1. | Bodansky, Daniel (ed.) : The Oxford handbook of international environmental law, 2007 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The Oxford handbook of international environmental law / Bodansky, Daniel (ed.) ; Jutta Brunnée ; Hey, Ellen. - repr. 2008., xxviii, 1080 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U.P., 2007. ISBN 978-0-19-926970-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: 1. Mapping the Field , Dan Bodansky, Jutta Brunnée, Ellen Hey. Part I: General Issues:. 2. The Evolution of International Environmental Law , Peter Sand 3. Paradigms and Discourses , John Dryzek 4. Global Environmental Governance as Administration , Benedict Kingsbury 5. Levels of Environmental Governance , Jeffrey Dunoff 6. Formality and Informality , Stephen Toope 7. Relationship between International Environmental Law and Other Branches of International Law , Alan Boyle 8. Instrument Choice , Richard Stewart 9. Science and Technology , Steinar Andresen, Jon Birger Skjaerseth. Part II: Analytical Tools and Perspectives:. 10. International Relations Theory , Kyle Danish 11. An Economic Theory of International Environmental Law , Scott Barrett 12. Critical Approaches , Karin Mickelson 13. Ethics and International Environmental Law , Christopher Stone. Part III: Basic Issues Areas:. 14. Atmosphere and Outer Space , Ian Rowlands 15. Ocean and Freshwater Resources , David Freestone, Salman M.A. Salman 16. Biological Resources , Rosemary Rayfuse 17. Hazardous Substances and Activities , David Wirth. Part IV: Normative Development:. 18. Different Types of Norms in International Environmental Law , Ulrich Beyerlin 19. Formation of Customary International Law and General Principles , Pierre-Marie Dupuy 20. Treaty Making and Treaty Evolution , Thomas Gehring 21. Private and Quasi-Private Standard Setting , Naomi Roht-Arriaza & Jason Morrison. Part V: Key Concepts:. 22. Transboundary Impacts , Günther Handl 23. Common Areas, Common Heritage, Common Concern , Jutta Brunnée 24. Ecosystems , Dan Tarlock 25. Precaution , Jonathan Wiener 26. Sustainable Development , Daniel Magraw and Lisa Hawke 27. Equity , Dinah Shelton 28. Environmental Rights , J.G. Merrills 29. Public Participation , Jonas Ebbesson 30. Legitimacy , Daniel Bodansky . Part VI: Actors and Institutions:. 31. Changing Role of the State , Thilo Marauhn 32. International Institutions , Ellen Hey 33. NGOs and Civil Society , Peter Spiro 34. Epistemic Communities , Peter Haas 35. Business , Steven Ratner 36. Indigenous Peoples , Russell Barsh 37. Regional Economic Integration Organizations , Ludwig Krämer 38. Treaty Bodies , Geir Ulfstein. Part VII: Implementation and Enforcement:. 39. Compliance Theory , Ron Mitchell 40. National Implementation , Catherine Redgwell 41. Financial and Technological Transfers , Laurence Boisson de Chazournes 42. Monitoring and Verification , Jorgen Wettestad 43. Compliance Procedures , Jan Klabbers 44. International Responsibility and Liability , Malgosia Fitzmaurice 45. International Dispute Settlement , Cesare Romano 46. Conclusions , Dan Bodansky, Jutta Brunnée, Ellen Hey INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Aarhus convention; Montreal protocol; Kyoto protocol; Framework convention on climate change; World charter for nature; LIBRARY LOCATION: Miljörätt SHELF CODE: Domvillan |
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2. | Smeulers, Alette (ed.) : Supranational criminology, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Supranational criminology : towards a criminology of international crimes / Smeulers, Alette (ed.) ; Roelof Haveman - (Series supranational criminal law:capita selecta ; vol. 6), xiv, 593 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2008. ISBN 978-90-5095-791-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: TABLE OF CONTENTS:. PREFACE. I. CRIMINOLOGY IN A STATE OF DENIAL - TOWARDS A CRIMINOLOGY OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMES: SUPRANATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY, Roelof Haveman and Alette Smeulers. 1. Introduction. 2. Th e Harvest of a Century. 3. Pros, Cons and Denial. 4. Tentative Demarcation of the Field of Study of Supranational Criminology. 5. Outline of the Book. 5.1. Defi ning and Conceptualising International Crimes. 5.2.Quantifying and Mapping Crimes. 5.3. The Aetiology of International Crimes. 5.4. The Response to Crime. 5.5. Victimology 5.6. Preventive Strategies. 6. Conclusion. PART I. DEFINE AND CONCEPTUALIZE INTERNATIONAL CRIMES AND STATE CRIME:. II. TOWARDS A CRIMINOLOGY OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMES: PRODUCING A CONCEPTUAL AND CONTEXTUAL FRAMEWORK, by David O. Friedrichs. 1. Introduction: Criminology post-Maastricht. 2. Criminology in Transition. 3. International Crime and Supranational Criminology: Terminological Confusion. 4. Crime, Social Harm and Supranational Criminology. 5. A Provisional Genealogy for a Supranational Criminology 6. A Criminology of Genocide, War and Humanitarian Intervention. 7. Supranational Criminology and Related Concerns. 8. On Context: Globalisation, a Postmodern World and the American Empire. 9. The Global Justice Movement and Supranational Crime. 10. International Crime and Global Governance. 11. In Conclusion: An Agenda for a Supranational Criminology. III. TOWARDS AN INTEGRATIVE STUDY OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMES AND STATE-CORPORATE CRIMINALITY: A RECIPROCAL APPROACH TO GROSS HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS, by Gregg Barak. 1. Introduction. 2. Political Economy and Nation-State Neutrality. 3. A Critical Taxonomy of International Crimes and State Criminality. 4. Supranational Criminology: An Integrative Perspective. 5. Peacemaking, Non-violence and Social Change. 6. Conclusion. PART II. MEASURE AND MAP INTERNATIONAL CRIMES: RESEARCH METHODOLOGY:. IV. MISSING PIECES. SOME THOUGHTS ON THE METHODOLOGY OF THE EMPIRICAL STUDY OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMES AND OTHER GROSS HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS, by Catrien Bijleveld. 1. Introduction. 2. For Studying International Crimes. 3. Particularities and a Research Methodology for International Crimes. 3.1. The Doubly-Dark Number. 3.2. Baseline Data. 3.3. Victim Surveys. 3.4. Security Issues. 3.5. Underreporting/Non-Response. 3.6. Use of Secondary Data. 3.7. Collating Information from Other Sources. 4. Examples. 4.1. Using Capture-Recapture Methods for Studying Prevalence (Number of Victims). 4.2. Integrating Meso and Micro Perspectives through Multilevel Analysis. 5. Discussion and a Research Agenda. V. THE UNACCOUNTABLE GENOCIDE. A CASE STUDY OF THE ROLES OF THE U.S. STATE DEPARTMENT AND U.S. GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY OFFICE IN CALCULATING THE DARFUR DEATH TOLL, by John Hagan. 1. Genocide Accountability. 2. 'Complex Humanitarian Emergencies' and the Population Health Paradigm. 3. The Humanitarian Strategic Embrace. 4. The Atrocities Documentation Survey. 5. Early Findings from the World Health Organization Surveys. 6. A Gathering Consensus. 7. The Consensus Breaks. 8. The Osama Bin Laden Connection. 9. State's New View of Death in Darfur. 10. Re-examining the Surveys. 11. A Complimentary and Combined Approach. 12. The Unaccountability of the Government Accountability Office. 13. A New and Alternative Approach . 14. Some Conclusions. PART III. INVESTIGATE THE CAUSES OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMES VI. GENOCIDE, WAR CRIMES AND CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY IN CENTRAL AFRICA: A CRIMINOLOGICAL EXPLORATION, by Dawn L. Rothe and Christopher W. Mullins. 1. Introduction. 2. Literature Review: State Crime, Crimes of Globalization and State- Corporate Crime Studies. 3. An Integrated The theory of Supranational Crimes. 4. The Social Context and Typical Elements of the Crimes. 4.1. Global Economics. 4.2. Social Disorder. 4.3. Militias. 5. Conclusion. VII. STATE CRIME, THE COLONIAL QUESTION AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLES, by Chris Cunneen. 1. Introduction: Colonialism and State Crime. 2. Genocide and Mass Murder. 3. The Forced Removal of Indigenous Children. 4. The 'Stolen Generations' Inquiry. 4.1. Deprivation of Liberty. 4.2. Deprivation of Parental Rights. 4.3. Abuses of Power. 4.4. Breach of Duty of Care and Guardianship Duties. 4.5. Violation of International Human Rights Standards. 5. Institutional Racism as a Foundational Harm. 6. Forced Labour and Government Fraud.7. Loss of Civil and Political Rights .8. Aft er State Crime: The Struggle for Reconciliation and Reparation. 8.1. Principles of Reparations. 8.2. Acknowledgment and Apology 8.3. Guarantee against Repetition. 8.4. Measures of Restitution and Rehabilitation. 8.5. Monetary Compensation. 9. Conclusion. VIII. CORPORATIONS AND INTERNATIONAL CRIMES, by Wim Huisman. 1. Introduction. 2. Conceptualisation. 2.1. Corporate Crime. 2.2. State-Corporate Crime. 2.3. International Crimes. 2.3.1. International Crime and International law. 2.3.2. Corporate Accountability for International Crimes 2.4. Discussion . 3. Forms of Involvement. 4. Explanations. 4.1. Corporate Crime Theory. 4.2. Motivation and Neutralisation. 4.2. The Role of the State. 4.3. Globalisation. 5. Conclusion. IX. DESTRUCTIVE BELIEFS: GENOCIDE AND THE ROLE OF IDEOLOGY, by Alex Alvarez. 1. Introduction. 2. Typology of Genocide. 3. Defi ning Ideology. 