1. | Cholewinski, Ryszard : Migrant workers in international human rights law, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Migrant workers in international human rights law : their protection in countries of employment / Cholewinski, Ryszard, lxxii, 465 p.. - Oxford : Clarendon Press, 1997. ISBN 0-19-825992-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Part 1: International Migration for Employment, Aliens and Citizens International Migration for Employment: An Overview with Reference to the Right to Development Migrant Workers and their Families as Aliens: Development of International Law and Applicability of Universal and Regional Human Rights Instruments. Part II: Universal Standards Specifically Relating to the Protection of Migrant Workers and Their Families The Protection of the Rights of Migrant Workers and their Families by the ILO with Particular Reference to the Migrant Workers Instruments of 1949 and 1975 The United Nations International Convention on the Protection of the Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of their Families. Part III: Case Study of the Regional Protection of the Rights of Migrant Workers and Their Families in Europe Council of Europe human Rights Conventions and European Community Law: A Comprehensive Framework for Protecting the Rights of Migrants in Europe? Who is a `Migrant Worker' in Europe? The Right to Equal Treatment and Non-Discrimination Economic, Social, Cultural, Political and Residence Rights Conclusion : Towards Inclusion or Exclusion? Bibliography INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; ECHR; ICCPR; CERD; ICESCR; SEA; TEU; Montevideo convention; Declaration of Philadelphia concerning the aims and purposes of the ILO; UN charter; ADRD; UDHR; Refugee convention; ECHRP-1; European convention on social and medical assistance; European interim agreement on social security schemes relating to old age, invalidity and survivors; European convention on establishment; EEC treaty; CDE; ESC; European code of social security; AMR ; OAU refugee convention; European convention on social security; European convention on the legal status of migrant workers (EMW); Cartagena declaration on refugees; CAT; Pact of San José; Additional protocol to the ESC; CRC; Scengen agreement; Protocol amending ESC; Convention on the participation of foreigners in public life at the local level; European charter for regional or minority languages; NAFTA agreement; EC treaty; Second protocol amending the convention on reduction of cases of multiple nationality and military obligations in cases on multiple nationality; EEA agreement; Additional protocol to the ESC providing for a system of collective complaints; Framework convention for the protection of national minorities; Revised ESC; Convention on the crossing of the external frontiers of the member states; |
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2. | Arambulo, Kitty : Strengthening the supervision of the international covenant on economic, social and cultural rights, 1999 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Strengthening the supervision of the international covenant on economic, social and cultural rights : theoretical and procedural aspects / Arambulo, Kitty - (Series school of human rights research ; vol. 3), xvii, 449 p.. - Antwerpen : Intersentia, 1999. ISBN 90-5095-058-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. General introduction. 2. The development of the protection of economic, social and cultural rights in the United Nations. 3. The arguments against economic, social and cultural rights and an individual complaint procedure for the ICESCR. 4. The arguments in support of economic, social and cultural rights and an individual complaint procedure for the ICESCR. 5. Improving supervision of the ICESCR : an optional protocol INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICESCR; 1994 version of the draft optional protocol to the ICESCR; 1997 version of the draft optional protocol to the ICESCR; Utrecht drafts of an optional protocol to the ICESCR; Optional protocol to the ICESCR as proposed in the present study; AMR; ACHPR; CAT; CEDAW; CEDAW-OP; CERD; CRC; ECHR; ESC; ESC-additional protocol; ICCPR; ICCPR-OP; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Vienna declaration and programme of action; |
