1. | Francioni, Francesco : The destruction of the Buddhas of Bamiyan and international law, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial The destruction of the Buddhas of Bamiyan and international law / Francioni, Francesco ; Lenzerini, Federico REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): European journal of international law : vol. 14; no. 4., p. 619-652. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2003. - ISSN 0938-5428 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / USA NOTE (GENERAL): UNESCO universal declaration on cultural diversity; UN charter; World heritage convention USED FOR Convention on the protection of world cultural and natural heritage; |
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2. | O'Keefe, Roger : World cultural heritage, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial World cultural heritage : obligations to the international community as a whole? / O'Keefe, Roger REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): International and comparative law quarterly : vol. 53; part 1., p. 189-210. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2004. - ISSN 0020-5893 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): World heritage convention; UDHR-27; ICESCR-15; |
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3. | Riley, Mary (ed.) : Indigenous intellectual property rights, 2004 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Indigenous intellectual property rights : legal obstacles and innovative solutions / Riley, Mary (ed.) - (Contemporary native American communites), xix, 393 p.. - Walnut Creek, CA : Altamira Press, 2004. ISBN 0-7591-0486-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: LEGAL OBSTACLES : CHAPTER 1: "As Long As the Grass Grows": Representing Indigenous Claims , by Tressa Berman. CHAPTER 2: Digital Vibes and Radio Waves in Indigenous Peru , by Bartholomew Dean. CHAPTER 3: Intellectual Property Protection and the Market for Alaska Native Arts and Crafts, by Julie Hollowell. CHAPTER 4: The Amerindian Rights Movement in Guyana and Its Influence , by Mary Riley. PART II: DEVELOPING INNOVATIVE SOLUTIONS : CHAPTER 5: Land, Tenure Systems, and Indigenous Intellectual Property Rights , by Catherine M. Tucker. CHAPTER 6: Benefit-Sharing Under the Convention on Biological Diversity , by Katy Moran. CHAPTER 7: Ownership of Indigenous Languages: A case study from Guatemala , by Judith M. Maxwell. PART III: ACCESS AND CONTROL : CHAPTER 8: Intellectual Property Rights and Indigenous Peoples Rights and Responsibilities, by Maui Solomon. CHAPTER 9: Biocolonialism and Isolates of Historic Interest , by Marie Annette Jaimes Guerrero. CHAPTER 10: Indigenous Knowledge and Traditional Plant Resources of the Secwepemc (Shuswap) Nation, by Kelly P. Bannister. CHAPTER 11: Intellectual Property Rights and Indigenous Cultural Heritage in Archaeology, by George P. Nicholas and Kelly P. Bannister. CHAPTER 12: Prior Informed Consent and Bioprospecting Research in Chiapas , by Elois Ann Berlin and Brent Berlin. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / Canada / France / Guatemala / Guyana / Honduras / India / Nigeria / North America / Paraguay / Peru / El Salvador / Suriname / USA LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Alaska NOTE (GENERAL): Convention on biological diversity; CRC; Draft declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; ICCPR; UDHR; UN declaration of linguistic rights; |
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4. | Francioni, Franceso (ed.) : The 1972 world heritage convention, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The 1972 world heritage convention : a commentary / Francioni, Franceso (ed.) ; with the assitance of Federico Lenzerini - (Oxford commentaries on international law), xxiv, 576 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2008. ISBN 978-0-19-92169-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PATRT I : INTRODUCTION: The 1972 world heritage convention : an introduction, by Francesco Francioni. PART II COMMENTARY: 1. Preamble , F. Francioni. 2. Definition of Cultural Heritage , A. Yusuf. 3. Article I Cultural Landscape , K. Whitby-Last. 4. Article 2 Definition of Natural Heritage , C. Redgwell. 5. Article 3 Identification and Deliniation of World Heritage , B. Boer. 6. Articles 4-7 National and International Protection of the ultural and Natural Heritage , G. Carducci. 7. Articles 8-11 World Heritage Committee and World Heritage List , T. Scovazzi. 8. Article 11 List of World Heritage in Danger , L. Condorelli. 9. Article 12 Protection of Properties not Inscribed on the World Heritage List , F. Lenzerini. 10. Article 13 World Heritage Committee and International Assistance , A. F. Vrdoljak. 11. Article 14 The Secretariat and Support of the World Heritage Committee , A. F. Vrdoljak. 