3.1. Nationalism. 3.2. Past Victimization. 3.3. Dehumanization. 3.4. Scapegoating. 3.5. Absolutist Worldview. 3.6. Utopianism. 4. Conclusions. X. PERPETRATORS OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMES: TOWARDS A TYPOLOGY, by Alette Smeulers. 1. Introduction. 2. Ordinary People within Extraordinary Circumstances: Setting the Context. 2.1. Consequences and Effects of a Period of Collective Violence. 2.2. Towards a Typology. 3. The Types. 3.1. The Criminal Mastermind. 3.2. The Fanatic. 3.3. The Criminal/Sadist. 3.4. The Profiteer. 3.5. The Careerist. 3.6. The Devoted Warrior. 3.7. Followers and Conformists. 3.8. The Compromised Perpetrator. 3.9. The Professional. 4. How Do the Perpetrators Look Back?. 5. Common Features and Concluding Remarks. XI. A SOCIOLOGY OF TORTURE, by Martha K. Huggins. 1. Introduction. 2. Predicting Torture. 3. Torture 101: A Criminological Model? . 3.1. Mislabelling. 3.2. Ideology 3.3. Ad-hoc legalism . 3.4. Systemic . 3.5. Multiple Actors . 3.7. Insularity and Secrecy . 3.8. Competition Rages . 3.9. Evidence Ignored . 3.10. Impunity is Widespread . 4. Torture and Criminology . 4.1. Conducting On-Line Research. 4.2. Triangulating Data Sources . 4.2.1. Library Catalogues 4.2.2. Criminal Justice Journals and Organizations . 4.2.3. Teaching Torture . 5. Summarizing Findings 5.1. On-Line Books and Journals, Library Catalogues and On-Line Criminology Journals . 5.2. On-Line Criminology-of-Practice Web Sites . . 5.3. Academic Courses . 6. Conclusion: Criminology and Torture . XII. MILITARIZING POWER IN THE WAR ON TERROR: UNLAWFUL ENEMY COMBATANTS AND THE MILITARY COMMISSIONS ACT Michael Welch . 1. Introduction . 2. Monarchical Power in the Classical Age . 3. From Penal Reform to Counter-law . 4. Militarized Penal Power in the War on Terror . 5. Th e MCA: Military Commissions Act of 2006 . 6. Recentralizing the Economy of Penal Power .7. Conclusion PART IV. DEFINE AND ANALYZE WAYS OF DEALING WITH INTERNATIONAL CRIMES XIII. DEALING WITH INTERNATIONAL CRIMES: TOWARDS A CONCEPTUAL MODEL OF ACCOUNTABILITY AND JUSTICE Jennifer Balint . 1. Introduction . 2. 'In the Name of the State'. International Crime and Its Parameters . . 3. Individuals and Institutions. Legal Approaches to International Crime. 4. Civic Liability. Considering Institutional Accountability . 5. A Typology of International Crime? Matching Legal Redress to Specifi c Crimes .6. Reconstruction and Prevention. Justice as Social Justice? . 7. Conclusion . XIV. DEALING WITH THE LEGACY OF MASS VIOLENCE: CHANGING LENSES TO RESTORATIVE JUSTICE Stephan Parmentier, Kris Vanspauwen and Elmar Weitekamp . 1. Introduction . 2. Th e Dominant Approach: Retributive Justice . 2.1. Strengths and Weaknesses of Retributive Justice . . 2.2. Th e Triptych of Criminal Prosecutions . 3. Changing Lenses to Restorative Justice . 3.1. Understanding Mass Violence through Restorative Justice. 3.2. Truth Commissions as Possible Forms of Restorative Mechanisms. 4. Mass Violence and Post-Conflict Justice through a Restorative Lens. 4.1. Searching for Truth. 4.2. Ensuring Accountability of the Perpetrators. 4.3. Providing Reparation to the Victims. 4.4. Promoting Reconciliation. 5. Conclusion. XV. DOING JUSTICE TO GACACA, by Roelof Haveman. 1. A Gacaca. 2. A Research Question. 3. A History of the Genocide. 4. Some Numbers of the Genocide. 5. Gacaca: Criminal Law and Criminal Procedure. 5.1. The Establishment of Gacaca. 5.2. Substantive Criminal Law. 5.2.1. Genocide and Crimes against Humanity: Three Categories. 5.2.2. Three Punishments. 5.3. Criminal Procedure. 5.3.1. Three Levels, Three Phases. 5.3.2. Three Remedies. 5.3.3. Hearing and Judgment. 5.3.4. Confession, Guilty Plea, Repentance, Apology. 5.4. Participative Lay Justice. 6. Judging Gacaca. 6.1. Time and Place Specific. 6.2. Work under Construction. 6.3. Reality versus Theory. 6.4. Rethinking Human Rights. 6.5. A Comparative Approach. 6.6. Goals. 6.7. You're Damned if You Do, You're Damned if You Don't. 7. Epilogue. XVI. 'REASON' AND 'TRUTH' IN INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE - A CRIMINOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE ON THE CONSTRUCTION OF EVIDENCE IN INTERNATIONAL TRIALS, by Uwe Ewald. 1. Introduction: Reason and Evidence in International Criminal Justice. 1.1. Why Should We Understand International Evidence Criminologically?. 1.2. Reason and Evidence - Historical Continuity and Current Diff erences. 2. Baselines of a Conceptual Framework: International Criminal Justice as Part of Public Discourse - 'Truth' and International Evidence. 2.1. Historical Truth and Evidence in International Criminal Justice. 2.2. New Global Security Discourse, Hegemonic Knowledge and Evidence. 2.3. 'Regime of Truth' - Modelling the Operational Practice of International Criminal Justice. 3. Origin of Evidence - Explorative Empirical Findings. 3.1. Evidence, Analysis and Judicial Reasoning. 3.2. Institutional Originators of (Potential) Evidentiary Information. 3.3. Personal Originators: Witnesses and 'Judicial Truth'. 4. Conclusions. PART V. VICTIMOLOGY XVII. VICTIMISATION AND SUPRANATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY, by David Kauzlarich. 1. Introduction. 2. Critical Criminology, State Crime and Supranational Criminology. 3. Types of Victims. 3.1. Direct and Indirect Victims. 3.2. Victims of Forced Obedience . 3.3. Victims of Crimes of Omission. 4. Victim Redress. 5. Conclusion. PART VI. DEVELOP PREVENTIVE STRATEGIES IN ORDER TO PREVENT INTERNATIONAL CRIMES XVIII. THE ROLE OF BYSTANDERS IN RWANDA AND SREBRENICA: LESSONS LEARNED,by Fred Grünfeld. 1. Introduction. 2. The Importance of the Bystander's Role. 3. Knowledge, Ignorance and Indiff erence. 3.1. Indifferent Onlookers. 3.2. Excluded Ignorance. 4. Early warning 4.1. Early Warning in Rwanda. 4.2. Early Warning in Srebrenica. 5. Military Strength and Rules of Engagement for Peacekeepers. 5.1. Rwanda with UNAMIR. 5.2. Srebrenica with UNPROFOR. 5.2.1. Nordbat. 5.2.2. Dutchbat. 5.2.3. No Change of Perception. 6. Right to Protect. 7. Guidelines for Preventive Strategy. Annex 1: Scheme "HURIVIC," Human Rights Violations and Conflict. XIX. INTERNATIONAL CRIMES AND CRIMINOLOGY: AN AGENDA FOR FUTURE RESEARCH, by Alette Smeulers and Roelof Haveman. 1. Introduction. 2. Conceptual and Theoretical Framework. 3. Methodological Clarity and Soundness. 4. Studying International Crimes through a Criminological Framework. 4.1. The Perpetrator. 4.2. Groups, Organisations and States. 4.3. The International Community. 5. Dealing with the Past . 5.1. International Criminal Law and International Criminal Justice . 5.2. Sentencing and Sanctioning. 5.3. The Role of the Victims and Victimology. 5.4. Alternative Means to Deal with the Past. 6. Epilogue. BIBLIOGRAPHY. CONTRIBUTORS AND EDITORS. INDEX WORDS:
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3. | Boltjes, Miek (ed.) : Implementing negotiated agreements, 2007 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Implementing negotiated agreements : the real challenge to intrastate peace / Boltjes, Miek (ed.), xx, 348 p.. - Hague : T.M.C. Asser Press, 2007. ISBN 978-90-6704-240-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Cha. 1: The implementation challenge in intrastate peace process: an analysis, by Miek Boltjes. Cha. 2: Recurrent challenges to the implementation of intrastate peace agreements: the resistance of state authorities, by Fernand de Varennes. Cha. 3: Reflections on implementation mechanisms of selected autonomy, self-rule and similar arrangements, by John Packer. Cha. 4: The implementation of the Good Friday agreement in Northern Ireland, by Denis Haughey. Cha. 5: The discordant accord: challenges in the implementation of the Chittagong Hill Tracts accord of 1997, by Devasish Roy. Cha. 6: Challenges faced by Tibetants in reaching a lasting agreement with China, by Lodi G. Gyari. Cha. 7: From compromise to process:the implementation of the South Tyrolean autonomy, by Jens Woelk. Cha. 8: Third party involvement in the negotiation andimplementation of intrastate peace agreement, by Geir Sjoberg. Cha. 9: The role of third parties inthe negotiation and implementation of intrastate agreements: an experince-based approach to UN involvement in intrastate conflicts, by Francesc Vendrell. Cha. 10: Implementing the framework agreement in Macedonia: the role of the international community, by Niek Community. Cha. 11: Adjudication of intrastate disputes:a review of possible mechanisms, by Wendy Miles. Cha. 12. The settlement of treaty of Waitangi claims of MAori groups in Aotearoa/New Zealand, by Morris Te Whiti Love. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Albania / Australia / Austria / Bangladesh / Canada / China / East Timor / Congo / Eritrea / Greenland / India / Iraq / Ireland / Israel / Italy / Macedonia / Maori / Moldova / Morocco / New Zealand / Northern Ireland / Nicaragua / Niger / Pakistan / Rhodesia / Russian Federation / Spain / Sri Lanka / Tanzania / Tibet / United Kingdom / Zanzibar NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; CEDAW; CERD; ECHR; |