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3. | Scheinin, Martin : Women's economic and social rights as human rights, 1999 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of monograph series Women's economic and social rights as human rights : conceptual problems and issues of practical implementation / Scheinin, Martin REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT: New trends in discrimination law - international perspectives / Hannikainen, L.; Nykänen, E. (eds.) - (Publications of Turku Law School ; vol. 3), p. 1-28. - Turku : Turku Law School, 1999. - ISSN 1237-5934 ISBN 951-29-1476-X LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICESCR; CEDAW; Beijing declaration and platform for action; |
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4. | Tomlin, Ginger : Full inclusion for persons with disabilities by the year 2000 what will it take?, 1997 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Full inclusion for persons with disabilities by the year 2000 what will it take? / Tomlin, Ginger REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Newsletter : vol. 2; no. 3., 8 p.. - Nottingham : University of Nottingham Student Human Rights Law Centre, 1997. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Paraguay / Mexico NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR; ACHPR-18; CRC-23; ICESCR-18; CEDAW; Vienna declaration and programme of action; Additional protocol to the American convention on human rights in the area of economic, social and cultural rights; |
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5. | Phuong, Catherine : Internally displaced persons and refugees, 2000 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Internally displaced persons and refugees : conceptual differences and similarities / Phuong, Catherine REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Netherlands quarterly of human rights (NQHR) : vol. 18; no. 2., p. 215-229. - Hague : Kluwer Law, 2000. - ISSN 0169-3441 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Refugee convention; Protocol relating to the status of refugees; |
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6. | Unequal protection, 2001 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Unequal protection : the state response to violent crime on South African farms /, 242 p.. - New York : Human Rights Watch, 2001. ISBN 1-56432-263-7 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: South Africa LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: s HRW
URL http://www.hrw.org/reports/2001/safrica2/Safarms1.htm#_1_1 |
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7. | Frostell, Katarina : Globalisation and the human rights of women, 2002 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: unpublished document Globalisation and the human rights of women / Frostell, Katarina, 90 p.. - Åbo/Turku : Åbo Akademi University. Institute for Human Rights, 2002. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR; CEDAW; CERD; ICESCR; ECHR; Vienna declaration and programme of action; Tiivistelmä suomeksi LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR/VIB SHELF CODE: rapporter |
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8. | Okafor-Obasi, Obasi : The enforcement of state obligations to respect and ensure human rights in international law, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The enforcement of state obligations to respect and ensure human rights in international law / Okafor-Obasi, Obasi, 149 p.. - Potsdam : MenschenRechtsZentrum, 2003. - ISSN 1435-9154 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. I. THE NATURE AND FORM OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 1. The acceptance of the existence of an international legal order 2. The legal position of the individual in international law II. OBLIGATIONS OF STATES IN THE PROTECTION OF INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS 1. Treaty-based human rights obligations 2. The nature of treaty-based human rights obligations 3. The ”absolute” and ”objective” character of human rights treaty obligations 4. Human rights conventions as self-contained regimes 5. The problem of characterisation of human rights obligations of states III. HUMAN RIGHTS OBLIGATIONS ARISING FROM GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW 1. Obligations erga omnes and human rights norms 2. The outlawing of genocide as obligation erga omnes 3. Protection from