda: Forced migration in Southern Africa. 44. Gaim Kibreab: Forced migration in the Great Lakes and Horn of Africa. 45. Sari Hanafi: Forced migration in the Middle East and North Africa. 46. Alessandro Monsutti and Bayram Balci: Forced migration in broader Central Asia. 47. Paula Banarjee: Forced migration in South Asia. 48. Kirsten McConnachie: Forced migration in South-East Asia and East Asia. 49. Anne McNevin: Forced migration in Australia, New Zealand, and the Pacific. 50. José H. Fischel de Andrade: Forced migration in South America. 51. Megan Bradley: Forced migration in Central America and the Caribbean: cooperation and challenges. 52. Susan F. Martin: Forced migration in North America. 53. Roland Bank: Forced migration in Europe. INDEX WORDS:
LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: Inst.ref. |
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12. | Trebilcock, Michael J. : Advanced introduction to law and development, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Advanced introduction to law and development / Trebilcock, Michael J. ; Mota Prado, Mariana - (Elgar advanced introductions), xii + 233 p. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar, 2014. ISBN 978-1-78347-338-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Defining development. 2. Determinants of development. 3. Institutional theories of development. 4. The rule of law and development: a legal perspective. 5. The rule of law: an economic perspective. 6. Political regimes and development. 7. Ethnic conflict and development. 8. Gender and development. 9. Public administration and development. 10. Corruption and development. 11. State-owned enterprises, privatization and public-private partnerships. 12. International trade. 13. Foreign direct investment. 14. Foreign aid. 15. Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
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13. | Vandenhole, Wouter (ed.) : Routledge international handbook of children's rights studies, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Routledge international handbook of children's rights studies / Vandenhole, Wouter (ed.) ; Desmet, Ellen (ed.) ; Reynaert, Didier (ed.) ; Lembrechts, Sara (ed.), xv, 436 p. - London : Routledge, 2015. ISBN 978-1-138-02370-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction, by Didier Reynaert, Ellen Desmet, Sara Lembrechts and Wouter Vandenhole. 2. Children's rights from a legal perspective: children's rights law, by Wouter Vandenhole. 3. The Convention on the Rights of the Child: reflections from a historical, social policy and educational perspective, by Eugeen Verhellen. 4. Children's rights and childhood studies: from living apart together towards a happy marriage, by Bruno Vanobbergen. 5. The sociology of childhood and children's rights, by Berry Mayall. 6. Children's rights from a social work perspective: towards a lifeworld orientation, by Didier Reynaert and Rudi Roose. 7. Anthropologists, ethnographers and children's rights: critiques, resistance and powers, by Geraldine André. 8. Children's rights: a critical geographical perspective, by Stuart C. Aitken. 9. Children's rights from a gender studies perspective: gender, intersectionality and the ethics of care, by Katrien De Graeve. 10. Children's rights and citizenship studies: re-theorising child citizenship through transdisciplinarity from the local to the global, by Richard Mitchell. 11. Children and young people's participation: a critical consideration of Article 12, by E. Kay M. Tisdall. 12. Education and children's rights, by Ann Quennerstedt. 13. Health and children's rights, by Ursula Kilkelly. 14. Juvenile justice from an international children's rights perspective, by Ton Liefaard. 15. The human rights of children in the context of formal alternative care, by Nigel Cantwell. 16. Violence against children, by Gertrud Lenzer. 17. Female genital mutilation in Europe from a children's rights perspective, by Els Leye and Annemarie Middelburg. 18. Child labour, working children and children's rights, by Karl Hanson, Diana Volonakis and Mohammed Al-Rozzi. 19. The human rights of children in the context of international migration, by Pablo Ceriani Cernadas. 20. Child poverty in the context of global social development, by Francine Mestrum. 21. Indigenous children's rights: opportunities in appropriation and transformation, by Natasha Blanchet-Cohen. 22. Natural resource exploitation and children's rights, by Ellen Desmet and José Aylwin. 23. Conclusions: towards a field of critical children's rights studies, by Ellen Desmet, Sara Lembrechts, Didier Reynaert and Wouter Vandenhole. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRC LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: Inst.ref. |