12. Articles 15-16 World Heritage Fund , F. Lenzerini. 13. Articles 17-18 Activities to Supprt of the World Heritage Fund , L. Patchett. 14. Articles 19-20 International Assistance , A. Lemaistre and F. Lenzerini. 15. Article 27-28 Educational Programmes , V. Vujicic-Lugassy and M. Richon. 16. Articles 29 Reports , B. Boer. 17. Articles 30-22 and 35-38 Final Clauses , F. Lenzerini. 18. Article 34 The Federal Clause , B. Boer. PART III: RELATION OF THE WOLRD HERITAGE CONVENTION WITH OTHER RELEVANT INTERNATIONAL TREATIES:. 1. The 1972 world heritage convention in the framework of other UNESCO conventions on cultural heritage, by Guido Carducci. 2. The world heritage convention and other conventions relating to the protection of the natural heritage, ny Catherine Redgwell. PART IV CONCLUSIONS:. 1. The future of the world heritage convention: problems and prospects, by Francesco Francioni and Federcico Lenzerini. APPENDIXES. INDEX WORDS:
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5. | Petaux, Jean : Democracy and human rights for Europe, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Democracy and human rights for Europe : the Council of Europe's contribution / Petaux, Jean, 337 p.. - Strasbourg : Council of Europe, 2009. ISBN 978-92-871-6667-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Part I - Forum for democracy, gage of stability:. Chapter 1 - An institution born of history - And compromise. Chapter 2 - Reuniting Europe, fostering democracy. Chapter 3 - The culture of human rights: law at the service of a political ambition. Part II - The home of human rights and the forum of cultural diversity:. Chapter 1 - An exceptional achievement with a political content: human rights. Chapter 2 - Europe right side out: culture at the heart and cultural diversity at the head. Chapter 3 - The culture of human rights: law at the service of a political ambition. Part III - The crucible of Europe and the future for politics:. Chapter 1 - The Council of Europe and the European Union: a new and vital synergy . Chapter 2 - The Council of Europe: regenerating a Europe stuck in the mud. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Romania / Russian Federation NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; European cultural convention; LIBRARY LOCATION: CoE-2009
URL http://book.coe.int/EN/ficheouvrage.php?PAGEID=36&lang=EN&produit_aliasid=2380 |
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6. | Bogdandy, Armin von ... [et al.] : The exercise of public authority by international institutions, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The exercise of public authority by international institutions : advancing international institutional law / Bogdandy, Armin von ... [et al.] - (Beiträge zum ausländischen öffentlichen Recht und Völkerrecht ; Bd. 210), xiii, 1005 p. . - Heidelberg : Springer, 2010. - ISSN 0172-4770 ISBN 978-3-642-04530-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. I. CONCEPT:. 1. Armin von Bogdandy, Philipp Dann & Matthias Goldmann: Developing the Publicness of Public International Law: Towards a Legal Framework for Global Governance Activities. 2. Comment by Stefan Kadelbach: From Public International Law to International Public Law: A Comment on the “Public Authority” of International Institutions and the “Publicness” of their Law. 3. Comment by Stephan Leibfried: To Tame and to Frame. 4. Ingo Venzke: International Bureaucracies from a Political Science Perspective – Agency, Authority and International Institutional Law. II. THEMATIC STUDIES:. 1. The Exercise of Public Authority through Instruments Concerning Individuals:. 1.1 Decisions:. 1. Clemens A. Feinäugle: The UN Security Council Al-Qaida and Taliban Sanctions Committee: Emerging Principles of International Institutional Law for the Protection of Individuals?. 2. Karen Kaiser: WIPO’s International Registration of Trademarks: An International Administrative Act Subject to Examination by the Designated Contracting Parties. 3. Maja Smrkolj: International Institutions and Individualized Decision-Making: An Example of UNHCR’s Refugee Status Determination. 1.2 Recommendations:. 1. Gefion Schuler: Effective Governance through Decentralized Soft Implementation: The OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises. 1.3 Information:. 1. Bettina Schöndorf-Haubold: The Administration of Information in International Administrative Law – The Example of Interpol. 2. The Exercise of Public Authority through Instruments Concerning Individual States:. 2.1 Decisions:. 1. Petra Lea Láncos: Flexibility and Legitimacy - The Emissions Trading System under the Kyoto Protocol. 2. Diana Zacharias: The UNESCO Regime for the Protection of World Heritage as Prototype of an Autonomy-Gaining International Institution. 