slavery as obligation erga omnes 4. The outlawing of acts of aggression as obligation erga omnes 5. Protection from racial discrimination as obligation erga omnes 6. The basic rights of the human person as obligation erga omnes 7. Jus Cogens and the search for peremptory norms of human rights 8. International crimes and human rights norms 9. The relationship between the concepts: erga omnes, jus cogens, international crime and human rights IV. INTERNATIONAL INSTRUMENTS FOR THE COERCIVE ENFORCEMENT OF STATE OBLIGATIONS TO ‘RESPECT AND ENSURE’ HUMAN RIGHTS 1. Countermeasures as consequences of breach of treaties in international law 2. Application of reprisals for the enforcement of treaty-based human rights obligations 3. Intervention for the protection of human rights in international law 4. Intervention by the Security Council for the protection of human rights: the situation before the East-West détente 5. Humanitarian intervention after the end of the Cold War 6. The legal nature of ECOWAS intervention in the Liberian Civil War 7. The legality of NATO’s intervention in Kosovo 8. Some instances of intervention with mixed motives V. NON-FORCEFUL MEASURES FOR THE ENFORCEMENT OF STATES’ HUMAN RIGHTS OBLIGATIONS 1. Economic and financial pressure as means of enforcing states’ obligation to respect and observe human rights 2. The application of the clausula rebus sic stantibus for the protection of human rights 3. The enforcement of human rights through the World Bank 4. The enforcement of human rights through the ILO 5. Diplomatic recognition as an instrument for securing a state's respect and promotion of human rights 6. Refusal to comply with an extradition agreement as a means of enforcing a state’s human rights obligations 7. Denial of immunity as a means of enforcing a state’s human rights obligations 8. Publicity as an instrument for the enforcement of human rights VI. JUDICIAL ENFORCEMENT OF STATE OBLIGATIONS TO ‘RESPECT AND ENSURE’ HUMAN RIGHTS 1. Enforcement of human rights through International Criminal Tribunals 2. The International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia 3. The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda 4. The International Special Court of Sierra Leone INDEX WORDS:
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9. | Barth Eide, Wenche (ed.) : Food and human rights in development, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Food and human rights in development : vol. I : legal and institutional dimensions and selected topics / Barth Eide, Wenche (ed.) ; Kracht, Uwe, xxxvi, 528 p.. - Antwerpen : Intersentia, 2005. ISBN 90-509-385-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Mary Robinson - Executive Director, Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative, former UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Hartwig de Haen - Assistant Director-General, Department of Economic and Social Development, FAO, Rome. I. Food in the Human Rights System:. 1. The Importance of Economic and Social Rights in the Age of Economic Globalisation, by Asbjørn Eide. 2. Democracy and the Politics of Hunger, by Dan Banik. 3. From Food Security to Food as a Human Right, by Wenche Barth Eide. 4. The Right to Adequate Food in Human Rights Instruments: Legal Norms and Interpretations, by Wenche Barth Eide and Uwe Kracht. 5. Whose Right to Food? Vulnerable Groups and the Hungry Poor, by Uwe Kracht. 6. The Interrelationships Between the Right to Food and Other Rights, by Margret Vidar. II. Legal and Institutional Dimensions:. 7. Justiciability of Economic and Social Rights: Reflections on the Norwegian and South African Debate and Experience, by Margit Tveiten. 8. The Role of Framework Legislation in Realising the Right to Food: Using South Africa as a Case Study of this New Breed of Law, by Sibonile Khoza. 9. The Role of the UN Human Rights Bodies in Promoting and Protecting the Right to Food, by Sally-Anne Way. 10. Programming With a Human Rights Approach A UNICEF Experience in Operational Practice, by Fabio Sabatini. 11. Developing Voluntary Guidelines for Implementing the Right to Adequate Food: Anatomy of an Intergovernmental Process, by Arne Oshaug. III. Aspects of the Right to Food Selected Topics :. 12. The Right to Food of Indigenous Peoples, by Siri Damman. 13. Breastfeeding: Babys Right and Mothers Duty?, by Elisabet Helsing. 14. HIV/AIDS, Food Security and Human Rights: Concepts and Linkages, by Ida-Eline Engh. 15. HIV/AIDS, Infant Feeding and Human Rights, by George Kent. 16. The Right to Food, the Right to Benefit from Science and the TRIPS Agreement, by Hans Morten Haugen. 17. Modern Human Rights Law in Specific Cultural Contexts: An Example of Traditional Power And Food Entitlement Systems, by A. Byaruhanga Rukooko. Annex 1: General Comment No. 12 on the Right to Adequate Food. Annex 2: Voluntary Guidelines to Support the Progressive Realisation of the Right to Adequate Food in the Context of National Food Security. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): GC-12(ICESCR); |