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14. | Riedel, Eibe (ed.) : Economic, social and cultural rights in international law, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Economic, social and cultural rights in international law : contemporary issues and challenges / Riedel, Eibe (ed.) ; Giacca, Gilles (ed.) ; Golay, Christophe (ed.), xxxiii, 525 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2014. ISBN 978-0-19-968597-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. The development of economic, social and cultural rights in international law, by Eibe Riedel, Gilles Giacca and Christophe Golay. 2. The sovereign bond markets and socio-economic rights: understanding the challenge of austerity, by Mary Dowell-Jones. 3. Economic and social rights in the 'great recession': towards a human rights-centred economic policy in times of crisis, by Sally-Anne Way, Nicholas Lusiani and Ignacio Saiz. 4. Realizing economic, social and cultural rights for all, by Sandra Ratjen and Manav Satija. 5. Gender and economic, social and cultural rights, by Christine Chinkin. 6. The nature and meaning of 'international assistance and cooperation' under the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, by Takhmina Karimova. 7. Corporations and economic, social and cultural rights, by Olivier De Schutter. 8. Trade and investment agreements: what role for economic, social and cultural rights in international economic law?, by Hans Morten Haugen. 9. Economic, social and cultural rights in the World Trade Organization: legal aspects and practice, by Holger P. Hestermeyer. 10. From the other shore: economic, social and cultural rights from an international environmental law perspective, by Stéphanie Chuffart and Jorge E. Vinuales. 11. The relationship between economic, social and cultural rights and international humanitarian law, by Gilles Giacca. 12. Economic, social and cultural rights: international criminal law's blind spot?, by Larissa van den Herik. 13. Budget analysis and economic and social rights, by Aoife Nolan. 14. Human rights impact assessments: emerging practice and challenges, by Simon Walker. 15. Judicial review in national courts: recognition and responsiveness, by Malcolm Langford. 16. The intersection between economic, social and cultural rights and civil and policital rights, by Ioana Cismas. 17. Building bridges: national human rights institutions and economic, social and cultural rights, by Allison Corkery and Duncan Wilson. 18. Transitional justice without economic, social and cultural rights?, by Frank Haldemann and Rachelle Kouassi. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICESCR, ICESCR-OP |
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15. | Rosenblum, Darren : Unisex CEDAW, or what's wrong with women's rights, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Unisex CEDAW, or what's wrong with women's rights / Rosenblum, Darren. - pp. 98-194 REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Columbia journal of gender and law : vol. 20., 2011. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW; CERD LIBRARY LOCATION: ÅAB, HeinOline Law Journal Library |
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16. | Hernández-Truyol, Berta Esperanza : Unsex CEDAW? No! Super-sex it! , 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Unsex CEDAW? No! Super-sex it! / Hernández-Truyol, Berta Esperanza. - 195-223 REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Columbia journal of gender and law : vol. 20(2)., p. 195-223., 2011. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW LIBRARY LOCATION: ÅAB, HeinOnline Law Journal Library |
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17. | Brems, Eva (ed.) : Stereotypes and human rights law, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Stereotypes and human rights law / Brems, Eva (ed.) ; Timmer, Alexandra (ed.), 198 p. - Cambridge : Intersentia, 2016. ISBN 978-1-78068-368-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Eva Brems and Alexandra Timmer: Introduction. 2. Simone Cusack: Building momentum towards change: how the UN's response to stereotyping is evolving. 3. Lourdes Peroni and Alexandra Timmer: Gender stereotyping in domestic violence cases: an analysis of the European Court of Human Rights' jurisprudence. 4. Vernónica Undurraga: Gender stereotyping in the case law of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. 5. Michael Perlin: 'My sense of humanity has gone down the drain': stereotypes, stigma and sanism. 6. Mathias Möschel: Racial stereotypes and human rights. 7. Rikki Holtmaat: The head of the woman is the man: the failure to address gender stereotypes in the legal procedures around the Dutch SGP. 8. Rebecca Cook and Cornelia Weiss: Gender stereotyping in the military: insights from court cases. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW; CERD; ECHR; ACHR |