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4. | Lea, David : Property rights, indigenous people and the developing world, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Property rights, indigenous people and the developing world : issues from aboriginal entitlement to intellectual ownership rights / Lea, David, vii, 296 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2008. ISBN 978-90-04-16694-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Aboriginal entitlement and conservative theory. 2. Individual autonomy, group self-determination and the assimilation of indigenous cultures. 3. Shareholder wealth maximization, multinational corporations and the developing world. 4. Tully and de Soto on uniformity and diversity. 5. Customary land tenure and communal holdings. 6. Custom as law. 7. Papua New Guinea and the legal methods for maintaining customary land tenure. 8. Customary land tenure in Fiji: a questionable colonial legacy. 9. The expansion and reconstructing of intellectual property and its implications for the developing world. 10. The myth of free markets: intellectual property, the IT industry and market freedoms in the global arena. 11. From the wright brothers to microsoft: issues in the moral grounding of intellectual property rights. 12. A delicate balance: the right to health care, IP rights inpharmaceuticals and TRIPS compliance. 13. Rights and genetic material in agriculture and human research: two forms of biopiracy? INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / Canada / Fiji / India / Iraq / Papua New Guinea / USA |
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5. | Bourquain, Knut : Freshwater access from a human rights perspective, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Freshwater access from a human rights perspective : a challenge to international water and human rights law / Bourquain, Knut - (International studies in human rights ; vol. 97), viii, 258 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2008. - ISSN 0924-4751 ISBN 978-90-04-16954-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Introduction. I. The background situation – water scarcity as a global problem. II. Causes of the current crisis. III. Strategies of crisis management. IV. The role of law in problem-solving. V. The human rights-based approach to freshwater access in international law. VI. Synopsis of the study. B. The law on international watercourses and its deficits in providing freshwater access. I. Introduction. II. Survey of the development of international water law in the 20th century. III. Analysis of international water law in regard to fulfilling the basic human need for water. IV. Concluding observations on international water law’s deficits. C. Elements of a human rights-based approach to freshwater access. I. Introduction. II. Characteristics of a human rights-based approach to freshwater access. III. Human rights-based approaches vs. policy concepts?. IV. Freshwater access in the context of the debate on rights to development and a clean environment. V. Elaboration of the scope of obligations attached to a human rights-based approach to freshwater access. VI. Universalism, particularism and pluralistic legal systems. VII. Concluding observations on the characteristics of a human rights-based approach to freshwater access. D. The human rights-based approach to freshwater access within current international human rights law; I. Introduction; II. Freshwater access within international human rights treaties; III. Freshwater access as part of customary international human rights law; IV. Freshwater access as part of general principles of international law; V. Extraterritorial obligations of states concerning the basic human need for water; VI. Concluding observations on the international human rights law’s contribution to freshwater access. E. Improving a human rights-based approach to freshwater access; I. Introduction; II. The need to connect human rights law with international water law; III. Establishing new international treaty law; IV. Specifying and developing the human rights-based approach to freshwater access by the interpretation of existing law; V. Soft law and policy instruments strengthening a human rights-based approach to freshwater access; VI. Concluding observations on prospects for the improvement of a human rights-based approach to freshwater access. F. Conclusions. Bibliography; Index. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; Aarhus convention; ICESCR; ICESCR-OP; ICCPR-OP; CEDAW; CRC; Declaration on the rights of minorities; Geneva conventions; Stockholm declaration; Rio declaration; |
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6. | Barth, William Kurt : On cultural rights, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph On cultural rights : the equality of nations and the minority legal tradition / Barth, William Kurt, xii, 256 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2008. ISBN 978-90-04-168428 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Section I. The Minority Legal Tradition: 1. On Cultural Rights: Introduction, Research Methodology, and Literature Review. Section II. History of the Minority Regime: 2. History of the Minority Question; 3. Minority Protection in the Era of Human Rights. Section III – Minority Group Case Studies: 4. The Minority Regime and the Aboriginal Peoples of Canada; 5. Minority Rights and the Roma of Europe. Section IV. Conclusions: 6. Conclusion; Bibliography; Appendix; Charts; Examples of Cultural Protection; Aboriginal-Canadian Groups;Canadian Residential Schools;Illustration of Bill C-31; Europe’s Roma Population; Romani Lexical Comparisons; Roma Poverty Rates; Roma Household Characteristics; INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Africa / Alaska / Albania / Africa / Australia / Austria / Belgium / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Brazil / Bulgaria / Canada / China / Czech Republic / Denmark / Estonia / France / Germany / Greece / Hungary / India / Iran / Israel / Japan / Liberia / Macedonia / New Zealand / Nicaragua / Pakistan / Peru / Philippines / Quebec / Russian Federation / Rwanda / Scotland / USSR / Spain / Ukraine / United Kingdom / USA / Uruguay / Yugoslavia NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
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7. | Jacobsen, Trudy (ed.) : Re-envisioning sovereignty, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Re-envisioning sovereignty : the end of westphalia? / Jacobsen, Trudy (ed.) ; Sampford, Charles ; Thakur, Ramesh - (Law, ethics and governance series), xvi, 375 p.. - Aldershot : Ashgate publ., 2008. ISBN 978-0-7546-7260-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART 1: SOVEREIGNTY AS A TRADITIONAL AND EMERGENT CONCEPT:. 1. Fables of sovereignty, by Wayne Hudson. 2. Sovereignty discourse and practice : past and future, by Joseph Camilleri. 3. Guises of sovereignty, Gerry Simpson. PART 2: SOVEREIGNTY IN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE:. 4. Westphalian and Islamic concepts of sovereignty in the Middle East, by Amin Saikal. 5. Wither sovereignty in Southeast Asia today?, by See Seng Tan. 6. Ambivalent sovereignty : China and re-imagining the Westphalian ideal, by Yongjin Zhang. Part 3: TRANSCENDING STATE SOVEREIGNTY 1: Human and global security:. 7. Confronting terrorism : dilemmas of principle and practice regarding sovereignty, by Brian L. Job. 8. Sovereignty in the 21st century : security, immigration, and refugees, by Howard Adelman. 9. State sovereignty and international refugee protection, by Robyn Lui. Part 4: TRANSCENDING STATE SOVEREIGNTY 2 : TRANSNATIONAL ISSUES:. 10. Do no harm : towards a Hippocratic standard for international civilisation, by Neil Arya. 11. Sovereignty and the global politics of the environment : beyond Westphalia?, by Lorraine Elliott. 12. Westphalian sovereignty in the shadow of international justice? a fresh coat of paint for a tainted concept, by Jackson Nyamuya Maogoto. Part 5: SOVEREIGNTY AND DEVELOPMENT:. 13. Development assistance and the hollow sovereignty of the weak, Roland Rich. 14. Corruption and transparency in governance and development : reinventing sovereignty for promoting good governance, by C. Raj Kumar. 15. Re-envisioning economic sovereignty : developing countries and the International Monetary Fund , by Ross P. Buckley. PART 6: RECONCEIVING THE STATE:. 16. Trust, legitimacy, and the sharing of sovereignty, by William Maley. 17. Sovereignty as indirect rule, by Barry Hindess. 18. Indigenous sovereignty, by Paul Keal. 19. Civil society in a post-statist circumstance, by Jan Aart Scholte. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Afghanistan / Algeria / Asia / Australia / Austria / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Cambodia / Canada / Burma / Burundi / Bulgaria / Chile / China / Colombia / Costa Rica / Dominican Republic / Ecuador / Eritrea / France / Germany / Greece / Hungary / India / Iran / Iraq / Italy / Japan / Kenya / Liberia / Libya / Lithuania / Malaysia / Mexico / Morocco / New Zealand / Niger / North Korea / Nigera / Pakistan / Palestine / Philippines / Poland / Russian Federation / Rwanda / South Africa / USSR / Spain / SRi Lanka / Taiwan / Thailand / Tunisia / USA / Uruguay / Uzbekistan / Venezuela / Former Yugoslavia / Zimbabwe LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): Refugee convention; ECHR;
URL http://www.ashgate.com/default.aspx?page=637&calcTitle=1&title_id=10047&edition_id=10947 |