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10. | Willems, Jan C. M. (ed.) : Developmental and autonomy rights of children, 2007 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Developmental and autonomy rights of children : empowering children, caregivers and communites / Willems, Jan C. M. (ed.). - 2. rev. ed.., xxiii, 211 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2007. ISBN 978-90-5095-726-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of contents:. CHAPTER 1. CHILDRENS RIGHTS ARE HUMAN RIGHTS; CURRENT ISSUES AND DEVELOPMENTS, THEO VAN BOVEN. 1. Introduction. 2. From Dependence to Emancipation. 3. Identity, Nationality, Name and Family Relations. 4. Children Living in Particularly Difficult Conditions. 5. An International Right of Petition for Children?. CHAPTER 2. CHILDRENS RIGHTS AND UNIVERSALITY, EVA BREMS. 1. Inclusive Universality. 1.1. From a Descriptive to a Normative Concept of Universality 1.2. Correcting Distortions. 1.3. Flexibility and Transformation. 2. International Childrens Rights: Accommodating Childrens Particularities to Promote the Universality of Human Rights. 2.1. Changing the Image of Children. 2.2. Four Types of Interests. 2.3. The United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child . 2.3.1. Protectionism prevails. 2.3.2. Development rights. 2.3.3. Autonomy rights. 2.3.4. Trias Pedagogica. 2.4. From Flexibility to Transformation? 3. The Universal Child? Accommodating Diversity Within International Childrens Rights. 3.1. Cultural Diversity. 3.1.1. Expressions of cultural pluralism in the text of the CRC. 3.1.2. Elastic language: the best interests of the child. 3.2. Other Types of Diversity. 3.2.1. Economic circumstances. 3.2.2. Gender. 4. Conclusion. CHAPTER 3. THE DEVELOPMENTAL DAMAGE TO CHILDREN AS A RESULT OF THE VIOLATION OF THEIR RIGHTS. MARTINE F. DELFOS. 1. Introduction. 2. Pervasive Traumatic Experiences. 3. Developmental Damage Caused by Sexual Abuse. 4. A Case of Systematic and Accumulative Violation of Rights. 5. Mental Sexual Abuse in the Classroom: Sexual Brainwashing. 6. The Anxiety Model: Externalising and Internalising Behavioural Problems. 7. Trauma and Guilt. 8. The Perspective of the Victim. 9. The Voice of the Child in the System of Care . 10. Conclusion. References. CHAPTER 4. THE CHILDRENS LAW OF NATIONS: THE INTERNATIONAL RIGHTS OF THE CHILD IN THE TRIAS PEDAGOGICA. JAN C. M. WILLEMS. 1. Introduction. 2. The Childrens Law of Nations: A Child-Caregiver-Community Approach to Childrens Rights. 2.1. Concepts and Terms. 2.2. The Childrens Law of Nations Binds All States, Both Rich and Poor. 2.3. Object and Purpose of the Childrens Law of Nations. 2.4. The Emancipation of the (Young) Child: Empowering Caregivers and Building Communities. 2.5. State Obligations: A Universal Constitutional Perspective. 3. The International Rights of the Child in the Trias Pedagogica: An Interpretative Framework. 3.1. The Convention on the Rights of the Child as Temple of the Trias Pedagogica: its Foundation, Pillars and Roof. 3.1.1. Foundation. 3.1.2. Pillars: the three Ps. 3.1.3. Roof: the fundamental principle of the right of the child to become an optimal person. 3.1.4. Firm ground. 3.2. Trias Versus Transism. 3.2.1. Trias pedagogica. 3.2.2. Transism. 3.3. The Constitutionalisation of the Trias Pedagogica: A Proposed Provision. 3.4. Plea for Provision (Provision-Prevention) and Participation as a New Legal Paradigm. 3.4.1. Informing the public, informing parents, informing the child. 3.4.2. What should we do?. 3.4.3. From passing on trauma to passing on knowledge. 4. Ten Programmatic Rights. 5. Conclusion. References. CHAPTER 5. CHILDRENS RIGHTS AND THE PREVENTION OF CHILD ABUSE AND NEGLECT: THE QUEST FOR A TRIAS PEDAGOGICA OF CHILDREN, PARENTS AND SOCIETY, JAN C. M. WILLEMS. 