1. | Handbook , 1992 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Handbook /, 147 p.. - London : Amnesty International, 1992. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; AMR; CAT; ECHR; ICCPR-2OP; ICESCR; UN charter; UDHR |
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2. | Morocco, 1991 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Morocco : Amnesty International briefing /, 12 p.. - London : Amnesty International, 1991. ISBN 0 86210 193 X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Morocco / North Africa : 5344 LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: countries |
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3. | Togo, 1992 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Togo : impunity for human rights violations at a time of reform /, 20 p.. - London : Amnesty International, 1992. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Togo / West Africa : 5561 / 5500 NOTE (GENERAL): CAT; ICCPR-OP; LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: countries |
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4. | Persecution after, 1991 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Persecution after : Problems faced by relesed Chinese dissidents / - (Asia Watch), 16 p.. - New York : Asia Watch, 1991. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: China : 7117 |
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5. | United Kingdom, 1994 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph United Kingdom : cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment during forciable deportation /, 15 p.. - London : Amnesty International, 1994. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; CAT; ICCPR LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR |
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6. | File of torture, 1994 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series File of torture : deaths in detention places or prisons : (12 September 1980 - 12 September 1994) / - (HRFT publications ; 5) - Ankara : The Human Rights Foundation of Turkey, 1994. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR-5 |
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7. | Egypt, 1994 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Egypt : human rights defenders under threat /, 24 p.. - London : Amnesty International, 1994. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: North Africa LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR |
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8. | Medical concern, 1994 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Medical concern : conditions in detention and health concern : Georgia /, 9 p. . - London : Amnesty International, 1994. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR |
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9. | Gordon, Neve (ed.) : Torture : human rights, medical ethics and the case of Israel, 1995 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Torture : human rights, medical ethics and the case of Israel / Gordon, Neve (ed.) ; Marton, Ruchama (ed.), xv, 206 p.. - London : ZED Books in Association of Israeli-Palestinian Physicians for Human Rights, 1995. ISBN 1-85649-314-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: The articles are:. 1. Associations, by Dahlia Rabikovitz. 2. Political evil :legalized and concealed sadism, by Haiim Gordon. 3. The social response to torture in Israel, by Stanley Cohen. 4. Workshop : strategies for an international campaign against torture in Israel, led by Jonathan E. Fine. 5. The white coat passes like a shadow : the health profession and torture in Israel, by Ruchama Marton. 6. The conflict between medical ethics and security measures, by Hernan Reyes. 7. The role of codes of medical ethics in the prevention of torture, by James Welsh. 8. Where is the Israeli Medical Association?, by Mamdouh AL-AKer. 9. Workshop: codes of medical ethics as a tool in the struggle against torture, led by James Wlsch. 10. The history of the legal struggle against torture in Israel, by Felicia Langer. 11. Medico-legal death investigation in Israel, by Robert H. Kirschner. 12. The modern inquisition state, by Avigdor Feldman. 13. Workshop : possibilities for cahnge through the courts, led by Lea Tsemel. 14. Evidence of the use of torture, by Inge Genefke. 15. Torture and mental health : a survey of the experience of Palestinins in Israeli prisons, by Eyad El-Sarraj. 16. Compensation suits as an instrument in the rehabilitation of tortured people, by Neve Gordon. 17. The Medical Foundation and its commitment to human rights and rehabilita- tion centre, led by Soren Bojholm. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Geneva conventions; UDHR; CAT |