3. Comment by Ute Mager:. The UNESCO Regime for the Protection of World Heritage. 2.2 Recommendations:. 1. Anuscheh Farahat: Regulating Minority Issues through Standard-Setting and Mediation: The Case of the High Commissioner on National Minorities. 2.3 Information:. 1. Erika de Wet: Governance through Promotion and Persuasion: The 1998 ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work. 2. Joseph Windsor: The WTO Committee on Trade in Financial Services: The Exercise of Public Authority within an Informational Forum. 3. The Exercise of Public Authority through General Instruments:. 3.1 Secondary Law:. 1. Isabel Feichtner: The Administration of the Vocabulary of International Trade: The Adaptation of WTO Schedules to Changes in the Harmonized System. 2. Christine Fuchs: Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) – Conservation Efforts Undermine the Legality Principle. 3.2 International Public Standards:. 1. Jürgen Friedrich: Legal Challenges of Non-binding Instruments: The Case of the FAO Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries. 2. Ravi Afonso Pereira: Why Would International Administrative Activity Be Any Less Legitimate? – A Study of the Codex Alimentarius Commission. 4. Public Authority through Private Law Instruments?. 1. Matthias Hartwig: ICANN – Governance by Technical Necessity. 2. Steven Less:. International Administration of Holocaust Compensation: The International Commission on Holocaust Era Insurance Claims (ICHEIC). III. CROSS-CUTTING ANALYSIS:. 1. Matthias Goldmann: Inside Relative Normativity: From Sources to Standard Instruments for the Exercise of International Public Authority. 2. Comment by Jan Klabbers: Goldmann Variations. 3. Armin von Bogdandy: General Principles of International Public Authority: Sketching a Research Field. 4. Comment by Sabino Cassese: Is There a Global Administrative Law?. 5. Jochen von Bernstorff: Procedures of Decision-Making and the Role of Law in International Organizations. 6. Comment by Christian Tietje: The Contributions by Jochen von Bernstorff and by Maja Smrkolj. 7. Volker Röben: The Enforcement Authority of International Institutions. 8. Comment by Dirk Hanschel: The Enforcement Authority of International Institutions – Some Remarks and Suggestions for Further Analysis. 9. Erika de Wet: Holding International Institutions Accountable: The Complementary Role of Non-Judicial Oversight Mechanisms and Judicial Review. 10. Armin von Bogdandy & Philipp Dann: International Composite Administration: Conceptualizing Multi-Level and Network Aspects in the Exercise of International Public Authority. 11. Comment by Ute Mager: International Composite Administration. 12. Rüdiger Wolfrum: Legitimacy of International Law and the Exercise of Administrative Functions: The Example of the International Seabed Authority, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) and International Fisheries Organizations. IV. CONTEXT:. 1. Eberhard Schmidt-Aßmann: The Internationalization of Administrative Relations as a Challenge for Administrative Law Scholarship. 2. Giacinto della Cananea: Procedural Due Process of Law Beyond the State. List of Contributors. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; UN charter-chap. VII; Refugee convention; Framework convention on climate change; Kyoto protocol; World heritage convention; ICCPR; ICESCR; ECHR; CRC; EU charter of fundamental rights;
URL http://www.springer.com/law/international/book/978-3-642-04530-1 |
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7. | Boerefijn, Ineke (ed.) : Human rights and conflict, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights and conflict : essays in honour of Bas de Gaay Fortman / Boerefijn, Ineke (ed.) ; Henderson, Laura ; Janse, Ronald ; Weaver, Robert, xv, 539 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2012. ISBN 978-1-78068-054-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Introduction Human Rights Before, During, and After Conflict, by Ronald Janse. PART I. HUMAN RIGHTS IN PRE-CONFLICT SITUATIONS:. 1. Human Rights and the Regulation of the International State System, by Duco Hellema. 2. Structures of Violence, by Jolle Demmers. 3. More Than Just a Nice Idea. Equality as an Effective Way to Reduce the Risk of Violent Conflict, by Jenny Goldschmidt and Laura Henderson. 4. Human Rights Violations and Contemporary Violent Conflict. An Inquiry into Causes and Remedies, by Georg Frerks. 5. Banning Cluster Bombs. Achieving Rights through Activism, by Georg Frerks, Miriam Struyk and Roos Boer. 6. Constraints and Challenges in Minority Protection. Experience of the OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities, by Natalie Sabanadze. 7. Early Warning, Non-Intervention and Failed Responsibility to Protect in Rwanda and Darfur, by Fred Grünfeld. 