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18. | Brammertz, Serge (ed.) : Prosecuting conflict-related sexual violence at the ICTY, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Prosecuting conflict-related sexual violence at the ICTY / Brammertz, Serge (ed.) ; Jarvis, Michelle (ed.), xl, 494 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2016. ISBN 978-0-19-876857-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Overview: the challenge of accountability for conflict-related sexual violence crimes (Michelle Jarvis). 2. International concern regarding conflict-related sexual violence in the lead-up to the ICTY's establishment (Grace Harbour). 3. Challenges to successful outcomes in sexual violence cases (Michelle Jarvis and Kate Vigneswaran). 4. Policies and institutional strategies for successful sexual violence prosecution (Michelle Jarvis and Najwa Nabti). 5. Proving crimes of sexual violence (Priya Gopalan, Daniela Kravetz and Aditya Menon). 6. Contextualizing sexual violence: selection of crimes (Laurel Baig, Michelle Jarvis, Elena Martin Salgado and Giulia Pinzauti). 7. Contextualizing sexual violence and linking it to senior officials: models of liability (Barbara Goy, Michelle Jarvis and Giulia Pinzauti). 8. Sentencing for sexual violence crimes (Laurel Baig). 9. The picture of sexual violence in the Former Yugoslavia conflicts as reflected in ICTY judgments (Saeeda Verrall). 10. Using the OTP's experience with sexual violence prosecutions as a springboard for building national capacity (Serge Brammertz, Michelle Jarvis and Lada Soljan). 11. Conclusions: situating the OTP's experience in a broader global context (Serge Brammertz and Michelle Jarvis). Annex A: The picture of sexual violence in the former Yugoslavia conflict as reflected in ICTY cases (Najwa Nahti and Saeeda Verrall). Annex B: Charges and outcomes in ICTY cases involving sexual violence (kate Vigneswaran). INDEX WORDS:
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19. | Rubenstein, Kim (ed.) : The public law of gender, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The public law of gender : from the local to the global / Rubenstein, Kim (ed.) ; Young, Katharine G. (ed.), xxii, 606 p. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2016. ISBN 978-1-107-13857-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Vicki C. Jackson: Feminism and constitutions. 2. Kristin A. Collins: Deference and deferral: constitutional structure and the durability of gender-based nationality laws. 3. Julieta Lemaitre and Kristin Bergtora Sandvik: Structural remedies and the one million pesos: on the limits of court-ordered social change for internally displaced women in Colombia. 4. Susan H. Williams: Customary law, constitutional law, and women's equality. 5. Laura Grenfell: Customasing equality in post-conflict constitutions. 6. Vijaya Nagarajan and Archana Parashar: Gender equality in international law and constitutions: mediating universal norms and local differences. 7. Sari Kouvo and Corey Levine: Law as a placeholder for change? Women's rights and realities in Afghanistan. 8. Beverley Baines: Polygamy: who speaks for women?. 9. Kim Rubenstein: In her own voice: oral (legal) history's insights on gender and the spheres of public law. 10. Sharon Bessell: Good governance, gender equality and women's political representation: ideas as points of disjuncture. 11. Margaret Wilson: Women in government/governance in New Zealand: a case study of engagement over forty years. 12. Huong Nguyen: Equality without freedoms? Political representation and participation of women in Vietnam. 13. Scott Wisor: Gender, justice and statistics: the case of poverty measurement. 14. Kirsty Gover: Gender and racial discrimination in the formation of groups: tribal and liberal approaches to membership in settler societies. 15. Dominique Allen: Rethinking the Australian model of promoting gender equality. 16. Susan Harris Rimmer: Gender, governance and the defence of the realm: globalising reforms in the Australian defence force. 17. Vicki C. Jackson: Feminism, pluralism, and transnationalism: on CEDAW and national constitutions. 18. Louise Chappell: Governing, victims' redress and gender justice at the International Criminal Court. 19. Osmat A. Jefferson and Innokenti Epichev: International organisation as employers: searching for practices of fair treatment and due process rights of staff. 20. Rohan Kapus and Kellin Kristofferson: A gender critique of accountability in global administrative governance. 21. Kate Wilkinson: Is this the future we want? An ecofeminist comment on the UN Conference on Sustainable Development Outcome Document. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Australia / Colombia / India / Malawi / New Zealand / South Sudan / Vanuatu / Vietnam NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW |
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20. | Freedman, Jane : Gendering the international asylum and refugee debate, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Gendering the international asylum and refugee debate / Freedman, Jane, 246 p. - Basingstoke : Palgrave Macmillan, 2015. ISBN 978-1-137-45622-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. A gendered approach to refugee and asylum studies. 2. Who are the 'refugee women'? 3. Gender-related persecutions: why do women flee? 4. Gender and asylum in international law: the Geneve Convention revisited. 5. Supporting women refugees and asylum seekers. 6. Asylum regimes and their impacts. 7. Women asylum seekers and refugees: experiences from France. 8. New and ongoing refugee 'crises'. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Democratic Republic of the Congo / France / Syria NOTE (GENERAL): Refugee convention |
