International human rights: the successor to International human rights in context: law, politics and morals ; text and materials
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Beschreibung: | Voraufl. teilw. u.d.T.: International human rights in context / Henry Steiner |
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adam_text | Summary of Contents
Acknowledgements
xxix
PART A: INTRODUCTORY NOTIONS AND BACKGROUND
TO THE INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME
1.
Human Rights Concepts and Discourse
3
A. Global Snapshots
3
B. The Global Framework for Contemporary Human Rights Discourse: Capital
Punishment, Interactions Among States, Exceptionalism
17
2.
The Human Rights Regime: Background and Birth
58
A. TheLawof Armed Conflict and Customary International Law
61
B. State Responsibility, General Principles and Natural Law
90
C. Interwar Minorities Regime and the Role of Treaties
102
D. Judgment at Nuremberg
120
E. Birth of the Regime: The UN Charter and the UDHR
139
PART B: NORMATIVE FOUNDATION OF
INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS
3.
Civil and Political Rights
157
A. The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights: Introduction
157
B. Women s Rights and CEDAW
166
C. Evolution of Human Rights: Sexual Orientation Discrimination
220
D. Norm Regression: The Torture Prohibition
238
4.
Economic and Social Rights
277
A. Overview
277
B. Competing Perspectives on ESR
291
C. The Relationship Between the Two Sets of Rights
310
D. The Problem of Resources
315
E. Constitutions, Courts and Administrative Remedies
330
5.
National Security, Terrorism and the Law of Armed Conflict
383
A. Terrorism and Human Rights: Definitions and Relationships
383
B.
11
September
2001:
A Turning Point
388
C. The Legal Framework: Public Emergencies, Derogations and the Law of Armed
Conflict
394
D. Regulating Detention
415
E. Torture and Diplomatic Assurances
445
F. Guaranteeing Fair Trials
466
Summary of Contents
PART C: RIGHTS, DUTIES AND DILEMMAS OF
UNIVERSALISM
6.
Rights or Duties as Organizing Concepts
489
A. Ideas about Rights and the Effects of Rights Rhetoric
490
B. Duty-Based Social Orders
509
7.
Conflict in Culture, Tradition and Practices: Challenges to
Universalism
531
A. Universalism
and Cultural Relativism
531
B. Dissonance and Conflict: Illustrations
557
PART D: INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS ORGANIZATIONS
8.
The United Nations Human Rights System
685
A. Overview of the UN Human Rights Machinery
691
B. The UN Human Rights Council
694
C. The Role of the High Commissioner for Human Rights
742
D. The Security Council and the Responsibility to Protect
745
E. A
World Court for Human Rights?
759
9.
Treaty Bodies: The ICCPR Human Rights Committee
762
A. Powers, Functions and Performance of the ICCPR Committee
763
B. Comment on the Overall UN Human Rights Treaty Body System
838
10.
International Human Rights Fact-Finding
845
A. The Relationship Between National and International Level Fact-Finding
847
B. Challenges of Fact-Finding
858
C. Fact-Finding Methodologies: Case Studies
865
D. Government Responses to Fact-Finding
883
11.
Regional Arrangements
889
A. The European Convention System
891
B. The Inter-American System
978
C. The African System
1025
PART E: STATES AS PROTECTORS AND
ENFORCERS OF HUMAN RIGHTS
12.
Vertical
Interpénétration:
International Human Rights Law
Within States Legal and Political Orders
1047
A. Domestic Internalization of International Law
1047
B. Conditioning Consent: Ratification with Reservations
1080
13.
Horizontal
Interpénétration:
Transnational Influence and Enforcement
of Human Rights
1117
A. Universal Jurisdiction
1122
B. US Civil Litigation and Global Comparisons
1144
С
Sovereign and Official Immunity
1194
Summary of Contents
xi
14.
Measuring and Evaluating Human Rights Performance
1225
A. Indicators: The Challenge of Measuring Human Rights
1225
B. Compliance and Effectiveness: Assessing the Empirical Record
1244
PARTF: CURRENT TOPICS
15.
Massive Human Rights Tragedies: Prosecutions and Truth Commissions
1281
A. International Criminal Tribunals for the Former Yugoslavia and Rwanda
1282
B. The International Criminal Court
1330
C. Hybrid Tribunals: The Case of Sierra Leone
1359
D. Alternative Justice Systems: Rwanda s
Gacąca
Courts
1370
E. Peace Versus Justice?
1391
F. Truth Commissions
1406
16.
Non-State Actors and Human Rights
1461
A. Transnational Corporations and Human Rights
1463
B. Armed Opposition Groups
1497
C. International Non-Governmental Organizations
1503
17.
Human Rights, Development and Climate Change
1516
A. Human Rights and Development
1516
B. The Right to Development
1525
C. Environment, Development and Human Rights
1536
Documents Supplement
1547
Index of Topics
1549
Index of Names
1577
Contents
Acknowledgements
xxix
PART A: INTRODUCTORY NOTIONS AND BACKGROUND TO THE
INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS REGIME
1.