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10. | Thuen, Trond : Quest for equality, 1995 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Quest for equality : Norway and the Saami challenge / Thuen, Trond, xx, 300 p. . - St. John's, Newfoundland : Memorial University of Newfoundland. Institute of Social and Economic Research, 1995. ISBN 0-919666-86-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Part One: Contrasts and Constraints: 1. Ethnicity. The Reproduction of Cultural Distinctiveness. 2. Saami and Norwegians : An Outline of an Ethnic Relationship. 3. Norwegians : The Ethos of Equality. 4. Saami The Problem of Ethnic Signification. 5. Saami and Norwegians : Symbols of Peoplehood and Nationhood. Part Two : Impacts of the Past : 6. Changes In Ethnic Ascriptions Through Time : Some Methodology Problems. 7. A Community in Transition. 8. The Past in the Present. Part Three: State and Minority : 9. Cultural Protection or Self-determination : Incongruent Imageries? 10. Communicating the Challenge : Symbolic Action and Redressive Reaction : 11. Saami Self-Determination in International Perspective. 12. Sapml, Norway and the European Issue. 13. Summary. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Finland / Canada / United Kingdom / Norway / Sweden LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Aaland Islands NOTE (GENERAL): Convention concerning indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); |
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11. | Mann, Jonathan ... [et al.] : Health and human rights, 1999 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Health and human rights : a reader / Mann, Jonathan ... [et al.], 505 p.. - New York : Routledge, 1999. ISBN 0-415-92101-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Introduction: Jonathan M. Mann, Sofia Gruskin, Michael A. Grodin, and George J. Annas. PART 1. HUMAN RIGHTS AND PUBLIC HEALTH: 1. Health and Human Rights, by Jonathan M. Mann, Lawrence Gostin, Sofia Gruskin, Troyen Brennan, Zita Lazzarini, and Harvey Fineberg. 2. Human Rights: An Introduction International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and FranQois-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights. 3. Public Health: An Introduction International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights. PART II. THE IMPACT OF HEALTH POLICIES AND PROGRAMS ON HUMAN RIGHTS. 4. The Impact of Health Policies on Human Rights: AIDS and TB Control, by George J. Annas. 5. The Public Health-Human Rights Dialogue International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies and Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights. 6. Toward the Development of a Human Rights Impact Assessment for the Formulation and Evaluation of Public Health Policies, by Lawrence Gostin and Jonathan Mann. PART III. HEALTH IMPACTS RESULTING FROM VIOLATIONS OF HUMAN RIGHTS: 7. From Solferino to Sarajevo, by Alain Destexhe. 8. Ethnic Cleansing and Other Lies: Combining Healti and Human Rights in the Search for Truth and Justice in the Former Yugoslava, by Alicia Ely Yamin. 9. Haiti 1991-1994: The International Civilian Mission'! Medical Unit, by Cecile Marotte and Herve Rakoto Razafimbahiny. 