8. Human Security. A Shifting and Bridging Concept that Can Be Operationalised, by Marlies Glasius. 9. From Acceptable Hazard to Violation of Rights. Upstream Human Rights Activism in the Sidoardjo Mudflow Case, by Irene I. Hadiprayitno. 10. Climate Change, Conflict and the Protection of Vulnerable Collectivities, by M.A. Mohamed Salih. 11. From Charity to Institutional Development. Refl ections on Newmont’s Corporate Social Responsibility Strategies and Conflict-Avoidance in Ghana, by Radu Mares. 12. Doing Business in Pre-Conflict Areas, by Tineke Lambooy. 13. Conflict and Rights in Vengeance-Ridden Societies. Moral and Legal Inferences, by Fatos Tarifa. PART II. HUMAN RIGHTS IN CONFLICT SITUATIONS:. 1. Human Rights and Humanitarian Action, by Dorothea Hilhorst and Bram J. Jansen. 2. Old Cultures Never Die? Cultural Genocide in International Law, by Yvonne Donders. 3. Non-State Actors in Conflict, by Anja Mihr. 4. Caught in the Middle of Persistent Confl ict. Th e Rights of Palestinian Children, by Karin Arts. PART III. HUMAN RIGHTS IN POST-CONFLICT SITUATIONS:. 1. How Transitional Are Transitional Politics and Transitional Justice? A Case of Misleading Terminology, by Peter R. Baehr. 2. Counter-Terrorism, Rule of Law Promotion and the Friends of Yemen, by Ronald Janse. 3. The Role of International Criminal Courts and Tribunals in Post-Conflict Societies, by Gentian Zyberi. 4. Rwanda’s Police Development, by Piet van Reenen. 5. Civil and Political Rights in Times of Political Oppression: Rights Without Remedies? The Case of Zambia, by Rodger M.A. Chongwe and Nicola Jägers. 6. Role of the Judiciary in the Enforcement of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Experience from Nepal, by Kalyan Shrestha and Ananda M. Bhattarai. 7. Loss and Destruction of Property. Post-Confl ict Human Rights Responses from an ECHR Perspective, by Antoine Buyse. 8. The Human Right to Mourning. Social Trauma and Transitional Justice in Post-Conflict Argentina, by Antonius Robben. 9. The Interface Between Transitional Justice and Reconciliation in the Wake of Civil War. A Case Study of Northern Uganda, by Lauren Gould and Cedric Ryngaert. Selected Bibliography: Bastiaan de Gaay Fortman. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; ICCPR; ECHR-14; ECHRP-12; EEC-art. 119; TEC-art. 13; EU charter of fundamental rights; Convention on cluster munitions; Framework convention on climate change; |
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8. | Tobin, Brendan : Indigenous peoples, customary law and human rights, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Indigenous peoples, customary law and human rights : why living law matters / Tobin, Brendan, 302 p.. - London : Routledge, 2014. ISBN 978-1-138-01968-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Customary law in context. 2. Self-determination in practice. 3. Where custom is the law. 4. In search of the living law. 5. Ancestral rights recovered: lands and traditional territories. 6. Natural resources or essences of life?. 7. Right to culture and cultural heritage. 8. Traditional knowledge. 9. Intercultural equity and justice. In closing: traditions for the future. INDEX WORDS:
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9. | Sprankling, John G. : The international law of property, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The international law of property / Sprankling, John G., 380 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2014. ISBN 978-0-19-965454-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Origins of international property law. 2. An international definition of 'property'. 3. The framework of international property law. 4. Rights in tangible objects. 5. Rights in intangibles. 6. Rights in land and other immovable things. 7. Rights in waters and oceans. 8. Rights in airspace and outer space. 9. Towards the global right to property. 10. The right to acquire. 11. The right to use. 12. The right to destroy. 13. The right to exclude. 14. The right to transfer. 15. Reflections on international property law. INDEX WORDS:
LIBRARY LOCATION: Offentlig rätt |