Human Rights Concepts and Discourse
3
A. GLOBAL SNAPSHOTS
3
Media Stories: What Human Rights Issues are Raised?
4
b. the global framework for contemporary human rights
discourse: capital punishment, interactions among states,
exceptionalism y]
1.
The Rapidly Changing Law on Capital Punishment
18
Amnesty International, Death Sentences and Executions
2011 19
State v. Makwanyane
22
Roper v. Simmons
34
2.
Should National Courts Look to Foreign Decisions and International
Law About Human Rights Issues Even When Not Formally Bound?
42
Sitaraman, The Use and Abuse of Foreign Law in Constitutional
Interpretation
42
3.
Exceptionalism and Unilateralism: Recent US Approaches to International
Law and Human Rights
47
Rubenfeld, Unilateralism and Constitutionalism
47
Garland, Peculiar Institution: America s Death Penalty in an
Age of Abolition
51
Law
&
Versteeg,
The Declining Influence of the United States Constitution
55
2.
The Human Rights Regime: Background and Birth
58
Comment on International Dimension of Human Rights Regime
58
A. THE LAW OF ARMED CONFLICT AND CUSTOMARY INTERNATIONAL LAW
61
The
Paquete Habana
62
Comment on the Law of Armed Conflict
69
Comment on the Role of Custom
72
Akehurst s Modern Introduction to International Law
75
Koskenniemi, The Pull of the Mainstream
78
Comment on the Changing Character of Customary International Law and of
Soft Law
81
Roberts, Traditional and Modern Approaches to Customary International Law:
A Reconciliation
82
Shelton, Introduction: Law, Non-Law and the Problem of Soft Law
85
xiv Contents
B.
STATE
RESPONSIBILITY,
GENERAL
PRINCIPLES AND NATURAL LAW
90
Comment on the Law of State Responsibility
90
Comment on the Chattin Case
93
Schachter,
International Law in Theory and Practice
99
C. INTERWAR MINORITIES REGIME AND THE ROLE OF TREATIES
102
Comment on the Minorities Regime After the First World War
102
Minority Schools in Albania
105
Comment on Further Aspects of the Minority Treaties 111
Comment on Treaties
113
D. JUDGMENT AT NUREMBERG
120
Comment on the Nuremberg Trial
120
Judgment of Nuremberg Tribunal
123
Views of Commentators
131
Henkin, International Law: Politics, Values and Functions
135
E. BIRTH OF THE REGIME: THE UN CHARTER AND THE UDHR
139
Comment on the Charter, UDHR and Origins of the Human Rights Regime
140
Glendon, A World Made New
146
Lauterpacht,
International Law and Human Rights
150
PART B: NORMATIVE FOUNDATION OF INTERNATIONAL
HUMAN RIGHTS
3.
Civil and Political Rights
157
A. THE INTERNATIONAL COVENANT ON CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS:
INTRODUCTION
157
Comment on Relationships Between the Universal Declaration and
thelCCPR
157
Cassese, A Plea for a Global Community Grounded in the Core of
Human Rights
163
в.
women s rights and cedaw
166
1.
Background to CEDAW: Socio-Economic Context, Discrimination
and Abuse
167
Initial Report of Guatemala Submitted to the CEDAW Committee
170
World Bank, Word Development Report
2012,
Gender Equality
and Development
173
Fredman,
Engendering Socio-Economic Rights
177
2.
CEDAW: Provisions and Committee
179
Background to CEDAW
. 179
Comment on CEDAW s Substantive Provisions
179
Comment on Types of State Duties Imposed by Human Rights Treaties
181
Comment on the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
Against Women
186
Concluding Observations of the Committee on the Elimination of
Discrimination Against Women
187
Contents xv
3. The Public/Private Divide:
Private Violence Against Women
191
Velasquez Rodriguez Case
193
General Recommendation No.
19
of CEDAW
( 1992),
Violence
AgainstWomen
196
Report on Mexico Produced by the Committee on the Elimination of
Discrimination AgainstWomen under Article
8
of the Optional
Protocol to the Convention, and Reply from the Government of Mexico
198
Ms. A. T.V.Hungary
202
4.
Affirmative Action and Quotas
205
CEDAW, General Recommendation No.
25 (2004):
Temporary Special
Measures
205
CEDAW, General Recommendation No.
23 ( 1997):
Political and
Public Life
207
Rubio
Marin, A New
European Parity-Democracy Sex Equality Model and
Why It Won t Fly in the United States
210
5.