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21. | O'Mahony, Charles (ed.) : Disability law and policy, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Disability law and policy : an analysis of the UN Convention / O'Mahony, Charles (ed.) ; Quinn, Gerard (ed.), 500 p. - Dublin : Clarus Press, 2017. ISBN 978-1-905536-90-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Eilionóir Flynn: Gender, disability and access to justice: an intersectional exploration of Article 13 of the CRPD. 2. Ignacio Campoy Cervera: Ideas for the construction of a human rights model for children, with or without disabilities. 3. Barbara Phillips, Nicole Emmenegger, Bruno Trezzini and Mary Keogh: Raising awareness about awareness: insights from the feminist movement on interpreting Article 8 of the CRPD. 4. Mary Keogh: Disability, gender and development. 5. Jukka Kumpuvuori and Riku Virtanen: Are we right or are we right? 'Right approach' in the advocacy work of organisations of persons with disabilities. 6. Anna Arstein-Kerslake: Legal capacity and supported decision-making: respecting rights and empowering people. 7. Mary Keys: Article 12 of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and the European Convention on Human Rights. 8. Tina Minkowitz: Legal capacity: alternatives to functional capacity. 9. Lana Kerzner: Supported decision-making innovations: the Canadian experience. 10. János Fiala-Butora: The CRPD and legal capacity reform in Hungary: compromise of what?. 11. Sándor Gurbai: Unfulfilled dream about moving from civil death to visible citizen: legal capacity law reform in Hungary. 12. Suzanne Doyle: Article 14 of the CRPD in light of Article 5 of the ECHR: the challenge for Council of Europe member states regarding the involuntary detention of persons with mental disabilities. 13. Tina Minkowitz: Mental health law: a paradigm for its dissolution. 14. Bernadette McSherry: 'New' rights for mental health laws? The right to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of health and the rights of carers. 15. Fiona Morrissey: Advance directives: supporting legal capacity in mental health care. 16. Liz Brosnan: The CRPD and human-rights based approaches: a magic wand for inclusion?. 17. Charles O'Mahony and Clara Hackett: The CRPD and the fusion of mental health and legal capacity legislation. 18. Charles O'Mahony: The implications of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities on criminal responsibility. 19. Noelin Fox: Independent living: the potential of the European Court of Human Rights. 20. Elizabeth Kamundia: Independent living for persons with disabilities in Kenya: charting the way forward. 21. Tabitha Collingbourne: Contradiction in terms? The UK, socio-economic rights and Article 19 CRPD. 22. Andrew Power: Self-determining options: comparative perspectives in independent living law & policy. 23. Sinead O'Donnell and Charles O'Mahony: The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities: exploring the synergy between Article 12 and Article 19. 24. Andrea Broderick and Shivaun Quinlivan: The right to education: Article 24 of the CRPD. 25. Joyce Mortimer: Inclusive education: moving beyond ideology and restrictive theoretical perspectives. 26. Bronagh Byrne: Reconciling sameness and difference in disability rights ideology: the case of student identity. 27. Tsitsi Chataika: African perspectives on Article 24 of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. 28. Joyce Mortimer: The European Court of Human Rights and the right to inclusive education. 29. Anna Lawson: Reasonable accommodation in the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and non-discrimination in employment: rising to the challenges?. 30. Olivia Smith: The CRPD and the general occupational requirement in employment. 31. Aisling de Paor: Genetic discrimination in employment: the relevance of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. 32. Claire Bruton and Shivaun Quinlivan: Disability, EU law and the CRPD: a new dawn?. 33. Charlotte May-Simera and Elizabeth Kamundia: Disability quota systems in public service employment, positive discrimination and Article 27 of the CRPD. 34. Francisco J. Bariffi: Human rights and disability: reinterpreting disability within the OAS in light of the CRPD. 35. David Hosking: The Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities and the European Union. 36. Omolara Funmilola Akinpelu: Human rights and persons with disabilities in Nigeria: beyond policy formulation. 37. Paula Campos Pinto: Of rights and wrongs: the national disability strategy in Portugal. 38. Meredith Raley: Article 33 of the CRPD: its potential for realising the human rights of persons with disabilities. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Canada / Hungary / Kenya / Nigeria / Portugal / UK NOTE (GENERAL): CRPD; ECHR |
