1. | Lee, Roy S. (ed.) : The international criminal court, the making of the Rome statute issues, negotiations, result, 1999 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The international criminal court, the making of the Rome statute issues, negotiations, result / Lee, Roy S. (ed.) ; in cooperation with the Project on international courts and tribunals, xxxv, 657 p.. - Hague : Kluwer, 1999. ISBN 90-411-1212-X LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. The principle of complementarity, by John T. Holmes. 2. Crimes within the jurisdiction of the court, by Herman von Hebel and Darryl Robinson. 3. Jurisdiction of the court, by Elizabeth Wilmshurts. 4. The international criminal court and the Security Council, by Lionel Yee. 5. Composition and administration of the court, by Medard R. Rwelamira. 6. The role of the international prosecutor, by Silvia A. fernandez de Gurmendi. 7. International criminal law principles, by Per Saland. 8. International criminal law procedures: 1. The process of negotaitions. 2. Investigation and prosecution. 3. The trial proceedings. 4. Rights of persons of accused of a crime. 5. Reparation to vicyims. 6. Protection of national security information. 7. Appreal and revision. 9. International cooperation and judicial assistance, by Phakiso Mochochoko. 10. Penalties, by Rolf Einar Fife. 11. Establishing an enforcement regime, by Trevor Pascal Chimimba. 12. Gender issues, by Cate Steains. 13. Participation of non-governmental organizations, by William Pace and Mark Thieroff. 14. Financing of the court, assembly of states parties and the preparatory commission, by S. Rama Rao. 15. Preamble and final clauses, by Tuiloma Neroni Slade and Roger S. Clark. 16. The development of the Rome statute, by Philippe Kirsch. 17. The international criminal court : a perspective, by Adriaan Bos. 18. Looking to the future, by Giovanni Conso. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; UN charter; ICCPR; Genocide convention; CAT; UDHR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Statute of the ICC (full text); |
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2. | Cassese, Antonio : International criminal law , 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International criminal law / Cassese, Antonio. - 2. ed.., xi, 455 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U.P., 2008. ISBN 978-0-19-920310-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Fundamentals of international criminal law -- General principles of international criminal law -- The elements of international crimes -- War crimes -- Crimes against humanity -- Genocide -- Torture as a discrete crime, and aggression -- Terrorism as an international crime -- Perpetration and joint criminal enterprise -- Other modes of liability -- Criminal liability for omissions -- Justifications and excuses -- Other excuses : superior order, necessity, duress, and mistake -- Immunities -- The establishment of international criminal tribunals -- International versus national jurisdiction -- The adoption of the essential features of the adversarial system -- General principles governing international criminal trials -- Stages of international proceedings in outline i-pre-trial and trial -- Appeals and enforcement -- The specificity of international trials INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICC statute; AMR; Hague conventions; Convention on slavery; Nuremberg charter; UN charter; Genocide convention; Geneva conventions; ECHR; ICCPR; ICESCR; Apartheid convention; Montreal convention; ACHPR; CAT; Ottawa convention; LIBRARY LOCATION: KB |
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3. | Triffterer, Otto (ed.) : Commentary on the Rome statute of the International Criminal Court, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Commentary on the Rome statute of the International Criminal Court : observers' notes, article by article ALso Special print (update of the pages 743-770, Kai Ambos) / Triffterer, Otto (ed.). - 2. ed.., XLI, 1954 p.. - München : Verlag C. H. Beck, 2008. ISBN 978-3-406-57841-0 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART 1. ESTABLISHMENT OF THE COURT. PART 2. JURISDICTION, ADMISSIBILITY AND APPLICABLE LAW. PART 3. GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF CRIMINAL LAW. PART 4. COMPOSITION AND ADMINISTRATION OF THE COURT. PART 5. INVESTIGATION AND PROSECUTION. PART 6. THE TRIAL. PART 7. PENALTIES. PART 8. APPEAL AND REVISION. PART 9. INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION AND JUDICIAL ASSISTANCE. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; ICCPR; CEDAW; ECHR; Draft code of crimes against the peace and security of mankind; Statute of the ICC; LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: Inst.ref. |
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4. | Cernic, Jernej Letnar : Human rights law and business, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Human rights law and business : corporate responsibility for fundamental human rights / Cernic, Jernej Letnar, xv, 328 p.. - Groningen : Europa Law Publ., 2010. ISBN 978-90-8952-081-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Part I: Introduction. Chapter 1: Introduction. Chapter 2 : The Nature and Scope of the Concept of Corporate Responsibility for Fundamental Human Rights. Part II: Examination of Current Normative Framework:. Chapter 3: Corporations and State Responsibility. Chapter 4: National and International Responses to Corporate Criminal Responsibility for Fundamental Human Rights. Chapter 5: Corporate Civil Responsibility for Fundamental Human Rights. Chapter 6: A Critical Examination of Emerging International Quasi-Judicial Legal Regimes for Corporate Responsibility for Fundamental Human Rights. Chapter 7: United Nations and Corporate Responsibility for Human Rights. Chapter 8: Corporate Responsibility and Investment Law. PART III: De Lege Ferenda Framework for Corporate Responsibility for Fundamental Human Rights:. Chapter 9: Towards a Normative Framework de Lege Ferenda for Human Rights Law and Business. Chapter 10: Summary and Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CAT; ICESCR; CRC; CEDAW; ECHR; |