Reproductive Rights and Debates Over US Ratification of CEDAW
213
Blanchfield, The UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW): Issues in the
US Ratification Debate
214
L. C
v.Peru
217
C. EVOLUTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS: SEXUAL ORIENTATION DISCRIMINATION
220
Explanations of Vote on
2011
Human Rights Council Resolution on
Human Rights, Sexual Orientation, and Gender Identity
233
Statement by the Holy See Delegation (The Vatican)
235
D. norm regression: the torture prohibition
238
International Instruments Prohibiting Torture
240
Bentham
on Torture
243
Public Committee Against Torture in Israel v. Government of Israel
246
Levinson
(ed.),
Torture: A Collection
257
Comment on US Law and Policy of Torture After
11
September
265
Conclusions and Recommendations of Committee Against Torture Relating
to Report Submitted by the United States
273
4.
Economic and Social Rights
277
A. OVERVIEW
277
Comment on Historical Origins of Economic and Social Rights
278
Excerpts from the ICESCR
282
Comment on Aspects of ICESCR
284
ESCR Committee, The Right to Water, General Comment No.
15 287
B. COMPETING PERSPECTIVES ON ESR
291
1.
Ambivalence Towards ESR
292
Roth, Defending Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: Practical Issues
Faced by an International Human Rights Organization
295
2.
Philosophical Perspectives
297
Neier, Social and Economic Rights: A Critique
297
Contents
Kelley, A Life of One s Own: Individual Rights and the Welfare State
299
Griffin, The Presidential Address: Discrepancies Between the Best
Philosophical Account of Human Rights and the International Law
of Human Rights
301
Nickel, Poverty and Rights
303
Sen, The Idea of Justice
305
Kant, The Doctrine of Virtue
306
3.
Religious Perspectives
308
С
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE TWO SETS OF RIGHTS
310
Sen, Freedoms and Needs
311
Drèze,
Democracy and the Right to Food
312
Fredman,
Human Rights Transformed: Positive Rights and Positive Duties
313
D. THE PROBLEM OF RESOURCES
315
1.
Avaihble Resources
316
Weiner, Child Labour in Developing Countries: The Indian Case
318
UN Development Programme, Human Development Report
320
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, General Comment
No.
3(1990) 322
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, General Comment
N0.11(1999) 323
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, An Evaluation of the
Obligation to Take Steps to the Maximum of Available Resources
Under an Optional Protocol to the Covenant: Statement
324
2.
The Fiscal Dimension of Determining Available Resources
326
Rights or Privileges? Fiscal Commitment to the Rights to Health,
Education and Food in Guatemala
328
E. CONSTITUTIONS, COURTS AND ADMINISTRATIVE REMEDIES
330
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, General
Comment No.
9 (1998) 331
1.
ESR in Constitutions
332
Australia: National Human Rights Consultation, Report
333
Ghai
&
Cottrell, The Millennium Declaration, Rights and Constitutions
334
Constitution of Kenya
338
2.
Administrative Approaches to ESR
340
Gauri, Redressing Grievances and Complaints Regarding Basic
Service Delivery
340
3.
India: Public Interest Litigation
344
Balakrishnan, Growth of Public Interest Litigation in India
346
Olga Tellis
v. Bombay Municipal Corporation
347
Birchfield
&
Corsi,
The Right to Life is the Right to Food:
People s Union for Civil Liberties v. Union of India
&
Others
351
4.
South Africa: A Model Social Rights Constitution?
353
Soobramoney v. Minister of Health (Kwazulu-Natal)
355
Government of South Africa v.
Grootboom
358
Treatment Action Campaign v. Minister of Health
363
Contents xvii
Mazibuko
v.
City of
Johannesburg 369
Williams,
The Role of
Courts in
the Quantitative-Implementation of
Social and Economic Rights: A Comparative Study
376
5.
The United States: Education Rights
378
Hershkoff
&
Loffredo, State Courts and Constitutional Socio-Economic
Rights: Exploring the Underutilization Thesis
379
Rebell,
The Right to Comprehensive Educational Opportunity
380
5.
National Security, Terrorism and the Law of Armed Conflict
383
A. TERRORISM AND HUMAN RIGHTS: DEFINITIONS AND RELATIONSHIPS
383
B.
11
SEPTEMBER
2001:
A TURNING POINT
388
С
THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK! PUBLIC EMERGENCIES, DEROGATIONS AND
THE LAW OF ARMED CONFLICT
394
Fitzpatrick, Human Rights in Crisis: The International System for Protecting
Rights During States of Emergency
395
Human Rights Committee, States of Emergency, General Comment
29
(on Article
4) 397
Comment on Relationships Between International Human Rights and the
Law of Armed Conflict
404
International Committee of the Red Cross, International Humanitarian
Law and Other Legal Regimes: Interplay in Situations of Violence
412
International Law Commission, Report of the Study Group Finalized by
Martti
Koskenniemi, Fragmentation of International Law
413
D. REGULATING DETENTION
415
1.
Case Study:
Guantánamo
Detainees
—
Process for Determining Status
and Grounds for Detention
415
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights Organization of
American States Detainees in
Guantánamo
Bay, Cuba Request for
Precautionary Measures
417
Response of the United States to Request for Precautionary Measures,
Detainees in
Guantánamo
Bay, Cuba
419
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Reiteration of
Precautionary Measures Regarding Detainees in
Guantánamo
421
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Detainees in
Guantánamo
Bay,
Cuba, Reiteration and Further Amplification of Precautionary Measures
422
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Resolution No.