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8. | Bell, Christine : On the law of peace, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph On the law of peace : peace agreements and the lex pacificatoria / Bell, Christine, xxvi, 383 p.. - Oxford : Oxford U. P., 2008. ISBN 978-0-19-922684-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. I. Understanding peace agreements. II. Peace agreements as legal documents: towards a lex pacificatoria. III. Peace agreements and the revision of international law: the force of the LEX. Conclusion. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Algeria / Asutralia / Azerbaijan / Bangladesh / Bosnia-Herzegovina / burundi / Cambodia / Cameroon / Canada / Chad / Chechnya / China / Cuba / Cyprus / East Timor / Ecuador / Egypt / El Salvador / Eritrea / Ethiopia / Fiji / Finland / France / Georgia / Germany / Greece / Guatemala / Haiti / Indochina / Indonesia / Israel / Ireland / Italy / laos / Liberia / Macedonia / Malaysia / Mali / Mexico / Middlea East / Moldova / Montenegro / Morocco / Mozambique / New Zealand / Nicaragua / Niger / Nigeria / North Korea / Northern Ireland / Norway / Pakistan / Palestine / Peru / Philippines / Russian Federation / Saudi Arabia / Senegal / Sierra Leone / Somalia / South Africa / South Korea / USSR / Spain / Sri lanka / Sudan / Sweden / Switzerland / Syria / Tajikistan / Uganda / Zimbabwe LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): Vienna convention on the law of treaties; UDHR; ACHPR; UN charter; CAT; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); Convention on rights and duties of states; CEDAW; Genocide convention; CRC; Refugee convention; Framework convention for the protection of national minorities; Declaration of Turku; Declaration of the rights of minorities; ECPT; Geneva conventions; ICCPR; ICESCR; CERD; Lund recommendations (national minorities); Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; ICC statute; UDHR;
URL http://www.oup.com/uk/catalogue/?ci=9780199226849&view=lawview |
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9. | Weller, Marc (ed.) : Settling self-determination disputes, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Settling self-determination disputes : complex power-sharing in theory and practice / Weller, Marc (ed.) ; Metzger, Barbara ; Johnson, Niall (ass.ed.), xvii, 793 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2008. ISBN 978-9004-16482-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Part I: Preface; Introduction: Settling Self-determination Conflicts: an introduction, by Marc Weller. SECTION ONE:FRAMEWORK AND CASE STUDIES: Part 1: Historical and Theoretical Framework:. Chapter 1: Nationalism, Self-Determination and the Doctrine of Territorial Unity, by James Mayall. Chapter 2: Why the Legal Rules on Self-determination do not Resolve Self-determination Disputes, by Marc Weller. Chapter 3: The Logics of Power-Sharing, Consociation and Pluralist Federations, by Brendan O’Leary. Part 2: Case Studies:. Chapter 4: Complex Power-Sharing in and over Northern Ireland: A Self-determination Agreement, a Treaty, a Consociation, a Federacy, Matching Confederal Institutions, Inter-Governmentalism and a Peace Process, by Brendan O’Leary. Chapter 5: Resolving the Bougainville Self-determination Dispute: Autonomy or Complex Power-Sharing?, by Anthony J. Regan. Chapter 6: Resolving Self-determination Disputes Thorough Complex Power-Sharing Arrangements: The Case of Mindanao, Southern Philippines, by Mark Turner. Chapter 7: Power Sharing and International Intervention: Overcoming the Post-Conflict Legacy in Bosnia and Herzegovina, by Florian Bieber. Chapter 8: Interim Governance for Kosovo: The Rambouillet Agreement and the Constitutional Framework Developed under UN Administration, by Marc Weller. Chapter 9: Power-sharing in Macedonia?, by Farimah Daftary /Eben Friedman. Chapter 10: Gagauzia and Moldova: Experiences in Power-sharing, by Priit Jaerve. Chapter 11: Case-study of the Conflict in South Ossetia, by Ketevan Tsikhelashvili and Natasha Ubilava. SECTION TWO: CROSS-CUTTING ANALYSIS: Part 3: Vertical Power-sharing:. Chapter 12: Addressing the Self-determination Dispute, by Marc Weller. Chapter 13: Power-sharing and the Vertical Layering of Authority: A Review of Current Practices, by Stefan Wolff. Chapter 14: Electoral Arrangements in Systems of Complex Power Sharing, by Andrew Reynolds. Chapter 15: Third Party Involvement in Self-determination Conflicts, by Ulrich Schneckener. Part 4: Functional Power-sharing:. Chapter 16: Education, by Mark Turner. Chapter 17: Resolving Self-Determination Disputes Using Complex Power-sharing: The role of Economic Policies, by John Bradley. Chapter 18: Policing Territories Previously Subject to civil war and ethnic violence, by Philip Towle. Chapter 19: The military dimension of security sector governance in complex power-sharing arrangements, by Paul Cornish. Chapter 20: Transforming justice, reclaiming the ruleof law: legal transition in complex power-sharing arrangements, by Angela Hegarty. Chapter 21: The role of human and minority rights in complex power-sharing, by Jennifer Jackson-Preece. Chapter 22: 'Bridges' in self-determination disputes? External relations of sub-national entities and minority groups, by Francesco Palermo. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Albania / Argentina / Australia / Argentina / Belgium / Bosnia-Herzegovina / Bulgaria / Burma / Canada / Chechnya / Congo / Corsica / Croatia / Cyprus / Czech Republic / East Timor / Eritrea / Ethiopia / Finland / Georgia / Germany / Gibraltar / Greece / Iceland / Indonesia / Iraq / Ireland / Israel / Italy / Latvia / Lithuania / Malaysia / Mauritania / Moldova / Montenegro / Netherlands / New Zealand / Nigeria / Norway / palestine / Pakistan / Paraguay / Philippines / Portugal / Quebec / Romania / Russian Federation / Scotland / Russian Federation / Rwanda / Slovak Republic / Somalia / South Africa / USSr / Sri Lanka / Spain / Serbia / Sweden / Switzerland / Taiwan / Tanzania / Turkey / Tibet / United Kingdom / USA / Yugoslavia LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Aaland Islands Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): AMR; Dayton peace accords; European charter for regional or minority languages; ECHR; Framework convention on the protection of national minorities; UN charter; ICCPR; Declaration on the rights of minorities; |
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10. | Boerefijn, Ineke (ed.) : Changing perceptions of sovereignty and human rights, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Changing perceptions of sovereignty and human rights : essays in honour of Cees Flinterman / Boerefijn, Ineke (ed.) ; Goldschmidt, Jenny, viii, 582 p.. - Antwerp : Intersentia, 2008. ISBN 978-90-5095-759-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. INEKE BOEREFIJN and JENNY GOLDSCHMIDT: Introduction. PART A: CHANGING PERCEPTIONS OF SOVEREIGNTY:. 1. TIM KOOPMANS: The Internationalisation of the Rule of law. 2. MENNO T. KAMMINGA: Humanisation of International Law. 3. BAS DE GAAY FORTMAN: Beating the State at its Own Game. An Inquiry into the Intricacies of Sovereignty and the Separation of Powers. 4. KOFI KUMADO: Changing Perceptions of Sovereignty and Human Rights in Africa. 5. MARJOLEIN VAN DEN BRINK: Gendered Sovereignty? In Search of Gender Bias in the International Law Concept of State Sovereignty. 6. NICO SCHRIJVER: Unravelling State Sovereignty? The Controversy on the Right of Indigenous Peoples to Permanent Sovereignty over their Natural Wealth and Resources. 7. YVONNE DONDERS: The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. A Victory for Cultural Autonomy?. 8. FONS COOMANS: Sovereignty Fading away? Prioritising Domestic Health Needs Versus Promoting Free Trade. PART B: ENFORCEMENT AND SOVEREIGNTY IN THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL ORDER: INTERNATIONAL ORGANISATIONS AND NON-STATE ACTORS:. 9. THEO VAN BOVEN: Five Years After Strengthening the United Nations. Recasting the Office of the High Commssioner for Human Rights. 10. TIEMO OOSTENBRINK: The Reform of the Thematic Treaty Mechanisms of the United Nations. 11. YUWEN LI: The Influence of International Organisations on the Protection of Human Rights in the Chinese Legal System. 12. PETER MALCONTENT: The European Union’s Influence on the Character and Effectiveness of Dutch Conduct in the UN Commission on Human Rights. 13. PIETER KOOIJMANS: Upholding Human Rights in a Tense and Globalising World. 14. WILLEM J.M. VAN GENUGTEN: Questioning the Freedom from Fear. A Meaningful Concept in a World Full of Abuse of Power and Injustice. 15. INEKE BOEREFIJN and JENNY GOLDSCHMIDT: Combating Domestic Violence Against Women. A Positive State Duty Beyond Sovereignty. PART C: ENFORCEMENT AND SOVEREIGNTY: INTERNATIONAL JUDICIAL INSTITUTIONS:. 16. LEONARD BESSELINK: The European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights. From Sovereign Immunity in Bosphorus to Full Scrutiny Under the Reform Treaty?. 17. SUSANNE BURRI: The Position of the European Court of Justice with Respect to the Enforcement of Human Rights. 18. EGBERT MYJER: Hardly a Week Goes by Without… Observations on the Increasing Number of General Problems of International Law in the Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights. 19. LEO ZWAAK: The Role of the Council of Europe and Its Committee of Ministers. Analysing the Efficiency of Measures Taken Under Article 46(2) of the ECHR. 20. TITIA LOENEN: Religious Pluralism and the European Court of Human Rights. Some Reflections on the Pros and Cons of a Wide Margin of Appreciation in the Case of Sahin v. Turkey. 21. CHRISJE BRANTS: The Free Flow of Information. A Sovereign Concept in and of Itself. 22. MITSUE INAZUMI: Japan and the ICC. A Reflection from the Perspective of the Principle of Complementarity. PART D: CHANGING PERCEPTIONS OF SOVEREIGNTY: CONFLICT AND HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION:. 23. BERTRAND RAMCHARAN: Sovereignties of Impunity and Contemporary Challenges of International Protection. 24. DUCO HELLEMA: Sovereignty and Peacebuilding. 25. PETER BAEHR: Human Rights in Foreign Policy and International Relations. Shifting Emphasis after 9/11? The Cases of the United States and the Netherlands. 26. BIBI VAN GINKEL: Combating International Terrorism: New Powers for the Security Council?. 27. OLIVIER RIBBELINK: Another Responsibility to Protect? Some Thoughts on a Possible Consequence of GMES, or How Remote Sensing for the Good Cause Could Result in ‘Another’ Responsibility to Protect. 28. ERIC MYJER: Afghanistan, the Erosion of the Right to Self-Defence and the Case of the Missing Immediacy. The Debate on the Ban on the Use of Force and Self-Defence from a Human Rights Perspective. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CERD; ICCPR-27; ACHPR; AMR; UN charter; ECHR; CEDAW; CAT;
