1. | Part two : civil and commercial law, 1995 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a monograph Part two : civil and commercial law / REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: Legal reform in post-communist Europe : the view from within / Frankowski, S.; Stephan, P. B. (eds.), p. 163-232. - Dordrecht : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 1995. ISBN 0-7923-3218-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: The articles are:. 1. Bogudar Kordasiewicz & Marek Wierzbowski : Polish civil and commercial law. 2. Flavius A. Baias : Romanian civil and commercial law. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Romania / Poland |
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2. | 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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3. | Chenwi, Lilian (ed.) : Extraterritorial human rights obligations from an African perspective, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Extraterritorial human rights obligations from an African perspective / Chenwi, Lilian (ed.) ; Soboka Bulto, Takele (ed.), xxxiii, 308 p. - Cambridge : Intersentia, 2018. ISBN 978-1-78068-198-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Lilian Chenwi and Takele Soboka Bulto: Introduction. 2. Lilian Chenwi and Takele Soboka Bulto: Extraterritoriality in the African regional human rights system from a comparative perspective. 3. Fons Coomans: Commercialisation of educational services and extraterritorial human rights obligations. 4. Lilian Chenwi: Extraterritorial human rights obligations in the context of development assistance to African states. 5. Nadia C.S. Lambek and Claire Debucquois: The right to food beyond borders: the extraterritorial reach of the right to food in Africa. 6. Khulekani Moyo: Extraterritorial application of the right to water under the African system for the protection of human rights. 7. Takele Soboka Bulto: Tortured unity: United States - Africa relations in extraordinary renditions and states' extraterritorial obligations. 8. Ademola Oluborode Jegede: Indigenous communities displaced by climate change and extraterritorial application of states' obligations in Africa. 9. Christopher Mbazira: Land grabbing, extraterritorial obligations and the failure of justice in Uganda: the Mubende case. 10. Prudence Acirokop: Extraterritorial obligations of Uganda for its military's failure to respect and protect civilians in areas of the Lord's Resistance Army activity. INDEX WORDS:
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4. | MacNaughton, Gillian (ed.) : Economic and social rights in a neoliberal world, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Economic and social rights in a neoliberal world / MacNaughton, Gillian (ed.) ; Frey, Diane F. (ed.), xx, 366 p. - Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2018. ISBN 978-1-108-41818-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Gillian MacNaughton and Diane F. Frey: Introduction. 2. James Heintz: Inequality, neoliberalism, and human rights. 3. Felipe Ford Cole: Neoliberalim's law in Peru: a model. 4. Asa Maron: Governing risky childhoods: how neoliberal governance prescriptions rule our social rights in Israel. 5. James Murphy: Neoliberalism and the privatization of social rights in education. 6. Gillian MacNaughton: Equality rights beyond neoliberal constraints. 7. Ben T.C. Warwick: A hierarchy of comfort? The CESCR's approach to the 2008 economic crisis. 8. Allison Corkery and Heba Khalil: Do metrics matter? Accountability of economic and social rights in post-revolution Egypt. 9. Ana Maria Sánchez Rodríguez: Contesting neoliberalism: bringing economic and social rights to end violence against women in Mexico. 10. Amanda Cahill Ripley: Challenging neoliberalism: making economic and social rights matter in the peacebuilding agenda. 11. Sakiko Fukuda-Parr: Developmental states, neoliberalism and the right to food: Brazil and South Africa. 12. Carmel Williams and Alison Blaiklock: Human rights informed the sustainable development goals, but are they lost in Nea Zealand's neoliberal aid program?. 13. Joo-Young Lee: Neoliberal developmentalism in South Korea and the unfulfilled promise of economic and social rights. 14. Diane F. Frey: Social justice, neoliberalism, and labor standards in the International Labour Organization. 15. Jean Carmalt: Neoliberal geographies and the justiciability of economic and social rights. 16. LaDawn Haglund: Can human rights challenge neoliberal logics? Evidence from water and sanitation rulings in São Paulo, Brazil. 17. Diane F. Frey and Gillian MacNaughton: Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Brazil / Egypt / Israel / Mexico / New Zealand / Peru / South Africa / South Korea |