2/06
on
Guantánamo
Bay Precautionary Measures
424
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights Welcomes Order to Close
Guantánamo
Detention Center
425
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Resolution No.
2/11
Regarding the Situation of the Detainees at
Guantánamo
426
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Press Release,
10
Years
After Detentions in
Guantánamo
Began, the IACHR Repeats its Call to
Close the Detention Center
428
2.
Case Study: Indefinite Detention in Europe
432
xviii
Contents
A and Others v. United Kingdom
434
Comment on the House of Lords Judgment in A and Others
440
E. TORTURE
AND DIPLOMATIC ASSURANCES
445
Case of Otherman (Abu Qatada) v. United Kingdom
456
F. GUARANTEEING FAIR TRIALS
466
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Report on Terrorism and
Human Rights
467
Human Rights Committee, Article
14:
Right to Equality Before Courts and
Tribunals and to a Fair Trial, General Comment
32 470
Incal v.Turkey
470
Comment on Military Judges and Muitary Courts after Incal and
11
September
473
Comment on National Security and
Socio-Economie
Rights
479
PART C: RIGHTS, DUTIES AND DILEMMAS OF
UNIVERSALISM
6.
Rights or Duties as Organizing Concepts
489
A. IDEAS ABOUT RIGHTS AND THE EFFECTS OF RIGHTS RHETORIC
490
Weston, Human Rights
490
Kamenka,
Human Rights, Peoples Rights
493
Kennedy, A Critique of Adjudication
495
Sunstein, Rights and Their Critics
498
Klare,
Legal Theory and Democratic Reconstruction
501
Kennedy, The Dark Side of Virtue
504
B. DUTY-BASED SOCIAL ORDERS
509
Comment on Duties
509
Cover, Obligation: A Jewish Jurisprudence of the Social Order
510
Kenyatta, Facing Mount Kenya: The Tribal Life of the Gikuyu
513
Comment on Duty Provisions of National Constitutions
515
Comment on Comparisons Between Rights and Duties in the African Charter
and in Other Human Rights Instruments
517
Mutua,
Human Rights and the African Fingerprint
521
Steiner,
Some Characteristics of the Liberal Political Tradition
525
7.
Conflict in Culture, Tradition and Practices: Challenges to
Universalism
531
A. UNIVERSALISM
AND CULTURAL RELATIVISM
531
Hatch, Culture and Morality: The Relativity of Values in Anthropology
535
Engle Merry, Human Rights and Gender Violence
538
American Anthropological Association, Statement on Human Rights
542
An-Na im, Human Rights in the Muslim World
545
Women and Islam: A Debate with Human Rights Watch
553
B. DISSONANCE AND CONFLICT: ILLUSTRATIONS
557
1.
Gender
558
Higgins, Anti-Essentialism, Relativism, and Human Rights
558
Views of Commentators about Female Genital Mutilation
562
Contents xix
Coomaraswamy, Report
on Cultural Practices in the Family That Are
Violent Towards Women
578
2.
Religion
582
a. Comparative Perspectives Among States
583
Durham, Perspectives on Religious Liberty: A Comparative Framework
583
Shelton
&
Kiss, A Draft Model Law on Freedom of Religion
588
Lynch v. Donnelly
590
Andrews, German Churches, Ever Giving, Ask to Receive
595
Constitution of Iran
597
b. International Law Perspectives
604
Human Rights Committee, General Comment No.
22:
The Right to
Freedom of Thought, Conscience and Religion
604
Declaration on the Elimination of All Forms of Intolerance and
of Discrimination Based on Religion or Belief
606
Sullivan, Advancing the Freedom of Religion or Belief Through the UN
Declaration on the Elimination of Religious Intolerance and
Discrimination
608
с
Proselytism
613
Kokkinakis v. Greece
613
Mutua,
Human Rights, Religion, and Proselytism
622
Stanley, Pope Tells India his Church has Right to Evangelize
625
3.
Dress and Symbols, Migration and Multiculturalism
627
Crossette, Testing the Limits of Tolerance as Cultures Mix
628
Savage, Europe and Islam: Crescent Waxing, Cultures Clashing
630
Ş
ahin v. Turkey
634
Comment on Prohibition of Headscarves in France
642
Crucifixes in Italian Classrooms
645
4.
Freedom of Speech
651
Comment on Hate Speech
652
Faurisson v. France
661
Schauer,
The Exceptional First Amendment
668
Comment on Blasphemy Cases
671
Dworkin, Even Bigots and Holocaust
Deniers
Must Have Their Say
679
PART D: INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS ORGANIZATIONS
8.