URL http://www.intersentia.be/searchDetail.aspx?bookId=100468 |
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11. | Westra, Laura : Environmental justice & the rights of indigenous peoples, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Environmental justice & the rights of indigenous peoples : international & domestic legal perspectives / Westra, Laura, x, 352 p.. - London : Earthscan, 2008. ISBN 978-1-84407-485-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Foreword by Bradford W. Morse. Part I: Basic Issues, Principles and Historical Background: 1. The Rights of Indigenous Peoples: Eco-footprint Crime and the ‘Biological/Ecological Integrity Model’ to Achieve Environmental Justice. 2. Cultural Integrity and Ecological Integrity: The Interface and International Law. 3. Cosmopolitanism and Natural Law for the Recovery of Individual and Community Rights. Part II: Selected Examples From Domestic and International Case Law : 4. Indigenous Peoples and Minorities in International Jurisprudence and the Responsibility of the World Bank. 5. The United States and Indigenous Peoples: Some Recent ATCA Jurisprudence. 6. First Nations of Canada and the Legal and Illegal Attacks on their Existence. Part III: Justifying Genocide: Principles and Reality: 7. Genocide and Eco-crime: The Interface. 8. Aboriginal Rights in Domestic and International Law, and the Special Case of Arctic Peoples. Part IV: Some Modest Proposals for Global Governance: 9. Indigenous Human Rights and the Obligations of State and Non-State Actors. 10. Governance for Global Integrity: Present Instruments, Trends and Future Goals. Index INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): AMR; Biodiversity convention; Canadian charter of rights and freedoms; CERD; ICCPR; ICESCR; CRC; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); ECHR; Draft declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; Rio declaration; UN charter; LIBRARY LOCATION: Miljörätt SHELF CODE: Arbetsmaterial |
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12. | Medina Quiroga, Cecilia (ed.) : Anuario de derechos humanos 2008, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: serial Anuario de derechos humanos 2008 / Medina Quiroga, Cecilia (ed.), 298 p.. - Santiago de Chile : Universidad de Chile. Facultad de Derecho, 2008. - ISSN 0718-2058 LANGUAGE: SPA INDEX WORDS:
LIBRARY LOCATION: s Anuario de derechos humanos
URL http://www.cdh.uchile.cl/publicaciones/anuarios/anuario2008.tpl |
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13. | Orre, Werner : Nationella minoriteters rätt till utbildning - genomförandet i Finland, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: unpublished document Nationella minoriteters rätt till utbildning - genomförandet i Finland / Orre, Werner, 80 p.. - Åbo : Åbo Akademi University. Faculty of Economics and Social Sciences, 2008. LANGUAGE: SWE INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Finland NOTE (THESIS): Master's thesis in public international law, ÅAU, [2008] NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; European charter for regional or minority languages; ECHR; ECHRP-12; Framework convention for the protection of national minorities; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); ICCPR; ICESCR; CDE; GC-18,23,(ICCPR); GC-3,13(ICESCR); Declaration on the rights of minorities; Hague recommendations; LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: seminarierummet |
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14. | Vainio, Kristiina : Urfolk som klagosubjekt, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: unpublished document Urfolk som klagosubjekt : en granskning av locus standi inför den interamerikanska kommissionen för mänskliga rättigheter i förhållandet till urfolkens kollektiva intressen / Vainio, Kristiina, 105 p.. - Åbo : Åbo Akademi. Ekonomisk-statsvetenskapliga fakulteten, 2008. LANGUAGE: SWE INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (THESIS): Master's thesis in public international law, ÅAU, 2008, [T] NOTE (GENERAL): Declaration on principles of international law concerning friendly relations and co-operation among states in accordance with the charter of the United States; Declaration on the right of peoples to peace; Declaration on the right to development; Declaration on the rights of minorities; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); ICCPR-27; AMR; ICCPR-OP; ICESR-1; Genocide convention; Convention on the protection and integration of indigenous and tribal populations (ILO convention no. 107); OAS charter; LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR SHELF CODE: seminarierummet |
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15. | Francioni, Franceso (ed.) : Biotechnology and international law, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Biotechnology and international law / Francioni, Franceso (ed.) ; Scovazzi, Tullio - (Studies in international law ; vol. 9), xxxvii, 448 p.. - Oxford : Hart publ., 2006. ISBN 1-84113-631-X LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Part I: THE INTERNATIONAL LEGAL REGIME OF BIOTECHNOLOGY: GENERAL ASPECTS:. 1. F. FRANCIONI (European University Institute; Università di Siena): International Law for Biotechnology: Basic Principles. 2. R. PAVONI (Università di Siena): Biodiversity and Biotechnology: Consolidation and Strains in the Emerging International Legal Regimes. Part II: BIOTECHNOLOGY AND THE PROTECTION OF THE ENVIRONMENT:. 3. C. REDGWELL (University College of London): Biotechnology, Biodiversity and Sustainable Development: Conflict or Congruence?. 4. T. SCOVAZZI (Università di Milano-Bicocca): Bioprospecting on the Deep Seabed: A Legal Gap Requiring to be Filled. 5. G. CATALDI (Università di Napoli ‘L’Orientale’): Biotechnology and Marine Biogenetic Resources: The Interplay Between UNCLOS and the CBD. 6. P. VIGNI (Università di Siena): Antarctic Bioprospecting: Is It Compatible with the Value of Antarctica as a Natural Reserve?. 7. A. GUYOMARD (Université de Nantes): Bioprospecting in Antarctica: A New Challenge for the Antarctic Treaty System. Part III: BIOTECHNOLOGY AND INTERNATIONAL TRADE ISSUES:. 8. E.-U. PETERSMANN (European University Institute): The WTO Dispute Over Genetically Modified Organisms: Interface Problems of International Trade Law, Environmental Law and Biotechnology Law. 9. H. ULLRICH (European University Institute): Traditional Knowledge, Biodiversity, Benefit-Sharing and the Patent System: Romantics v. Economics?. 10. S. ZARRILLI (UNCTAD): International Trade in GMOs: Legal Frameworks and Developing Country Concerns. Part IV: BIOTECHNOLOGY AND HUMAN RIGHTS:. 11. M.E. FOOTER (University of Amsterdam): Agricultural Biotechnology, Food Security and Human Rights. 12. F. LENZERINI (Università di Siena): Biotechnology, Human Dignity and the Human Genome. 13. M. FRABONI and F. LENZERINI (Università di Siena): Indigenous Peoples’ Rights, Biogenetic Resources and Traditional Knowledge: The Case of the Sateré-Mawé People. Part V: BIOTECHNOLOGY AND REGIONAL ECONOMIC INTEGRATION SYSTEMS:. 14. P. ŠTURMA (Charles University in Prague): The EU Charter of Fundamental Rights and the Governance of Biotechnology in the European Union. 15. S. POLI (Università di Trieste): The EU Risk Management of Genetically Modified Organisms and the Commission’s Defence Strategy in the Biotech Dispute: Are They Inconsistent?. 16. F. NOVAK (Pontificia Universidad Católica de Lima): Biotechnology and Regional Integration Systems: Legislation and Practices in the Andean Community Countries. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: France / Germany / India / Italy / Japan / Peru / Philippines / Spain / Thailand / United Kingdom / USA / Venezuela NOTE (GENERAL): Aarhus convention; ACHPR; AMR; Convention on biological diversity; ECHR; ESC; Cartagena protocol on biosafety; Rio declaration; Stockholm declaration; CRC; EU charter of fundamental rights; ICESCR; ToA; TEU; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; International declaration on human genetic data; LIBRARY LOCATION: Domvillan - Miljörätt SHELF CODE: Arbetsmaterial
URL http://www.hartpub.co.uk/books/details.asp?isbn=9781841136318 |