10. Disabled Persons and Their Right to Equal Treatment Allowing Differentiation While Ending Discriminatior, by Aart Hendriks. II. Rights Violations in the Ecuadorian Amazon: The Human Consequences of Oil Development Center for Economic and Social Rights 12. Censorship and Manipulation of Family Planning Informatior An Issue of Human Rights and Women's Health, by Lynn P. Freedman. PART IV, EXPLORING THE INEXTRICABLE LINKAGE BETWEEN HEALTH AND HUMAN RIGHTS : 13. Socioeconomic Status and Health: The Challenee of the Gradient, by Nancy Adier, Thomas Boyce, Margaret A. Chesney, Sheldon Cohen, Susan Folkman, Robert L. Kahn, and S. Leonard Syme 14. Interrelationship Between Gender Relations and the HIV/AIDS Epidemic: Some Possible Considerations for Policies and Programs, by Jacques du Guerny and Elisabeth Sjöberg. 15. Human Rights and AIDS: The Future of the Pandemic, by Jonathan M. Mann. 16. Reflections on Emerging Frameworks of Health and Human Rights, by Lynn P. Freedman. 17. Gender, Health, and Human Rights, by Rebecca Cook. 18. Health, Human Rights, and Lesbian Existence, by Alice M. Miller, AnnJanette Rosga, and Meg Satterthwaite. PART V. MEDICINE AND HUMAN RIGHTS: 19. The Nuremberg Doctors' Trial: (a) Opening Statement of the Prosecution Telford Taylor (b) The Judgment Judges Harold Sebring, Walter Beals, and Johnson Crawford. 20. Medicine and Human Rights: Reflections on the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Doctors' Trial, by George J. Annas and Michael A. Grodin. 21. Questing for Grails: Duplicity, Betrayal, and Self-Deception in Postmodern Medical Research, by George J. Annas. 22. Irreversible Error: The Power and Prejudice of Female Genital Mutilation, by Catherine L. Annas. 23. Research and Informed Consent In Africa-Another Look, by Carel Ljsselmuiden and Ruth Faden. 24. Human Rights and Maternal-Fetal HIV Transmission Prevention Trials In Africa, by George J. Annas and Michael A. Grodin. 25. Human Rights and Human Genetic Variation Research Committee on Human Genetic Diversity, National Research Council. PART VI. HOW TO PROCEED FROM CONCEPT TO ACTION 26. Common Strategies for Health and Human Rights: From Theory to Practice, by Stephen P. Marks. 27. The Health Professional as Human Rights Promoter: Ten Years of Physicians for Human Rights (USA), by Kari Hannibal and Robert Lawrence. 28. Medical Humanitarlanism and Human Rights: Reflections on Doctors Without Borders and Doctors of the World, by Renee Fox. 29. For Our Patients, Not for Profits: A Call to Action The Ad Hoc Committee to Defend Health Care. 30. Medicine and Public Health, Ethics and Human Rights, by Jonathan M. Mann. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Africa / Algeria / Albania / Angola / Armenia / Australia / Bangladesh / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Brazil / Burundi / Burkina Faso / Cambodia / Canada / China / Croatia / Cuba / Czechoslovakia / Pakistan / Ecuador / El Salvador / Ethiopia / Europe / France / Gabon / United Kingdom / Guatemala / Haiti / Hungary / India / Former Yugoslavia / Iraq / Israel / Ivory Coast / Japan / Latin America / Malawi / Malaysia / Middle East / Mozambique / Netherlands / Nicaragua / Nigeria / Philippines / Poland / Rwanda / South Africa / Somalia / USSR / South Korea / Spain / Sri Lanka / Sudan / Switzerland / Tajikistan / Tanzania / Thailand / Turkey / Uganda / Viet Nam / Zaire / Zambia / Zimbabwe NOTE (GENERAL): Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ICESCR; CEDAW; CAT; Conventional weapons convention; CRC; Declaration of Alma-Ata; Declaration of Helsinki; DEDAW; ICCPR; CERD; |
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12. | Corstens, Geert : European criminal law, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph European criminal law / Corstens, Geert ; Pradel, Jean, xii, 650 p.. - Hague : Kluwer Law, 2002. ISBN 90-411-1362-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Foreword. Abbreviations. Introduction. Part One: European Inter-state Co-operation in Criminal Matters (Council of Europe and the European Union). Title 1: Co-operation in General Matters. 1: Primary Mutual Assistance. 2: Secondary Mutual Assistance. Title 2: Co-operation in Special Applications. 1: Conventions Relating to Certain Offences. 2: Conventions Relating to Certain Individuals. Part Two: Criminal Law And The European Convention On Human Rights (Council of Europe). Title 1: The Human Rights Jurisdictions: A Study of the European Court of Human Rights. Title 2: Content of Human Rights. 