The United Nations Human Rights System
685
Comment on Sovereignty and Domestic Jurisdiction
685
Comment on Conceptions of Enforcement
689
A. OVERVIEW OF THE UN HUMAN RIGHTS MACHINERY
691
B. THE UN HUMAN RIGHTS COUNCIL
694
General Assembly Resolution
60/251 695
Comment on the Special Procedures System
699
1.
Standard-Setting
701
xx Contents
2.
Country
Reports 704
Charlesworth,
Swimming to Cambodia: Justice and Ritual in
Human Rights After Conflict
708
Kirby, United Nations Procedures: A Response to
Professor Hilary Charlesworth
710
Manual of Operations of the Special Procedures of the
Human Rights Council
712
Report of the Special Rapporteur on
Extrajudicial,
Summary or Arbitrary
Executions, Philip Alston, Mission to Kenya
713
Government of Kenya Response, Philip Alston s Report Paternalistic,
Unhelpful and Uncalled For
718
Comment on Israel
720
3.
Thematic Reports of Special Rapporteurs
728
Report of the Special Rapporteur on the Situation of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms of Indigenous Peoples, James Anaya
729
4.
Handling Complaints
731
Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, Opinion No.
31/2006 732
5.
Evaluating the Special Procedures
735
Piccone,
Catalysts for Rights: The Unique Contribution of the
U.N. s Independent Experts on Human Rights, Final Report of the
Brookings Research Project on Strengthening UN Special Procedures
735
6.
The Universal Periodic Review
737
De Frouville,
Building a Universal System for the Protection of
Human Rights: The Way Forward
740
С
THE ROLE OF THE HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
742
General Assembly Resolution
48/141
High Commissioner for the
Promotion and Protection of All Human Rights
742
D. THE SECURITY COUNCIL AND THE RESPONSIBILITY TO PROTECT
745
Comment on Earlier Work of Security Council
745
Views on the Responsibility to Protect
748
Comment on Security Council Action and Inaction on Libya and Syria
751
E. A
WORLD COURT FOR HUMAN RIGHTS?
759
Nowak,
It s Time for a World Court of Human Rights
759
9.
Treaty Bodies: The ICCPR Human Rights Committee
762
A. POWERS, FUNCTIONS AND PERFORMANCE OF THE ICCPR COMMITTEE
763
1.
Introduction
763
Comment on the Formal Organization of the ICCPR Committee
763
2.
State Reporting
768
Comment on Reports by States
768
Case Study: Report of the USA to the ICCPR Committee
771
Dialogue Between the Human Rights Committee and the Delegation
of the USA
772
Concluding Observations of the Human Rights Committee, United States
ofAmerica
778
Contents xxi
Fourth Periodic Report, United States of America
783
Concluding Observations of the Human Rights Committee, Islamic
Republic of Iran
785
Report on Kosovo (Republic of Serbia) Submitted by the
United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK)
787
3.
General Comments
791
Alston, The Historical Origins of the Concept of General Comments in
Human Rights Law
792
Comment on Evolution of General Comments
79 3
Illustrations of General Comments
794
Comment on Some Controversies Addressed in GCs
803
4.
Individual Communications
808
Comment on Communications
808
CaseStudies
812
Comment on Interim Measures
823
Comment on National Level Follow-Up
827
Comment on Outcome of the Communications Procedures
832
Human Rights Committee, General Comment No.
33:
The Obligations
of States Parties under the Optional Protocol to the [ICCPR]
835
Steiner,
Individual Claims in a World of Massive Violations:
What Role for the Human Rights Committee?
836
B. COMMENT ON THE OVERALL UN HUMAN RIGHTS TREATY BODY SYSTEM
838
10.
International Human Rights Fact-Finding
845
A. THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL
LEVEL FACT-FINDING
847
Report of the Secretary-General s Panel of Experts on Accountability in Sri Lanka
848
Report of the Commission of Inquiry on Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation
852
National Commissions of Inquiry
856
Report of the Special Rapporteur on
Extrajudicial,
Summary or
Arbitrary Executions, Philip Alston
857
B. CHALLENGES OF FACT-FINDING
858
Valticos, Foreword
858
US Department of State,
2010
Country Reports on Human Rights Practices
860
Orentlicher, Bearing Witness: The Art and Science of Human Rights Fact-Finding
861
С
FACT-FINDING METHODOLOGIES: CASE STUDIES
865
1. Dar
fur
865
Report of the International Commission on Inquiry on Darfur to the United
Nations Secretary-General
866
2.
The Democratic Republic of the Congo
872
Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights Democratic
Republic of the Congo,
1993-2003:
Report of the Mapping Exercise
873
D. GOVERNMENT RESPONSES TO FACT-FINDING
883
Cohen, Government Responses to Human Rights Reports: Claims, Denials
and Counterclaims
884
xxii Contents
Official
Government
of Rwanda
Comments on the Draft UN Mapping
Report on the DRC
888
11.
Regional Arrangements
889
A. THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION SYSTEM
891
1.