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16. | Joona, Juha : Entisiin Tornion ja Kemin Lapinmaihin kuuluneiden alueiden maa- ja vesioikeuksista, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Entisiin Tornion ja Kemin Lapinmaihin kuuluneiden alueiden maa- ja vesioikeuksista / Joona, Juha - (Juridica lapponica ; 32), 418 p.. - Rovaniemi : Lapin Yliopisto. Pohjoisen ympäristö- ja vähemmistöoikeuden instituutti, 2006. - ISSN 0783-4144 ISBN 978-952-92-1045-9 LANGUAGE: FIN INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Finland NOTE (GENERAL): Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169); |
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17. | Aguirre, Daniel : The human right to development in a globalized world, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The human right to development in a globalized world / Aguirre, Daniel, 351 p. . - Aldershot : Ashgate, 2008. ISBN 978-0-7546-7471-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. 1. Introduction: economic globalization and human rights. Part 1: Development in a Global World:. 2. Human rights and development cooperation in context. 3. Development cooperation in theory: the right to development. 4. Development cooperation in practice: international investment law. Part 2 : Triadic Responsibility in a Global World:. 5. Micro-level: corporate responsibility. 6. Macro-level regulation: state responsibility. 7. Meso-level regulation: the international cooperation and collective responsibility. 8. Conclusion: the right to development, legitimacy and stability in a global world. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; Charter of economic rights and duties of states; CERD; ICESR; |
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18. | von Bogdandy, Armin (ed.) : Max Planck yearbook of United Nations law, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Max Planck yearbook of United Nations law : vol. 12 2008 / von Bogdandy, Armin (ed.) ; Wolfrum, Rüdiger ; Philipp, Christiane E., xix, 560 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2008. - ISSN 1389-4633 ISBN 978-90-04-16959-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: 1. Orakhelashvili, Alexander, Statehood, Recognition and the United Nations Syst em: A Unilateral Declaration of Independence in Kosovo (260.4 KB) - full text. 2. Weiß, Wolfgang, Security Council Powers and the Exigencies of Justice after War. 3. Kanetake, Machiko, Enhancing Community Accountability of the Security Council through Pluralistic Structure: The Case of the 1267 Committee. 4. Breen, Claire, Revitalising the United Nations Human Rights Special Procedures Mechanisms as a Means of Achieving and Maintaining International Peace and Security. 5. Trevisanut, Seline, The Principle of Non-Refoulement at Sea and the Effectiveness of Asylum Protection. 6. de Oliveira Godinho, Fabiana, The United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the Protection of Indigenous Rights in Brazil. 7. Fuchs, Christine, UN Convention to Combat Desertification: Recent Developments. 8. Niemelä, Pekka, A Cosmpolitan Word Order? Perspectives on Francisco de Vitoria and the United Nations. Focus: Rule of Law:. 9. Fitschen, Thomas, Inventing the Rule of Law for the United Nations. 10. Barriga, Stefan/ Alday, Alejandro, The General Assembly and the Rule of Law: Daring to Succeed? - The Perspective of Member States. 11. Bühler, Konrad G., The Austrian Rule of Law Initiative 2004-2008 - The Panel Series, the Advisory Group and the Final Report on the UN Security Council and the Rule of Law. 12. Reinisch, August/ Knahr, Christina, From the United Nations Administrative Tribunal to the United Nations Appeals Tribunal - Reform of the Administration of Justice System within the United Nations. 13. Alvarez Núñez, Rosa Giannina, Intellectual Property and the Protection of Traditional Knowledge, Genetic Resources and Folklore: The Peruvian Experience. (L.L.M.thesis) INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; |
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19. | Turner, Stephen J. : A sustainable environmental right, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph A sustainable environmental right : an examination of the legal obligations of decision-makers towards the environment / Turner, Stephen J. - (Energy and environmental law & policy series : supranational and comparative apspects ; vol. 1), xxiii, 284 p.. - Alphen an den Rijn : Kluwer Law, 2009. ISBN 978-90-411-2815-7 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; AMR; ECHR; ICCPR; ICESCR; UDHR; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; LIBRARY LOCATION: Domvillan SHELF CODE: Miljörätt |
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20. | Veintie, Tuija (ed.) : Local and global encounters, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Local and global encounters : norms, identities and representations in formation / Veintie, Tuija (ed.) ; Virtanen, Kristiina - (Renvall Institute publications ; 25), 158 p.. - Helsinki : University of Helsinki, 2009. - ISSN 0786-6445 ISBN 978-952-10-5301-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Negotiating the human rights-based approach and the charity-based approach in development cooperation activities: experiences of deaf women in Uganda, by Hisayo Katsui. 2. The Human Rights Committee ontraditional cultural rights: the case of the Arctic indigenous people, by Kamrul Hossain. 3. The changing place of religion and the question of secularization inthe 'Modernization' of Tibet, by Mitra Härkönen. 4. Thobgyal Sarpa : The only Tibetan Bonpo settlement in India, by Thupten K. Rikey. 5. Reterritorialisation of schooling in the Eucadorian indigenous context, by Tuija Veintie. 6. Global youth cultures and Amazonian indigenous adolescence, by Pirjo Kristiina Virtanen. 7. 'Partnership' between Northern NGOs and their Vietnamese counterpart organisations, by Minna Hakkarainen and Hisayo Katsui. 8. Healthcare policy administration and reforms in post-colonial Kenya and challenges for the future, by Richard Wamai. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Uganda NOTE (GENERAL): CRPD; ICESCR; CRC; UDHR; ICCPR-27; GC no. 23(ICCPR);
URL http://www.helsinki.fi/hum/renvall/research/renvall_25.html |
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21. | Nautiyal, Suresh (ed.) : Indigenous survival and the modern world, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Indigenous survival and the modern world / Nautiyal, Suresh (ed.) ; Hirvelä, Ville-Veikko, 46 p.. - New Delhi, India : Citizens' Global Platform, 2005. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: India |
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22. | Bloed, Arie ... [et al.] : European yearbook of minority issues, 2008 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph European yearbook of minority issues : vol. 6, 2006/7 / Bloed, Arie ... [et al.], vii, 588 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2008. ISBN 978-90-04-17423-8 ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: ARTICLES:. A. General Articles Section; Political Participation of Minorities, by Rainer Hofmann. New Media and the Implementation of Instruments in Support of Minority Rights Related to Media, by Tom Moring. Minority Protection, Data Collection and the Right to Privacy, by Julie Ringelheim. Roma and Housing Rights in Europe: Possibilities for International Human Rights Law to Redress the Exclusion of Pariah Minorities. Slovakia: A Case Study, by Claude Cahn. The Draft for a Nordic Saami Convention, by Timo Koivurova. B. Special Focus: Crossborder Cooperation and Minorities in Eastern Europe: Still Waiting for a Chance?:. Introduction, by Rainer Hofmann. Transnational and Trans-regional Cooperation and Effects on the Situation of Minorities: A Case Study of the Polish–Ukrainian Border Region, by Katrin Böttger. A Case Study on Crossborder Cooperation in the Ukrainian–Moldovan Border Region and Its Effects on the Respective Minorities, by Nataliya Belitser. National Minorities and Crossborder Cooperation between Hungary and Croatia. A Case Study of Baranya, Hungary and Osijec(ko-baranjska County, Croatia, by Martin Klatt and Jørgen Kühl. Crossborder Cooperation in Mid-Eastern Europe and Its Influence on Minorities: the Case of the Lithuanian Minority in Poland, by Karina Zabielska. Crossborder Cooperation and Minorities in Eastern Europe: Still Waiting for a Chance? A Summary and Evaluation of the Four Case Studies, by Alice Engl and Jens Woelk. C. Special Focus: Diversity Managment and Integration:. The Law and Politics of Diversity Management: A Neo-institutional Approach, by Joseph Marko. Conceptualizing Democratic Diversity Management for Multicultural Societies: Theories of Society and Law, by Tove H. Malloy. Diversity Management and Integration: From Ideas to Concepts, by Mitja Žagar. Creating an Integrated Society, Managing Diversity and Human Rights in Europe, by Merja Pentikäinen. PART II: REPORTS:. A. International Developments: 1. Completing the First Decade of Monitoring: Latest Developments under the Framework Convention for the Protection of National Minorities, by Elena Jurado and Antti Korkeakivi. 2. The Work of the Committee of Experts of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages (June 2006-June 2007), by Vesna Crnic'-Grotic'. 3. Recent Case Law of the European Court of Human Rights Concerning the Protection of Minorities (August 2006-December 2007), by Leto Cariolou. 