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5. | Safferling, Christoph : International criminal procedure, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International criminal procedure / Safferling, Christoph, xxxiii, 602 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2012. ISBN 978-0-19-956288-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: 1: Introduction. PART I - The Development of International Criminal Procedure. PART II - The Special Circumstances of International Criminal Procedure. PART III - A methodology for international criminal procedure. PART IV - The participants. PART V - The procedural structure and preliminary issues. PART 6 - The investigation stage. PART 7 - The confirmation proceedings. PART 8 - The trial. PART 9 - Appeal and revision. PART 10 - Contempt of Court. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; ECHR; IMT charter; Geneva conventions; Genocide convention; ICCPR; ICC statute; ICTY statute; ICTR statute; |
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6. | Dudley, Michael (ed.) : Mental health and human rights, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Mental health and human rights : vision, praxis and courage / Dudley, Michael (ed.) ; Silove, Derrick ; Gale, Fran, xxvii, 704 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2012. ISBN 978-0-19-921396-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Semyon Gluzman: A personal testament. PART 1: OVERARCHING CONCEPTUAL ISSUES:. 1: Winton Higgins: Human rights development: provenance, ambit and effect. 2: Charles Watters: Mental health and illness as human rights issues: philosophical, historical and social perspectives and controversies. 3: Michael L Perlin and Eva Szeli.: Mental health law and human rights: evolution and contemporary challenges. 4: Laurence Kirmayer: Culture and context in human rights. 5: Jennifer Randall, Graham Thornicroft, Elaine Brohan, Aliya Kassam, Elanor Lewis-Holmes, and Nisha Mehta: Stigma and discrimination: critical human rights issues for mental health. 6: Alexander McFarlane and Richard Bryant: Genes, Biology, Mental Health and Human Rights. The Effects of Traumatic Stress as a Case Example. 7: Tristan McGeorge and Dinesh Bhugra: Race, class, mental health and human rights. 8: Roshni Mangalore, Martin Knapp and David McDaid: Mental health economics, mental health policies and human rights. 9: Catherine Esposito and Daniel Tarantola: Mental disability, HIV and human rights. 10: Amita Dhanda: Universal Legal Capacity as a Universal Human Right. COMENTARY:. 1. Eugene Brody: Technology and human rights: a personal perspective. 2. Ezra Susser and Mich Bresnahan: Global mental health and social justice. PART 2: HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES, PSYCHIATRY, NATION STATES AND MARKETS:. 11: Michael Dudley and Fran Gale: Through a glass, darkly: Legacies of the Nazis and the Nuremberg trials for mental health and human rights. 12: Robert van Voren: The abuse of psychiatry for political purposes. 13: Derrick Silove, Susan Rees, and Zachary Steel: The return of torture. 14: Jim Welsh: Medicine, mental health and capital punishment. 15: Danny Sullivan and Paul Mullen: Mental health and human rights in secure settings. 16: Alan Rosen, Tully Miller Rosen, and Patrick McGorry: The rights of people with severe and persistent mental illness. 17: Jonathan H. Marks: Survival, Evasion, Resistance and Escape: A Framework Proposal for the Comprehension and Prevention of Health Professionals' Complicity in Detainee Abuse. COMMENTARY 3:. Thomas Kallert: Coercive treatment in psychiatry: a human rights issue?. 18. Philip Mitchell: Psychiatrists and the pharmaceutical industry - on the ethics of a complex relationship. COMMENTARY 4:. Vikram Patel, Arthur Kleinman, and Benedetto Saraceno: Protecting the human rights of people with mental disorders: a call to action for global mental health. COMMENTARY 5:. Meg Smith: Detained, diagnosed and discharged: human rights and the lived experience of mental illness in New South Wales. PART 3: SOME VULNERABLE GROUPS:. 19. Zachary Steel, Catherine R. Bateman Steel and Derrick Silove: Civillilan populations affected by conflict and displacement : mental health and the human rights imperative. 20: Sarah Mares and Jon Jureidini: Child and adolescent refugees and asylum seekers in Australia: The Ethics of exposing children to suffering to achieve social outcomes. 21: Zachary Steel, Catherine R. Bateman Steel, and Derrick Silove: Civilian populations affected by conflict and displacement: Mental health and the human rights imperative. 22: Kathleen Maltzahn and Louella Villadiego: Trafficking, mental health and human rights. 23: Beverley Raphael, Carol Nadelson, Mel Taylor, and Jennifer Jacobs: Human rights and women's mental health. 24: Ernest Hunter, Helen Milroy, Ngiare Brown, and Tom Calma: Mental health, human rights and indigenous people. 25: Ian Hall and Evan Yacoub: Human rights for people with intellectual disabilities. 