Introduction and Overview
891
Moravcsik, The Origins of Human Rights Regimes:
Democratic Delegation in Postwar Europe
893
Comment on Admission to Membership and Content of Rights
894
2.
The European Court and its Procedures
897
Comment on the Dramatic Evolution of the ECHR System
897
European Court of Human Rights, Annual Report
2011 900
3.
The Interstate Procedure: Article
33 902
Hoffmeister,
Case Note: Cyprus v. Turkey
904
4.
The Court s Jurisdiction
906
Banković
and Others v. Belgium and Others
907
Issa
and Others v. Turkey
912
Al-Skeini and Others v. United Kingdom
914
5.
The European Court in Action: Some Illustrative Cases
920
McCann and Others v. United Kingdom
922
Finogenov and Others v. Russia
925
Osman
v.
United Kingdom
930
Oneryildiz v. Turkey
932
United Communist Party of Turkey v. Turkey
935
Refah
Partisi
(The Welfare Party) and Others v. Turkey
939
Hirst v. United Kingdom (No.
2) 949
Scoppola
v.
Italy (No.
3) 952
6.
The Convention and the Court at the National Level
956
Stone Sweet, A Cosmopolitan Legal Order: Constitutional Pluralism
and Rights Adjudication in Europe
956
Implementation of Judgments of the European Court of Human Rights
960
7.
The Continuing Need for Reform
962
Steering Committee for Human Rights (CDDH) Final Report on
Measures Requiring Amendment of the European Convention
on Human Rights
963
High Level Conference on the Future of the European Court of
Human Rights
968
8.
The Broader European Institutional Context: The
EU
and the
OSCE
971
9.
Other Human Rights Conventions Adopted by the Council of Europe
975
Comment on Three Conventions
975
B. THE INTER-AMERICAN SYSTEM
978
1.
Background and Institutions
979
Comment on Development of the Inter-American System
979
Comment on Rights Recognized in the American Declaration
and Convention
981
Contents xxiii
Cavallaro
&
Brewer, Reevaluating Regional Human Rights Litigation in
the Twenty-First Century: The Case of the Inter-American Court
982
Comment on the Inter-American and European Systems
986
2.
The Standards to be Applied to Different States
987
Inter-American Court of Human Rights, Advisory Opinion
OC-
10/89,
14
July
1989 988
3.
The Commission at Work
991
Annual Report of the Inter-American Commission on
Human Rights
2011 993
Cassei,
Will Chavez Remove Venezuela from the
Inter-American Commission?
1002
4.
The Court in Action
1003
Velasquez Rodriguez Case
1004
Sawhoyamaxa Indigenous Community v. Paraguay
1010
The Miguel Castro Castro Prison v. Peru
1018
THE AFRICAN SYSTEM
1025
Comment on the African Union
1025
Comment on Institutional Implementation: The African Commission
1027
Heyns & Killander,
The African Regional Human Rights System
1028
Report of the Fact-Finding Mission to Zimbabwe,
24-28
June
2002 1032
Lawyers for Humans Rights v. Swaziland
1034
Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights and Interights v.
Arab Republic of Egypt
1036
Comment on the African Court of Human and Peoples Rights
1042
PART E: STATES AS PROTECTORS AND ENFORCERS OF
HUMAN RIGHTS
12.
Vertical
Interpénétration:
International Human Rights Law
Within States Legal and Political Orders
1047
A. DOMESTIC INTERNALIZATION OF INTERNATIONAL LAW
1047
Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, General Comment No.
9 1048
Heyns &
Viljoen, The Impact of the United Nations Human Rights Treaties
on the Domestic Level
1049
Leary, International Labour Conventions and National Law
1056
Comment on Monism and Dualism
1058
Comment on the Presumption of Compatibility
1060
Kirby, The Role of International Standards in Australian Courts
1063
Minister of State for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v. Ah
Hin Teoh 1065
Sales
&
Clement, International Law in Domestic Courts:
The Developing Framework
1068
Patel,
Founding Legitimate Expectations on Unincorporated Treaties
1069
Van Alstine, The Role of Domestic Courts in Treaty Enforcement
1071
Comment on Treaties in the United States
1073
Comment on National Human Rights Institutions
1077
xxiv Contents
Goodman & Pegram, National Human
Rights Institutions,
State
Conformity,
and Social Change
1078
В.
CONDITIONING
CONSENTI
RATIFICATION WITH RESERVATIONS
1080
Comment on Reservations to CEDAW
1082
Sohn &
Buergenthal, International Protection of Human Rights
1087
Comment on Background to Submission of ICCPR to Senate
1090
Proposals by Bush Administration of Reservations to International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
1092
Comment on Effects of Reservations With Respect to Other States Parties
1096
Human Rights Committee, General Comment No.
24 1097
International Law Commission s Guide to Practice on Reservations to Treaties:
Permissibility of Reservations and Authority to Decide
1099
Comment on Severability
1105
Kennedy v. Trinidad and Tobago
1106
Goodman, Human Rights Treaties, Invalid Reservations, and State Consent
1109
International Law Commission s Guide to Practice on Reservations to
Treaties: The Question of Severability
1113
13.