4. European Commission for Democracy through Law: Review of Recent Reports and Opinions Relevant to the Protection of National Minorities, by Alain Chablais. 5. The Activities of the OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities (July 2006-December 2007), by Krzysztof Drzewicki and Vincent de Graaf. 6. The Activities of the United Nations Independent Expert on Minority Issues (July 2006-December 2007), by Erik Friberg and Graham Fox. B. National Developments: 1. The Kosovo Constitution and Provisions for the Protection of Minorities in Europe, by Marc Weller. 2. Legal and Policy Developments in the Russian Federation in 2007 with regard to the Protection of Minorities, by Bill Bowring. 3. Minorities and Georgia’s Obligations and Commitments to the Council of Europe: A Review of Recent Progress on the Fulfilment of Obligations and Commitments on National Minorities and Related Issues, by Tom Trier. 4. The Romanian Law on Ratification of the European Charter for Regional or Minority Languages, by Sergiu Constantin. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Norway / Finland / Sweden / Poland / Ukraine / Moldova / Croatia / Romania LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Kosovo NOTE (GENERAL): AMR; ACHPR; ADRD; CAT; ICCPR; ICCPR-OP; CEDAW; CERD; ICESCR; CRC; Charter of Paris; Copenhagen document; ECHR; ECHRP-12; ECPT; ESC; Framework convention for the protection of national minorities; Hague recommendations (1996); Convention concerning indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries ( ILO convention 169); Lund recommendations (1999); UDHR; UN charter; Declarations on the rights of minorities; Draft declaration on the rights of indigenous peoples; Vienna convention on the law of treaties; Vienna declaration and programme of action; ICESCR; European charter for regional or minority languages; |
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23. | Nautiyal, Suresh ... [et al.] : Indigenous survival and the modern world, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Indigenous survival and the modern world / Nautiyal, Suresh ... [et al.] - ( Unheard voices ; 3), 46 p.. - Munrika, New Delhi : Citizens' Global Platform, 2005. LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
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24. | Mini guide to ethnic and national minority issues in Europe, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Mini guide to ethnic and national minority issues in Europe /, 41 p.. - Flensburg : European Centre for Minority Issues, 2005. ISBN 3-00-017070-7 LANGUAGE: ENG INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Framework convention for the protection of national minorities; European Charter for regional or minority languages; |
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25. | Armstrong, David ... [et al.] : Routledge handbook of international law, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Routledge handbook of international law / Armstrong, David ... [et al.], xxxiv, 468 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2009. ISBN 978-0-415-41876-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: SECTION I: THE NATURE OF INTERNATIONAL LAW:. 1. International law and international relations scholarship / by Robert Beck. 2. International law and international community / Andreas Paulus. 3. Legal theory and international law / Friedrich Kratochwil. 4. Soft law / Dinah Shelton. 5. The practice of international law / Anthony Carty. 6. International law as a unitary system / Anthony D'Amato. SECTION II : EVOLUTION OF INTERNATIONAL LAW:. 7. International law in the ancient world / David Bederman. 8. The age of Grotius / Edward Keene. 9. The legacy of the nineteenth century / Martti Koskenniemi. 10. Latin American international law / Liliana Obrego´n. 11. Religion and international law : an analytical survey of the relationship / Mashood Baderin. 12. The struggle for an international constitutional order / Marc Weller. SECTION III : LAW AND POWER IN INTERNATIONAL SOCIETY:. 13. Law and force in the 21st century / Gerry Simpson. 14. The nature of US engagement with international law : making sense of apparent inconsistencies / Shirley Scott. 15. The Iraq war and international law / Wayne Sandholtz. SECTION IV: KEY ISSUES IN INTERNATIONAL LAW:. 16. The international criminal court / Beth Simmons and Allison Danner. 17. Fidelity to constitutional democracy and to the rule of international law / Allen Buchanan and Russell Powell. 18. International crimes / William Schabas. 19. Challenges of the "new terrorism" / John Murphy. 20. Law and legitimacy : the world trade organization / Amrita Narlikar. 21. Attainments, eclipses, and disciplinary renewal in international human rights law : a critical overview / Obiora Chinedu Okafor. 22. The colonial origins of intellectual property regimes in African states / Ikechi Mgbeoji. 23. Indigenous rights claims in international law : self determination, culture, and development / Karen Engle. 24. International refugee law : dominant and emerging approaches / Helene Lambert. 25. Sustainable development in international law / Marie-Claire Cordonnier Segger. 26. WTO law and sustainable development / Markus Gehring. 27. Looking ahead : international law's main challenges / Andrea Bianchi INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Africa / Algeria / Angola / Australia / Canada / China / Colombia / Egypt / France / Greece / India / Iraq / Iran / Israel / Malaysia / New Zealand / Nicaragua / Nigeria / Rhodesia / Russian Federation / Somalia / South Africa / USSR / Uruguay / Zimbabwe LIBRARY LOCATION: IMR Inst.ref.
URL http://www.routledge.com/books/Routledge-Handbook-of-International-Law-isbn9780415418768 |
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26. | Langford, Malcolm (ed.) : Social rights jurisprudence, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Social rights jurisprudence : emerging trends in international and comparative law / Langford, Malcolm (ed.), xv, 687 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2009 . ISBN 978-0-521-67805-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: PART I. Overview:. 1. The justiciability of social rights: from practice to theory, by Malcolm Langford. 2. The challenges of crafting remedies for violations of socio-economic rights, by Kent Roach. 3. The right to legal aid in social rights litigation, by Andrea Durbach. PART II. Select National Jurisdictions:. 4. South Africa, by Sandra Liebenberg. 5. India, by S. Muralidhar. 6. South Asia, by Iain Byrne and Sara Hossain. 7. Colombia, by Magdalena Sepúlveda. 8. Argentina, by Christian Courtis. 9. Brazil, by Flavia Piovesan. 10. Venezuela, by Enrique Gonzalez. 11. Canada, by Martha Jackman and Bruce Porter. 12. The United States, by Cathy Albisa and Jessica Schultz. 13. Hungary, by Malcolm Langford. 14. France, by Laurent Pech. 15. United Kingdom, by Jeff A. King. 16. Ireland, by Aoife Nolan. PART III. Regional Procedures and Jurisprudence:. 17. African regional human rights system, by Danwood Mzikenge Chirwa. 18. The inter-American commission on human rights, by Tara J. Melish. 19. The inter-American court of human rights, by Tara J. Melish. 20. European court of human rights, by Luke Clements and Alan Simmons. 21. The European committee of social rights, by Urfan Khaliq and Robin Churchill. 22. European Court of Justice, by Philippa Watson. PART IV. International Human Rights Procedures and Jurisprudence:. 23. Committee on economic, social and cultural rights: past, present and future, by Malcolm Langford and Jeff A. King. 24. Committee on the elimination of racial discrimination, by Nathalie Prouvez. 25. Human rights committee, by Martin Scheinin. 26. Committee on the elimination of discrimination against women, by Leilani Farha. 27. Committee on the rights of the child, by Geraldine Van Bueren. PART V. Special Topics:. 28. The international labor organization, by Colin Fenwick. 29. Liability of multinational corporations, by Sarah Joseph. 30. The World Bank inspection panel, by Dana Clark. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ICESCR; CEDAW; Convention concerning the indigenous and tribal peoples in independent countries (ILO convention no. 169): Convention on the protection and integration of indigenous and tribal populations (ILO convention no. 107); The worst forms of child labour (ILO convention no. 182); CRC; Protocol of San Salvador; ACHPR; |