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10. | Kuwali, Dan (ed.) : By all means necessary, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph By all means necessary : protecting civilians and preventing mass atrocities in Africa / Kuwali, Dan (ed.) ; Viljoen, Frans (ed.), 495 p. - Pretoria : Pretoria University Law Press, 2017. ISBN 978-1-920538-66-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: IMPLEMENTATION OF PROTECTION OF CIVILIANS MANDATES. 1. Dan Kuwali and Frans Viljoen: Introduction. 2. Dan Kuwali: Article 4(h), the responsibility to protect and the protection of civilians. 3. Conor Foley: Defining protection of civilians in the context of armed conflicts. 4. Dire Tladi: Interpretation of protection of civilians mandates in United Nations Security Council Resolutions. PART II: PROTECTION OF SPECIFIC POPULATIONS AND PROPERTY AT RISK. 5. Thompson Chengeta: Protection of civilians from wilful killing in armed conflicts. 6. Dan Kuwali: Prevention of violent extremism in Africa. 7. Cephas Lumina: Protection of children in armed conflicts. 8. Cristiano d'Orsi: Protection of refugees and internally displaced persons during armed conflicts. 9. Dan Kuwali, Catherine Nakirya and Grace Amuge: Protection from sexual and gender-based violence in Africa. 10. Dan Kuwali and Gudmundur Alfredsson: Protection of minorities. 11. Jan F. Mutton: Protection of cultural heritage during armed conflicts in Africa. PART III: MEANS AND STRATEGIES FOR DEALING WITH MASS ATROCITIES. 12. Anna Larsson and Dan Kuwali: The role of humanitarian agencies in the protection of civilians. 13. Thomas Probert: The role of the UN Human Rights Council Special Procedures in protecting the right to life in armed conflicts. 14. John-Mark Iyi: The role of courts in protection of civilians. 15. Mphatso Boti-Phiri: Conflict prevention, peace building and prevention of mass atrocities. 16. Neville Dastoor and Dan Kuwali: The role of the United Nations Security Council in protection of civilians. PART IV: LESSONS LEARNT IN PROTECTION OF CIVILIANS IN ARMED CONFLICTS. 17. Buba Bojang: Protection of civilians in armed conflicts in West Africa. 18. Bright Nkrumah and Godard Busingye: No peace, no war: protection of civilians in the Great Lakes Region in Africa. 19. Paul Phiri: Protection of civilians in the Horn of Africa. 20. Joe Stork: Protection of civilians: experiences from the Middle East and North Africa. 21. Solomon Dersso: The African Union's agenda on the protection of civilians: a review of its ambition and practice. 22. Noel M. Morada: Asian perspectives on atrocity prevention and protection of civilians PART V: THE FUTURE OF PROTECTING CIVILIANS AND PREVENTING MASS ATROCITIES IN AFRICA. 23. Gilbert Mittawa: Overcoming challenges in protecting civilians. 24. Dan Kuwali: The future of protection of civilians in Africa. 25. Dan Kuwali and Frans Viljoen: Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (MEETINGS): Colloquim on the protection of civilians in armed conflicts, Pretoria, 18 and 19 September 2014 NOTE (GENERAL): Constitutive Act of the African Union |
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11. | Hohmann, Jessie (ed.) : The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples : a commentary / Hohmann, Jessie (ed.) ; Weller, Marc (ed.) - (Oxford commentaries on international law), 611 p. - Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2018. ISBN 978-0-19-967322-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Joshua Castellino and Cathal Doyle: Who are 'indigenous peoples'? An examination of concepts concerning group membership in the UNDRIP. 2. S. James Anaya and Luis Rodriguez-Piñero: The making of the UNDRIP. 3. Martin Scheinin and Mattias Åhrén: Relationship to human rights, and related international instruments. 4. Christina Binder: The UNDRIP and interactions with international investment law. 5. Marc Weller: Self-determination and indigenous peoples: Articles 3, 4, 5, 18, 23, and 46(1). 6. Jessien Hohmann: The UNDRIP and the rights of indigenous peoples to existence, cultural integrity and identity, and non-assimilation: Articles 7(2), 8, and 43. 7. Kirsty Gover: Equality and non-discrimination in the UNDRIP: Articles 2, 6, and 7(1). 8. Shin Imai and Kathryn Gunn: Indigenous belonging: membership and identity in the UNDRIP. 9. Mauro Barelli: Free, prior, and informed consent in the UNDRIP: Articles 10, 19, 29(2), and 32(2). 10. Alexandra Xanthaki: Culture: Articles 11(1), 12, 13(1), 15, and 34. 11. Tobias Stoll: Intellectual property and technologies: Article 31. 12. Daniel Joyce: Media: Article 16. 13. Lorie M. Graham and Amy B. Van Zyl-Chavarro: Indigenous education and the UNDRIP: Article 14. 14. Claire Charters: Indigenous peoples' rights to lands, territories, and resources in the UNDRIP: Articles 10, 25, 26, and 27. 15. Stefania Errico: Control over natural resources and protetion of the environment of indigenous territories: Articles 29, 30, and 32. 16. Lee Swepston: Labour rights: Article 17. 17. Camilo Pérez-Bustillo and Jessie Hohmann: Indigenous rights to development, socio-economic rights, and rights for groups with vulnerabilities: Articles 20-22, 24, and 44. 18. Willem van Genugten and Federico Lenzerini: Legal implementation and international cooperation and assistance: Articles 37-42. 19. Federico Lenzerini: Reparations, restitution, and redress: Articles 8(2), 11(2), 20(2), and 28 INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: Inst.ref. |