Horizontal
Interpénétration:
Transnational Influence and
Enforcement of Human Rights
1117
Comment on Interstate Sanctions
1118
A. UNIVERSAL JURISDICTION
1122
Comment on the
Eichmann
Trial
1124
Lahav, Judgment in Jerusalem
1126
Comment on
Ex Parte
Pinochet and Universal Jurisdiction
1128
Case Concerning the Arrest Warrant of
11
April
2000
(Democratic Republic
of the Congo v. Belgium)
1130
Comment on Discussions of Universal Jurisdiction at the United Nations
1138
B. US CIVIL LITIGATION AND GLOBAL COMPARISONS
1144
Lutz &
Sikkink,
The Justice Cascade: The Evolution and Impact of
Foreign Human Rights Trials in Latin America
1145
Stephens, Individuals Enforcing International Law: The Comparative and
Historical Context
1149
Sosa
v. Alvarez-Machain
1151
Comment on ATS Claims After
Sosa
1165
Torture Victim Protection Act
1173
Senate Report on the Torture Victim Protection Act
1174
Comment on Criminal Prosecution Under the Torture Convention and for
Other Human Rights Violations
1177
Colliver,
Green
&
Hoffman, Holding Human Rights Violators Accountable
by Using International Law in US Courts: Advocacy Efforts and
Complementary Strategies
1180
Chibundu, Making Customary International Law Through Municipal
Adjudication: A Structural Inquiry
1183
Comment on Foreign Policy Impact
1186
Contents xxv
С.
SOVEREIGN AND OFFICIAL IMMUNITY
1194
Comment on Samantarv.Yousuf
1197
Comment on
Ex Parte
Pinochet and Immunity
1199
Al-Adsani v. United Kingdom
1201
Comment on Germany v. Italy Before the International Court of Justice
1209
Case Concerning the Arrest Warrant of
11
April
2000
(Democratic Republic
of the Congo v. Belgium)
1211
Prosecutor v. Charles Taylor, Special Court for Sierra Leone (Decision on
Immunity from Jurisdiction)
1215
Decision on the Failure by the Republic of Malawi to Comply With the
Cooperation Requests Issued by the Court With Respect to the Arrest and
Surrender of President Omar
Al Bashir
1219
14.
Measuring and Evaluating Human Rights Performance
1225
a. indicators: the challenge of measuring human rights
1225
Report on Indicators for Promoting and Monitoring the Implementation of
Human Rights
1226
The Use of Indicators in Realizing ESCR, Report of the High Commissioner
for Human Rights
1233
Feiner,
Closing the Escape Hatch : A Toolkit to Monitor the Progressive
Realization of Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights
1236
Engle Merry, The Problem of Human Rights Indicators
1238
Rosga
&
Satterthwaite, Measuring Human Rights: U.N. Indicators in
Critical Perspective
1240
B. COMPLIANCE AND EFFECTIVENESS: ASSESSING THE EMPIRICAL RECORD
1244
Risse &
Sikkink,
Conclusion
1244
Howse
&
Teitel, Beyond Compliance: Rethinking Why International Law
Really Matters
1249
Hathaway, Do Human Rights Treaties Make a Difference?
1251
Simmons, Mobilizing for Human Rights: International Law in
Domestic Politics
1253
Posner, Some Skeptical Comments on Beth Simmons s Mobilizing for
Human Rights
1261
Swaine, Ersatz Treaties
1263
Howse
&
Teitel, Beth Simmons s Mobilizing for Human Rights:
A Beyond Compliance Perspective
1264
Simmons, Reflections on Mobilizing for Human Rights
1265
Goodman
&
Jinks, Socializing States: Promoting Human Rights
Through International Law
1267
Linos, Diffusion Through Democracy
1274
PARTF: CURRENT TOPICS
15.
Massive Human Rights Tragedies: Prosecutions and
Truth Commissions
1281
Contents
A. INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL TRIBUNALS FOR THE FORMER YUGOSLAVIA
AND RWANDA
1282
Minow, Between Vengeance and Forgiveness
1282
Koskenniemi, Between Impunity and Show Trials
1283
Security Council Resolutions on Establishment of an International Tribunal
for the Former Yugoslavia
1286
Report of the Secretary-General Under Security Council Resolution
808 1287
Statute of the International Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
1289
Comment on Background to the Tadic Litigation Before the
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
1294
Prosecutor v. Tadic
1299
Comment on Significance of Nationality
1307
Statute of the International Tribunal for Rwanda
1312
Prosecutor v. Akayesu
1314
Crossette, Inquiry Says UN Inertia in
94
Worsened Genocide in Rwanda
1327
Alvarez, Crimes of States/Crimes of Hate: Lessons from Rwanda
1328
B. THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT
1330
Roth, The Court the US Doesn t Want
1334
Grossman, Undersecretary for Political Affairs, American Foreign Policy
and the International Criminal Court
1337
Security Council Resolution on Situation in Sudan and Explanations of
Vote
1341
Security Council Resolution Libya
1344
Comment on Immunity Before the ICC: Who is Exempt From International
Justice?