1: Paramount Rights. 2: Procedural Rights. Part Three: Criminal Law and Community Law (European Union). Title 1: Bodies And Institutions. Title 2: The Sources. 1: Formal Diversity of the Sources. 2: Actual Uniformity Behind The Sources: Respect For Fundamental Rights. Title 3: Operation (The positive and negative effects of Community legislation on national criminal law) 1: The Negative Effect: The Incompatibility of the Provisions of National Law with Community Law. 2: The Positive Effect: Obligations of Member States with respect to Criminal Law. Appendix I: Glossary. Annex II: European Convention of Human Rights and its protocols. Appendix III: Consolidated Version of the Treaty on European Union. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): SEA; CAT; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; TEU; ToA; ECHR; ECPT; European convention of mutual assistance; Schengen convention; Treaty of Nice; |
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13. | Combating torture, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Combating torture : a manual for action /, xvi, 335 p.. - London : Amnesty International, 2003. ISBN 0-86210-323-1 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; AMR; ADRD; Arab charter on human rights; Cairo declaration on human rights in Islam; Durban declaration and programme of action; ECPT; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; CERD; ICCPR; ICCPR-OP; The statute of the ICC; CAT; CEDAW; CRC; Genocide convention; UDHR; Vienna declaration and programme of action; |
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14. | Falcon Y Tella, Maria José : Civil disobedience [T], 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Civil disobedience [T] / Falcon Y Tella, Maria José - (The Erik Castrén Institute monographs oninternational law and human rights ; vol. 7), xxviii, 487 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2004. ISBN 90-04-14121-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS: Preface by the Series Editor; Introduction; 1. Justification for the Study of the Subject of Civil Disobedience within Legal Philosophy; 2. Methodology of the Work: Between Dualism and the Threedimensional; 3. The Question of Terminology: Different Meanings of the Term “Civil Disobedience”; I. The Concept of Civil Disobedience. I. : THE CONCEPT OF CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE: CHApTER 1. The Positive Aspect; 1. The Polemic Surrounding Formal Requirements; “Formal” and “Flexible” Definition of Civil Disobedience; 1.1. The Plane of Values: The “What-For” of Civil Disobedience as an Act of Legitimative Pretensions; 1.1.1. The Conscious and Intentional Nature of Civil Disobedience; 1.1.2. The Appeal to Ethical Principles in Civil Disobedience; 1.2. The Plane of Norms: Those Against Which Civil Disobedience is Directed. Civil Disobedience Between Dissent and Consensus; 1.2.1. Dissent: Civil Disobedience as an Illegal Act; 1.2.2. Consensus: Civil Disobedience as an Act within the Democratic System; 1.3. The Plane of Facts: The “How” of Civil Disobedience; Civil Disobedience as a Civic Political Act Seeking Efficacy; The Means Employed in Civil Disobedience; 1.3.1. Civil Disobedience as a Collective Act; 1.3.2. Civil Disobedience as a Public Act; 1.3.3. Civil Disobedience as, in Principle, a Non-Violent Act; 1.3.4. The Organised and Deliberate Nature of Civil Disobedience; 2. Ends Pursued: The “For What” of Civil Disobedience; 2.1. The Plane of Values: Symbolic and Educational Ends of Civil Disobedience; 2.2. The Plane of Norms: Innovative Ends of Civil Disobedience; 2.3. The Plane of Facts: Stabilising Goals of Civil Disobedience; CHAPTER 2. Negative Aspect; Definition Vis-à-Vis Related Phenomena; 1. Phenomena Traditionally Compared with Civil Disobedience; 1.1. Civil Disobedience and Conscientious Objection; Draft-Dodging as Indirect Civil Disobedience to the Law Governing Conscientious Objection; 1.2. Civil Disobedience and Resistance; Levels of Resistance; 1.2.1. Non-Resistance; 1.2.2. Passive Resistance; 1.2.3. Active Resistance; 1.2.4. The Right to Resist; 1.3. Civil and Criminal Disobedience; Justified