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22. | Namwase, Sylvie (ed.) : Protecting the human rights of sexual minorities in contemporary Africa, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Protecting the human rights of sexual minorities in contemporary Africa / Namwase, Sylvie (ed.) ; Jjuuko, Adrian (ed.), 323 p. - Pretoria : Pretoria University Law Press, 2017. ISBN 978-1-920538-60-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Sylvie Namwase, Adrian Jjuuko and Ivy Nyarango: Sexual minorities' rights in Africa: what does it mean to be human; and who gets to decide?. 2. John Osogo Ambani: A triple heritage of sexuality? Regulation of sexual orientation in Africa in historical perspective. 3. Sylvie Namwase: Culture versus homosexuality: can a right 'from' culture be claimed in Ugandan courts?. 4. Seth Muchuma Wekesa: Decriminalisation of homosexuality in Kenya: the prospects and challenges. 5. Ella Scheepers and Ishtar Lakhani: Somewhere over the rainbow: the continued struggle for the realisation of lesbian and gay rights in South Africa. 6. Busisiwe Deyi: First class constitution, second class citizen: exploring the adoption of third-gender gategory in South Africa. 7. Esau Mandipa: The suppression of sexual minority rights: a case study of Zimbabwe. 8. Roopanand Amar Mahadew and Darsheene Singh Raumnauth: A psycho-legal reflection on issues surrounding the LGBTI community in Mauritius. 9. Emerson Lopes: The legal status of sexual minorities in Mozambique. 10. Lame Charmaine Olebile: The status of LGBTI rights in Botswana and its implications for social justice. 11. Victor Oluwasina Ayeni: Human rights and the criminalisation of same-sex relationships in Nigeria: a critique of the Same-Sex Marriage (Prohibition) Act. 12. Azubike Chinwuba Onuora-Oguno: Protecting same-sex rights in Nigeria: case note on Teriah Joseph Ebah v Federal Government of Nigeria. 13. Michel Togue: The status of sexual minority rights in Cameroon. 14. Adrian Jjuuko: The protection and promotion of LGBTI rights in the African regional human rights system: opportunities and challenges. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Botswana / Cameroon / Kenya / Mauritius / Mozambique / Nigeria / South Africa / Uganda / Zimbabwe NOTE (MEETINGS): Colloquium on sexual minority rights in Africa, Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria, December 2014 |
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23. | McQuigg, Ronagh J. A. : The Istanbul Convention, domestic violence and human rights, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The Istanbul Convention, domestic violence and human rights / McQuigg, Ronagh J. A., 183 p. - London : Routledge, 2017. ISBN 978-1-138-95367-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction. 2. Domestic violence as a human rights issue. 3. The background to the adoption of the Istanbul Convention. 4. The provisions of the Istanbul Convention. 5. Monitoring mechanisms. 6. Advantages of the Istanbul Convention and potential challenges. 7. Conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Istanbul convention |
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24. | Simic, Olivera (ed.) : An introduction to transitional justice, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph An introduction to transitional justice / Simic, Olivera (ed.), 313 p. - London : Routledge, 2017. ISBN 978-1-138-94322-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Anja Mihr: An introduction to transitional justice. 2. Andrew G. Reiter: The development of transitional justice. 3. Rachel Kerr: International criminal justice. 4. Annika Björkdahl and Johanna Mannergen Selimovic: Gender and transitional justice. 5. Agata Fijalkowski: Truth and reconciliation commissions. 6. Agata Fijalkowski: Amnesty. 7. Lavinia Stan: Lustration and vetting. 8. Lars Waldorf: Local transitional justice: customary law, healing rituals, and everyday justice. 9. Jemima Garcia-Godos: Reparations. 10. Lia Kent: Transitional justice and peacebuilding. 11. Olivera Simic: Arts and transitional justice. 12. Susanne Buckley-Zistel and Annika Björkdahl: Memorials and transitional justice. 13. Andrew D. Reiter: Measuring the success (or failure) of transitional justice. 14. Olivera Simic: Doing the fieldwork: well-being of transitional justice researchers. INDEX WORDS:
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25. | Muiznieks, Nils : Human rights in Europe, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights in Europe : from crisis to renewal? / Muiznieks, Nils, 249 p. - Strasbourg : Council of Europe, 2017. LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Social rights, austerity and preserving Europe's acquis. 2. Migration and human rights. 3. Freedom of expression and media freedom. 4. Human rights defenders. 5. Children's rights. 6. Women's rights and gender equality. 7. Human rights of Roma and travellers. 8. Human rights of LGBTI people. 9. Intolerance. 10. Transitional justice and human rights. 11. Counter-terrorism and human rights. 12. Law enforcement, the judiciary and human rights INDEX WORDS:
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26. | Campbell, Meghan : Women, poverty, equality, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Women, poverty, equality : the role of CEDAW / Campbell, Meghan, 312 p. - Oxford : Hart Publishing, 2018. ISBN 978-1-5099-0974-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Mapping the problem. 2. The drafting of CEDAW. 3. Strategies for interpreting CEDAW. 4. Interpreting gender-based poverty into CEDAW. 5. The Committee and gender-based poverty. 6. The working methods of the Committee. 7. Evolutionary general recommendations. 8. Envisioning gender-based poverty in CEDAW. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW |
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27. | González Pascual, Maribel (ed.) : The right to family life in the European Union, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The right to family life in the European Union / González Pascual, Maribel (ed.) ; Torres Pérez, Aida (ed.) - (Routledge research in EU law), 256 p. - London : Routledge, 2017. ISBN 978-1-138-18627-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Luis López Guerra: European Convention on Human Rights and family life: primary issues. 2. Bruno de Witte: The scope of application of the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights. 3. Sara Iglesias Sánchez and Keiva Carr: The right to family life in the EU Charter of Fundamental Rights. 4. Maribel González Pascual: Mutual recognition of judicial decisions and the right to family life. 5. Anna Lorenzetti: The European courts and transsexuals: the binary distinction and the pattern of family law. 6. Guillem Cano Palomares: Right to family life and access to medically assisted procreation in the case law of the European Court of Human Rights. 7. Esther Farnós Amorós: Biology-based systems of parentage and safety valves protecting social parenting. 8. Kristine Kruma: Family reunification: a tool to shape the concept of EU citizenship. 9. Aida Torres Pérez: The right to family life as a bar to the expulsion of third country nations in the European Union. 10. Lucia Alonso Sanz: When there is no family: unaccompanied minors in the EU. 11. Silvia Morgades-Gil: The protection of family life in the EU common policy on asylum. 12. Lucia Busatta: Moving patients and families and the social right to cross-border healthcare. 13. Joan Solanaes Mullor: The right to housing and the protection of family life and vulnerable groups: European judicial activism. 14. Samantha Currie: Unjoined-up policy making and patchy promotion of gender equality: free movement and reconciliation of work and family life in the EU INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): EU charter of fundamental rights; ECHR |
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28. | Brysk, Alison : Violence against women, 2016 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Violence against women : law and its limits / Brysk, Alison REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Deusto journal of human rights : no. 1(2016)., p. 145-173. - Bilbao : Universidad de Deusto, 2016. - ISSN 2530-4275 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
URL http://revista-derechoshumanos.revistas.deusto.es/article/view/1278 |
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29. | Nadj, Daniela : International criminal law and sexual violence against women, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International criminal law and sexual violence against women : the interpretation of gender in the contemporary international criminal trial / Nadj, Daniela, xii, 255 p. - London : Routledge, 2018. ISBN 978-1-138-65254-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Introduction. 1. Wartime sexual violence as a feminist topic of analysis. 2. The evolution of gender-based violence in international law. 3. The trajectory wartime sexual violence: from marginalised phenomenon of wartime history to highly visible offence in international criminal law. 4. Feminist approaches to human rights, gender, ethnicity, culture and conflict. 5. The dynamics of 'ethno-nationalist conflict': the interface of gender and ethnicity in ICTY wartime sexual violence jurisprudence. 6. The value of critique and the representation of female identiy in ICTY wartime sexual violence jurisprudence. 7. Conclusion INDEX WORDS:
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30. | Churchill, Robert Paul : Women in the crossfire, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Women in the crossfire : understanding and ending honor killing / Churchill, Robert Paul, xiv, 334 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2018. ISBN 978-0-19-046856-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. First steps towards understanding honor killing. 2. Empirical research on honor killing. 3. The social realities of honor. 4. Socialization, gender, and violence-prone personality. 5. Warrior masculinity and female victimization. 6. The cultural evolution of honor killing. 7. Providing protection and leveraged reform. 8. Moral transformation: taking honor out of honor killing. 9. Moral transformation: sustainability and community ownership. INDEX WORDS:
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