1. Introduction. 2. International Law and the Emancipation of the Child. 3. Human Dignity: Respect and Self-Respect. 4. Multiculturalism or Social Exclusion?. 5. Parental Autonomy or Transism?. 6. Womens Rights in the Best Interests of the Child. 7. Developmental Damage: One out of Three Children. 8. Preparation for Parenthood as a Human Right. 9. Trias Pedagogica: Constitutionalization and Operationalization. 10. The CRC: Building Blocks for a Constitutional Trias Pedagogica. 11. Continuum of Care: Combined Universal, Selective and Indicated Prevention. 12. Conclusion. CHAPTER 6. THE CONVENTION ON THE RIGHTS OF THE CHILD: ORIENTATION AND CONCEPTUALIZATION OF CHILDRENS RIGHTS, JAN C. M. WILLEMS. 1. Introduction. 2. Orientation. 3. Conceptualization. 4. Conclusion. References. Appendices. CHAPTER 7. CHILDRENS RIGHTS AT A DIGNITARIAN HORIZON OF RESPONSIBLE PARENTHOOD JAN C. M. WILLEMS: 1. Introduction. Part One: A Helicopter View. 2. Dignitarian Versus Libertarian Attitudes and Views. Part Two: Responsible Parenthood. 3. The Best Interests of the Child. 4. Parental Responsibilities and State Obligations. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; |
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11. | Windfuhr, Michael (ed.) : Beyond the nation state, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Beyond the nation state : human rights in times of globalization / Windfuhr, Michael (ed.), 277 p.. - Uppsala : Global Publications Foundation, 2005. ISBN 91-973739-4-X LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: I. SURVEY OF THE LANDSCAPE:. Michael Windfuhr: State obligations for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in Times of Globalization. Fons Coomans: Progressive Development of International Human Rights Law. II. FOCUS ON INTERNATIONAL INTERGOVERNMENTAL ORGANISATIONS:. 1. Caroline Dommen: The WTO, International Trade, and Human Rights. 2. Simon Walker: Mainstreaming Human Rights in the WTO. – Making Headway?. 3. Anthony G. Freeman: ILO: a Case Study in Mainstreaming Human Rights. 4. Gerald Moore: FAO: Towards a Right to Food Approach?. 5. Sigrun I. Skogly: The Bretton Woods Institutions – Have Human Rights Come in from the Cold?. III. THE CHALLENGE OF REGIONAL INSTITUTIONS:. 1. Jürgen Meyer: Human Dignity in the Future Constitution for Europe. 2. Edwin Berry: The Mainstreaming of Social Rights within the Council of Europe and the EU. 3. Héctor Faúndez Ledesma: The Validity of Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in the Inter-American System. 4. Ray Onyegu: Implications for Human Rights & Development in Africa. 5. Manal M. Tibe: Mutilateral Economic Institutions and Human Rights in the Arab World. IV. HOW TO REGULATE IN A MULTILATERAL SETTING TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS?. 1. Cornelia Heydenreich: Th e OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprices. 2. Brigitte Hamm: The Need to Strengthen the Responsibilities of Business for Human Rights. 2. Mary Robinson: Corporate Social Responsibility and Workplace Standards: Responsible Strategies for Global Sourcing. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICCPR; ICESCR; |
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12. | Naert, Frederik : International law aspects of the EU's security and defence policy, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International law aspects of the EU's security and defence policy : with a particular focus on the law of armed conflict and human rights / Naert, Frederik - (International law ; vol. 4), xxviii, 682 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2010. ISBN 978-90-5095-771-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: INTRODUCTION. CHAPTER 1: BRIEF HISTORICAL EVOLUTION. CHAPTER 2: THE STATE OF THE ESDP. CHAPTER 3: ESDP OPERATIONS. CHAPTER 4: SOME CONCLUSIONS AND LEGAL ISSUES RAISED. CHAPTER 5: THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL STATUS OF INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS. CHAPTER 6: THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL STATUS OF THE EU. CHAPTER 7: HOW ARE INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS BOUND BY INTERNATIONAL LAW?. PART III. APPLICABLE INTERNATIONAL LAW IN ESDP OPERATIONS GENERAL INTRODUCTION TO THE APPLICABLE LAW. CHAPTER 8: THE LAW OF ARMED CONFLICT. CHAPTER 9: HUMAN RIGHTS. SUMMARY, GENERAL CONCLUSIONS, FINAL REFLECTIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS. REFERENCES, CITATIONS AND TABLE OF CASES. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; ECHR; ICCPR; EU constitution; EU treaty; ICC statute; ICJ statute; TEU; Ottawa convention; Paris protocol; ToA; Treaty of Nice; LIBRARY LOCATION: Europarätt