26: Mark Tomlinson, Peter Cooper, Leslie Swartz, and Mireille Landman: Reflections from a mother-infant intervention: a human rights based approach to research collaboration. 27: Myron Belfer and Diana Samarasan: Missing Voices: Speaking up for the rights of children and adolescents with disabilities. 28: Carmelle Peisah and Henry Brodaty: The mental health and rights of mentally ill older people. 29: Louise Newman: Mental health, rights and people with diverse sexual identities and orientations. 30: Adrian Carter and Wayne Hall: The rights of individuals treated for drug addiction. COMMENTARY 6: Lakshmi Vijayakumar and Lillian Craig Harris: The veil of silence: human rights and suicide. PART 4: Protection of mental health: current provisions and how they may be strengthened:. Introduction. 31: Crick Lund, Tom Sutcliffe, Alan Flisher, and Dan J. Stein: : Protecting the rights of the mentally ill in poorly resourced settings: experiences from four African countries 32: Francois Crepeau and Anne-Claire Gayet: Human rights standards relevant to mental health and how they may be made more effective. 33: John RM Copeland, Eugene Brody, Tony Fowke, Preston Garrison, and Janet Meagher: The role of world associations and the United Nations. 34: David Oaks: Whose voices should be heard: the role of mental health consumers, psychiatric survivors and families Gunilla Backman and Judith Mesquita: The Right to Health. 35: Oliver Lewis and Nell Munro: The right to participation of people with mental disabilities in legal and policy reforms. 36. Reflections from a mother-infant intervention: a human rights-based approach to research collaboration. 37: Peter Walkts. Julia Shearsby and Zachary Steel: Cognitive-behavioural therapy, human rights and psychosis. 38: Fran Gale and Michael Dudley: Promoting social goodness and preventing human rights violations: a post-Nuremberg inheritance for the helping professions. PART 5: Towards the future:. Norman Sartorius: Afterword: Global mental health and human rights: barriers and opportunities INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; UDHR; CEDAW; CERD; CRPD; CAT; CAT-OP; CRC; Declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; ICESCR; ECHR; ECPT; ESC; Framework convention on climate change; Geneva conventions; ICCPR; CRPD; Declaration on the rights of persons belonging to minorities; |
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7. | Hassler, Sabine : Reforming the UN Security Council membership, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Reforming the UN Security Council membership : the illusion of representativeness / Hassler, Sabine - (Routledge research in international law), xv, 322 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2013. ISBN 978-0-415-50590-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Introduction. 1. The Security Council at the Helm of UN Collective Security. 2. The Security Council’s Composition and Membership. 3. Institutional Reform and Its Significance for the Security Council. 4. Proposals on Representativeness. 5. Proposals on Size. 6. Proposals to Remedy Imbalance. 7. Membership Criteria, Power Prerogatives and Periodic Review. 8. A ‘Perfect’ Security Council?. 9. Concluding Thoughts. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Brazil / China / France / Hungary / India / Iraq / Israel / Italy / Japan / Korea / Kuwait / Russian Federation / Rwanda / USSR / United Kingdom / USA LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; |
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8. | Bantekas, Ilias : Intenational human rights, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Intenational human rights : law and practice / Bantekas, Ilias ; Oette, Lutz, xlvii, 731 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U.P., 2013. ISBN 978-0-521-15236-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of Contents:. 1. International human rights law and notions of human rights: foundations, achievements and challenges. 2. International human rights: the normative framework. 3. Human rights in practice. 4. The United Nations charter system. 5. The UN human rights treaty system. 6. Regional human rights treaty systems. 7. Individual complaints procedures. 8. Civil and political rights. 9. Economic, social and cultural rights. 10. Group rights: self-determination, minorities and indigenous peoples. 11. Women's rights. 12. The right to development, poverty and related rights. 13. Victims' rights and reparation. 14. The application of human rights in armed conflict and the international criminalisation process. 15. Human rights and counter-terrorism. 16. Non-state actors and human rights. 17. Globalisation and its impact on human rights. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Argentina / Australia / Bangladesh / Belgium / Botswana / Malaysia / Nigeria / Pakistan / Peru / Philippines / South Africa / Sri Lanka / Sudan / Switzerland / United Kingdom / USA / Venezuela NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; African charter on the rights and welfare of the child; ADRD; Arab charter of human rights; EU charter of fundamental rights; CAT; ICESCR; CEDAW; CERD; CRPD; CRC; Convention on biological diversity; Refugee convention; Dayton peace agreement; Declaration on the right to development; European charter for regional and minorities language; ESC; ECPT; Framework convention for the protection of national minorities; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); ICCPR; AMR; Lisbon treaty; ICC statute; Vienna convention onthe law of treaties; UDHR;
URL http://www.cambridge.org/fi/knowledge/isbn/item7102344/?site_locale=fi_FI |