Criminality; Political Crime; 1.4. Civil Disobedience and Revolution; 2. Other Phenomena Related to Civil Disobedience; 2.1. Civil Disobedience and Terrorism; 2.2. Civil Disobedience and the Strike. The Political General Strike. The Hunger Strike; 2.3. Civil Disobedience and Test Cases; 2.4. Civil Disobedience and Tyrannicide; 2.5. Civil Disobedience and Symbolic Acts; 2.6. Civil Disobedience and Treason; 2.7. Civil Disobedience and War, in Its Various Guises; 2.7.1. General Observations on War; Possible Justifications for War; 2.7.2. Civil Disobedience and the “Just War”; 2.7.3. Civil Disobedience and Religious Wars: The Crusades and the “Holy War”; 2.7.4. Present-Day War: Total and Atomic War; 2.8. Civil Disobedience and Self-Guardianship in Private Law; 2.9. Civil Disobedience and “Copping-Out”; 2.10. Distinct Types of Disobedience by Acting Subject; Dutiful Obedience; 2.10.1. Military Disobedience; 2.10.2. Ecclesiastical Disobedience; 2.10.3. Administrative Disobedience; Civil Servant Disobedience; 2.11. Dissent; 2.12. Militant Action; 2.13. Social Protest; 2.14. Non-Cooperation; 2.15. Non-Peaceful Disobedience: Rebellion, Sedition and Guerrilla Warfare; 2.16. Civil Disobedience and the Right to Asylum; II. THE JUSTIFICATION OF CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE: The Positive Aspect; Dialectic of Legitimacy, Validity and Effectiveness Applied to the Subject of Civil Disobedience; 1. The Plane of Values; The Moral Justification for Civil Disobedience: “The Individual’s Moral Duty to Disobey”; The Main Theories Concerning Moral Obligation; 1.1. Iusnaturalism: The Appeal to a Higher Law and the Subsuming of Civil Disobedience under Natural and Human Rights Theories; 1.2. Moral Relativism: The Appeal to Individual Conscience; The Spanish Polemic Begun by González Vicén and Elías Díaz; 1.3. Utilitarianism: The Appeal to the Common Good; Critiques of Utilitarian Theories; 2. The Plane of Norms. Legal Excuses for Civil Disobedience; Does “A Subjective Right of the Individual to Civil Disobedience” Exist?; 2.1. The Anglo-American Answer and Its Applicability to Spanish Law; Distinct Mechanisms According to the Actor or Subject Employing Them; 2.1.1. When the Actor is the Lawyer; Main “Defences”; 2.1.2. When the Actor is the Jury; “Jury Nullification”, as an Expression of “Freedom of the Jury”; 2.1.3. When the Actor is the Prosecutor; “Prosecutorial Discretion” as a Type of “Official iscretion”; 2.1.4. The Civil Disobedient’s Role as Defendant in the Trial; 2.1.5. The Judge’s Role in the Treatment of Civil Disobedience; The “Political Question Doctrine”; 2.2. An Attempt at Taking a Personal Position, and Conclusions Concerning the Possible Existence of a Subjective Right to Civil Disobedience within the Spanish Legal System; 2.2.1. Antinomy of Values; 2.2.2. Antinomy of Powers; 2.2.3. Antinomy of Norms; 2.2.4. The Possible Nature of a Right to Civil Disobedience. III. THE PLANE OF FACTS: Political and Social Explanation of Civil Disobedience; The “Individual Political Obligation to Obey”; 3.1. Political Obligation as a Prima Facie Obligation; 3.2. Theory Types; 3.2.1. Consensual Democratic Theories, Acceptance and Popular Representation; The Majority Rule; Fair Play Obligation; Form of Government under Which Civil Disobedience Develops; 3.2.2. Coercive as opposed to Recognition Theories; 3.2.3. Mixed Theories; Chapter 2. Negative Aspects: The Limits of Civil Disobedience; INDEX WORDS:
URL http://www.brill.nl/m_catalogue_search.asp?sub=6&converted_subtitle=inete&subtitle=inete&x=13&y=10 |
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15. | Sevinc, Murat : Hunger strikes in Turkey, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Hunger strikes in Turkey / Sevinc, Murat REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Human rights quarterly : a comparative and international journal of the social sciences, humanities and law : vol. 30; no. 3., p. 655-679. - Baltimore : John Hopkins U. P., 2008. - ISSN 0275-0392 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Turkey
URL http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/human_rights_quarterly/summary/v030/30.3.sevinc.html |