URL http://www.intersentia.be/searchDetail.aspx?bookId=100898 |
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13. | Ekholm, Linda : Ursprungsfolkens rätt att bestämma sina egna prioriteringar gällande utvecklingsprocessen, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: unpublished document Ursprungsfolkens rätt att bestämma sina egna prioriteringar gällande utvecklingsprocessen : särskilt om ursprungsfolkens rätt att delta i utvecklingsfrågor / Ekholm, Linda, 99 p.. - Åbo : Åbo Akademi, 2006. LANGUAGE: SWE INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (THESIS): Avhandling pro gradu i Folkrätt, ÅA,[2006], [T] NOTE (GENERAL): Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); Vienna declaration and programme of action; Final document of the world conference on human rights in Vienna; AMR; ICCPR; Draft declaration on indigenous peoples rights; Proposed declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; Declaration on the right to development; LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: seminarierummet |
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14. | McCorquodale, Robert : International law beyond the state, 2011 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph International law beyond the state : essays on sovereignty, non-state actors and human rights / McCorquodale, Robert, 460 p.. - London : CMP Publishing, 2011. ISBN 978-1-907174-10-0 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; Vienna declaration and programme of action; ICESCR; ICCPR;
URL http://www.cmppublishing.com/HrBooks_International%20Law%20Beyond%20the%20State.html |
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15. | Westendorp, Ingrid (ed.) : The Women's Convention Turned 30, 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The Women's Convention Turned 30 : achievements, setbacks and prospects / Westendorp, Ingrid (ed.), xxxi, 512 p.. - Antwerp : INTERSENTIA, 2012. ISBN 978-1-78068-085-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Chapter 1. Introduction, by Ingrid Westendorp. Chapter 2. The United Nations and the Promotion and Protection of Women’s Human Rights: A Work in Progress, by Fleur van Leeuwen. Chapter 3. The Essence of Discrimination Against Women: An Interpretation by CEDAW and the European Union, by Ingrid Westendorp and Antonia Waltermann. Chapter 4. The Principle of Equality, by Rolanda Oostland. Chapter 5. Temporary Special Measures under the Women’s Convention and Positive Action under EU Law: Mutually Compatible or Irreconcilable?, by Lisa Waddington and Laura Visser. Chapter 6. Using Culture to Achieve Equality, by Ingrid Westendorp. Chapter 7. ‘Because to me, a Woman Who Speaks in Public is a Public Woman’: 30 Years Women’s Convention and the Struggle to Eliminate Discrimination of Women in the Field of Trafficking and Prostitution, by Marjolein van den Brink and Marjan Wijers Chapter 8. Articles 7 and 8: Th e Added Value of the Women’s Convention and the Dutch Case of the Christian Party, by Margreet de Boer. Chapter 9. Equal Treatment of Women and Men in Nationality Law, by Gerard-René de Groot. Chapter 10. Barriers to Girls’ Right to Education in Afghanistan, by Fons Coomans and Samira Sakhi Chapter 11. Equal Employment Opportunities and Equal Pay: Measuring EU Law against the Standards of the Women’s Convention, by Anja Wiesbrock. Chapter 12. Women’s Right to Health and International Trade – Special Reference to the GATS and the TRIPS Agreement, by Jennifer Sellin and Nishara Mendis. Chapter 13. Eradicating Female Circumcision: Changing a Harmful Social Norm through the Women’s Convention, by Phyllis Livaha. Chapter 14. Equality and Economic and Social Life Including Implications for the European Union, by Dagmar Schiek and Jule Mulder. Chapter 15. Rural Women’s Right to Land and Housing in Times of Urbanization, by Ingrid Westendorp. Chapter 16. Equality of Men and Women before the Law: Towards a New Dutch Law on Names, by Tilly Draaisma. Chapter 17. Article 16 of the Women’s Convention and the Status of