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27. | Ferstman, Carla (ed.) : Reparations for victims of genocide and crimes against humanity, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Reparations for victims of genocide and crimes against humanity : systems in place and systems in the making / Ferstman, Carla (ed.) ; Goetz, Mariana ; Stephens, Alan, vii, 575 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2009. ISBN 978-90-04-17449-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Preface (Judge Elizabeth Odio Benito). Introduction, (Carla Ferstman, Mariana Goetz and Alan Stephens). Part I: Reparations for Victims – Key Themes and Concepts:. 1. Victims’ Rights to a Remedy and Reparation: the New United Nations Principles and Guidelines (Professor Theo Van Boven); 2. Reparation Programmes: A Gendered Perspective (Anne Saris and Katherine Lofts); 3. Massive Trauma and the Healing Role of Reparative Justice (Yael Danieli, Ph.D.). Part II: Reparations and the Holocaust:. 4. The Claims Conference and the Historic Jewish Efforts for Holocaust-Related Compensation and Restitution (Gideon Taylor, Greg Schneider and Saul Kagan); 5. The Swiss Banks Holocaust Settlement (Judah Gribetz and Shari C. Reig). Part III: The Internationalised Context of ‘Mass Claims’:. 6. Overcoming Evidentiary Weaknesses in Reparation Claims Programmes - The Mass Claims Context (Heike Niebergall); 7. International Mass Claims Processes and the ICC Trust Fund for Victims (Edda Kristjánsdóttir); 8. The United Nations Compensation Commission (Linda A. Taylor). Part IV: Reparations and International and Regional Courts:. 9. Bringing Justice to Victims? Responses of Regional and International Human Rights Courts and Treaty Bodies to Mass Violations (Dr. Lutz Oette); 10. The Concepts of ‘Injured Party’ and ‘Victim’ of Gross Human Rights Violations in the Jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights: A Commentary on their Implications for Reparations (Clara Sandoval-Villalba); 11. Reparation for Gross Violations of Human Rights Law and International Humanitarian Law at the International Court of Justice (Conor McCarthy); 12. Reparations and the International Criminal Court (Carla Ferstman and Mariana Goetz). Part V: Pursuing Extraterritorial Reparations Claims – Lawyers’ Perspectives:. 13. The Prosecution of International Crimes and the Role of Victims’ Lawyers (Luc Walleyn); 14. Compensation for the Victims of Chemical Warfare in Iraq and Iran (Liesbeth Zegveld); Part VI: Reparations in National (Territorial) Contexts: 15. Reparations and Victim Participation: A Look at the Truth Commission Experience (Cristián Correa, Julie Guillerot and Lisa Magarrell); 16. The Argentinean Reparations Programme for Grave Violations of Human Rights Perpetrated During the Last Military Dictatorship (1976-1983) (Andrea Gualde and Natalia Luterstein); 17. Reparations for Victims in Colombia: Colombia´s Law on Justice and Peace (Julián Guerrero Orozco and Mariana Goetz); 18. Policy Challenges for Property Restitution in Transition - The Example of Iraq (Peter Van der Auweraert); 19. Reparations in Dayton’s Bosnia and Herzegovina (Carla Ferstman and Sheri P. Rosenberg); 20. Goats & Graves: Reparations in Rwanda’s Community Courts (Lars Waldorf); 21. Still Not Talking: The South African Government's Exclusive Reparations Rolicy and the Impact of the R30,000 Financial Reparations on Survivors (Oupa Makhalemele); Conclusions. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): ACHPR; AMR; CERD; CEDAW; ECHR; Geneva conventions; Additional protocols to the Geneva conventions; International convention for the protection of all persons from enforced disappearance; ICCPR; ICCPR-OP; Nairobi declaration on women's and girls' right to a remedy and reparation; ICC statute; UDHR; CAT; |
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28. | Ramcharan, Bertrand G. : The protection roles of UN human rights special procedures, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The protection roles of UN human rights special procedures / Ramcharan, Bertrand G., x, 213 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2009. ISBN 978-90-04-17147-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Foreword, by Ambassador Peter Maurer. Introduction. Chapters :. I. Contemporary Challenges of International Protection. II. Origins, Essence and Foundations of Special Procedures. III. The Protection Roles of Country Mandates. IV. The Protection Roles of Thematic Mandates. V. State, Individual, Corporate and International Responsibility. VI. Prevention, Urgent Action and Appeals. VII. Containment and Mitigation: The Transmittal of Complaints to Governments and Visits on the Spot. VIII. Fact-Finding, Recommendations, and Follow Up. IX. Remedies. X. Advocacy for Protection. Conclusion; Bibliography; Index INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UDHR; UN charter; ICCPR; ICESCR; |
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29. | Sabatello, Maya : Children's bioethics, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Children's bioethics : the international biopolitical discourse on harmful traditional practices and the right of the child to cultural identity / Sabatello, Maya, xxiii, 287 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2009. ISBN 978-90-04-17341-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Chapter 1: Introduction; OUTLINE OF THE BOOK. Chapter 2: Using International Human Rights Framework to Study Bioethics; INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGTHS AND BIOETHICS: AN INEXTRICABLE CONNECTION; MEDICAL CULTURES; CHILDREN, BIOETHICS AND MEDICAL CULTURES; CHILDREN’S BIOETHICS AND THE QUESTION OF AGENCY; BIOETHICS AND CULTURE: TERMS AND WORKING DEFINITIONS. Chapter 3: Children’s Bioethics in the Convention on the Rights of the Child: Historical Overview of the Drafting Process; DRAFTING THE CHILDREN’S CONVENTION; CATEGORIES OF BIOMEDICAL PRACTICES; WHO WON, WHO LOST?; CONCLUSION. Chapter 4: Traditional Bodily Practices: Case Studies; CASE SELECTION; TRADITIONAL BODILY PRACTICES: BACKGROUND AND CONTEXT; CONCLUSION. Chapter 5: Children’s Bioethics and the Framework of Analysis; THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK OF HUMAN RIGHTS; BODILY PRACTICES AND CULTURAL CONFLICTS; CONCLUSION. Chapter 6: Biomedical Practices and the Child: Rights in Question; ABUSE AND NEGLECT; TORTURE, CRUEL AND INHUMAN AND DEGRADING TREATMENT; FREEDOM FROM VIOLENCE; FREEDOM OF THOUGHT, CONSCIENCE AND RELIGION; INFORMED CONSENT; CONCLUSION. Chapter 7: Rights Discourse, Children and Bioethics; CULTURE, CULTURAL RIGHTS AND CULTURAL IDENTITY; CHILDREN AS BEARERS OF (BIOMEDICAL) CULTURAL RIGHTS; THE CHILD'S CULTURAL IDENTITY; CHILDREN’S BIOETHICS IN PRACTICE; CONCLUSION. Chapter 8: Broadening the Lens; GENETIC MANIPULATIONS; GENETIC SELECTION OF CHILDREN’S CHARACTERISTICS: A PART OF PARENTAL REPRODUCTIVE FREEDOM?; SCIENTIFIC PROGRESS AND CHILDREN; THE CHILD’S ‘RIGHT TO A SOUND MIND AND BODY’?; CONCLUSION. Chapter 9: Conclusion; CONSIDERATIONS UNDER THE PHYSICAL PATH; CONSIDERATIONS UNDER THE IDENTITY PATH; RESOLUTION OF BIOMEDICAL CONFLICTS; CHILDREN’S BIOETHICS: A REEVALUATION; Bibliography; COURT CASES; INTERNATIONAL DOCUMENTS; SOURCES INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Biomedicine convention; Additional protocol to the biomedicine convention; CEDAW; ACHPR; CRC; African charter on the rights and welfare of the child; CRPD; CERD; ICESCR; Oviedo convention; UDHR; ECHR; ICCPR; |
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30. | Delbrück, Jost ... [et al.] : German yearbook of international law, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph German yearbook of international law = Jahrbüch für internationales Recht / Delbrück, Jost ... [et al.], 771 p.. - Berlin : Duncker & Humblot, 2009. - ISSN 0344-3094 ISBN 978-3-428-13132-7 LANGUAGE: ENG, GER ABSTRACT: Forum: P. J. Kuijper, Superpower Frustrated? The Costs of Non-Lisbon in EU External Affairs. FOCUS SECTION: Poverty as a Challenge to International Law: The Millennium Development Goals and the Guise of Humanitarianism:. 1. M. E. Salomon: Poverty, Privilege and International Law: The Millennium Development Goals and the Guise of Humanitarianism. 2. C. Kaufmann / M. Grosz: Poverty, Hunger and International Trade: What's Law Got to Do with It? Current Mechanisms and the Doha Development Agenda. 3. D. Bradlow: Developing Countries Debt Crises, International Financial Institutions, and International Law: Some Preliminary Thoughts. 4. E. Brown Weiss / T. K. Lat: Engaging the World's Poor People in Sustainable Development. 5. V. Chetail: Paradigm and Paradox of the Migration-Development Nexus: The New Border for North-South Dialogue. 6. K. Arts: The European Community's Contribution to the Fight Against Poverty in Developing Countries: Normative and Real?. 7. M. Langford: Poverty in Developed States: International Human Rights Law and the Right to a Remedy. GENERAL ARTICLES:. 1. R. Geiß: The Protection of Journalists in Armed Conflicts. 2. S. von Schorlemer: Compliance with the UNESCO World Heritage Convention: Reflections on the Elbe Valley and the Dresden Waldschlösschen Bridge. 3. C. J. Tams / A. Zimmermann: "[T]he Federation Shall Accede to Agreements Providing for General, Comprehensive and Compulsory International Arbitration". The German Optional Clause Declaration of 1 May 2008. 4. A. Proelß: Marine Genetic Resources under UNCLOS and the CBD. 5. H. Taki: Opinio Juris and the Formation of Customary International Law: A Theoretical Analysis. 6. Y. Tanaka: Rethinking Lex Ferenda in International Adjudication. REPORTS:. 1. P. Braasch / S. Fuhrmann: Die Rechtsprechung des Internationalen Gerichtshofes im Jahre 2008. 2. H. Martin / K. Will / S. Hentrei: Die Rechtsprechung des Europäischen Gerichtshofes für Menschenrechte im Jahre 2008. 3. C. A. Müller / T. Smith: The Work of the International Criminal Court in 2008. 4. E. Fernández Muñoz / B. Krings / K. Molle: The Work of the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia in the Year 2008. 5. M. Fröhlich / A. Trautmann: Die Rechtsprechung des WTO-Streitbeilegungsgremiums im Jahre 2008. 6. J. Glocke / S. Klatte: Die Tätigkeit der International Law Commission im Jahre 2008. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): TEU; Nice treaty; ICESCR; ICCPR-OP; |