Muslim Women at Divorce, by Pauline Kruiniger. Chapter 18. CEDAW: A Full Human Rights Treaty Body?, by Cees Flinterman. Chapter 19. Due Diligence Mania, by Menno T. Kamminga. Chapter 20. Reservations to the Women’s Convention: A Muslim Problem Ill-addressed?, by Zoé Luca. Chapter 21. Th e Optional Protocol to the Women’s Convention: An Assessment of Its Eff ectiveness in Protecting Women’s Rights, by Sille Jansen. Chapter 22. Emerging from the Shadows: Violence Against Women and the Women’s Convention, by Kate Rose-Sender. Chapter 23. Th e Impact of Corruption upon Women’s Rights: A Neglected Area?, by Martine Boersma. Chapter 24. Th e Impact and Eff ectiveness of State Reporting under the Women’s Convention: The Case of the Netherlands, by Jasper Krommendijk. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Morroco / Pakistan / Netherlands NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; UDHR; DEDAW; CEDAW; CEDAW-OP; ICCPR-3; ICESCR; |
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16. | Ssenyonjo, Manisuli (ed.) : The African regional human rights system , 2012 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The African regional human rights system : 30 years after the African charter on human and peoples' rights / Ssenyonjo, Manisuli (ed.) - (International studies in human rights ; vol. 107), xliv, 583 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2012. ISBN 978-9004-21814-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of contents:. Preface; Foreword: The African Human Rights System: 30 Years after the Adoption of the ACHPR; List of Contributors; List of African Court and African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights Cases; List of African Union Instruments; List of Abbreviations; List of Activity Reports of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights 1987-2010. PART I: Introduction:. Chapter 1: An Introduction to the Development of the African Regional Human Rights System: 30 Years after the Adoption of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, by Manisuli Ssenyonjo. PART II: Rights and Duties in the African Charter:. Chapter 2: Civil and Political Rights in the African Charter, by Olufemi Amao. Chapter 3 Economic, Social and Cultural Rights in the African Charter , by Manisuli Ssenyonjo. Chapter 4 Group Rights under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights: Concept, Praxis and Prospects Basil Ugochukwu, by Opeoluwa Badaru and Obiora Okafor. Chapter 5: Scope of Individual Duties in the African Charter, by Kofi Quashigah. PART III: Rights of the Vulnerable under the African System:. Chapter 6: Women’s Human Rights in Africa, by Rashida Manjoo. Chapter 7: Children’s Rights in Africa, by Julia Sloth-Nielsen. Chapter 8: Rights of Refugees and Internally Displaced Persons in Africa, by Jamil Ddamulira Mujuzi. Chapter 9 : Rights of Indigenous Peoples in Africa, by George Mukundi Wachira. Chapter 10: The Rights of Older Persons and Persons with Disabilities in Africa, by Yeung Kam John Yeung Sik Yuen. PART IV: Implementation Mechanisms for Human Rights in Africa:. Chapter 11: The African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, by Magnus Killander. Chapter 12: The African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child, by Gina Bekker. Chapter 13: From the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights to the African Court of Justice and Human Rights, by Prof. Githu Muigai. Chapter 14: Human Rights Realisation in the African Sub-Regional Institutions, by Solomon T. Ebobrah. Chapter 15: International Criminal Tribunals in Africa, by George William Mugwanya. Chapter 16: The International Criminal Court and Africa, by Daniel David Ntanda Nsereko. Chapter 17: The Protection of Women’s Human Rights by Domestic Courts in Africa: A Perspective from Uganda, by Manisuli Ssenyonjo. PART V: Conclusion: Towards an Effective African Regional Human Rights System:. Chapter 18: Tentative Reflections on the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, by Ben Chigara. Chapter 19: Institutional Mainstreaming and Rationalisation, by Morris Kiwinda Mbondenyi. Chapter 20: Strengthening the African Regional Human Rights System, by Manisuli Ssenyonjo. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; CAT; CEDAW; CERD; ICESCR; CRC; ICCPR; OAU charter; UDHR;
URL http://www.brill.com/african-regional-human-rights-system |