1345
Alvarez, Opening Remarks, How Best to Assure the Independence of
the ICC Prosecutor
1350
Comment on Transporting Justice to The Hague: Should States be Limited in
Their Resort to the ICC?
1352
С
HYBRID TRIBUNALS: THE CASE OF SIERRA LEONE
1359
Statute of the Special Court for Sierra Leone
1360
International Center for Transitional Justice, The Special Court for Sierra
Leone: The First Eighteen Months
1363
Kaymar Stafford, A Model War Crimes Court: Sierra Leone
1366
d.
alternative justice systems: Rwanda s
gacąca
courts
1370
Organic Law No
16/2004
of
2004
Establishing the Organization, Competence
and Functioning of
Gacąca
Courts Charged With Prosecuting and
Trying the Perpetrators of the Crime of Genocide and Other Crimes Against
Humanity, Committed Between October
1,1990
and December
31,1994 1371
Amnesty International, Rwanda: The Troubled Course of Justice
1375
Republic of Rwanda, Reply to Amnesty International s Report Rwanda:
The Troubled Course of Justice
. 1376
Amnesty International, Rwanda
—
Gacąca:
A Question of Justice
13 79
Clark, The
Gacąca
Courts, Post-Genocide Justice and Reconciliation in Rwanda
1381
Waldorf, Like Jews Waiting for Jesus: Posthumous Justice in Post-Conflict
Rwanda
1385
Contents xxvii
E.
PEACE
VERSUS
JUSTICE?
1391
Boot, When Justice and Peace Don t Mix
1392
Rahman
Lamin,
Charles Taylor
...
and International Politics
1394
Snyder
&
Vinjamuri, Trials and Errors: Principle and Pragmatism in
Strategies of International Justice
1394
Cobban, Think Again: International Courts
1396
Sikkink,
The Justice Cascade
1399
Scheffer, All the Missing Souls: A Personal History of the War Crimes Tribunals
1402
Robinson, Serving the Interests of Justice: Amnesties, Truth Commissions
and the International Criminal Court
1403
F. TRUTH COMMISSIONS
1406
Comment on the Right to the Truth
1406
Steiner,
Introduction to Truth Commissions
1411
Tepperman, Truth and Consequences
1414
Views on Functions and Utility of Truth Commissions
1417
Comment on the Standardization of Truth Commissions
1419
Hayner, Unspeakable Truths: Confronting State Terror and Atrocity
1420
Minikon, Truth Commissions in Africa: Learning Over a Decade
1421
Cavallaro
&
Albuja, The Lost Agenda: Economic Crimes and
Truth Commissions in Latin America and Beyond
1423
Promotion of National Unity and Reconciliation Act of South Africa,
1995 1426
Report of Truth and Reconciliation Commission of South Africa
1430
Decisions of Amnesty Committee, Truth and Reconciliation Commission
1435
Comment on Relationships Between Truth Commissions and Criminal
Tribunals
1441
Hayner, Unspeakable Truths: Confronting State Terror and Atrocity
1442
Prosecutor v. Norman
1446
Final Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Sierra Leone:
Witness to Truth
1453
16.
Non-State Actors and Human Rights
1461
A. TRANSNATIONAL CORPORATIONS AND HUMAN RIGHTS
1463
1.
Illustrating the Challenges
1464
2.
Towards Regulation
1468
Norms on the Responsibilities of Transnational Corporations and
Other Business Enterprises With Regard to Human Rights
1471
Howen, Business, Human Rights and Accountability
1475
Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: Implementing the
United Nations Protect, Respect and Remedy Framework
1479
Simons, International Law s Invisible Hand and the Future of Corporate
Accountability for Violations of Human Rights
1490
Parker
&
Howe, Ruggie s Diplomatic Project and its Missing Regulatory
Infrastructure
1491
Muchlinski, Implementing the New UN Corporate Human Rights
Framework: Implications for Corporate Law, Governance, and Regulation
1492
xxviii Contents
В.
ARMED
OPPOSITION
GROUPS
1497
Sivakumaran, Binding Armed Opposition Groups
1498
Clapham, Human Rights Obligations of Non-State Actors in
Conflict Situations
1499
С
INTERNATIONAL NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
1503
Anderson, The Ottawa Convention Banning Landmines,
the Role of International Non-Governmental Organizations and the
Idea of International Civil Society
1507
Jaques,
Strengthening Democratic Governance: The Role of Civil Society
1510
Grant
&
Keohane, Accountability and Abuses of Power in World Politics
1511
International Non-Governmental Organizations Accountability Charter
1512
17.
Human Rights, Development and Climate Change
1516
A. HUMAN RIGHTS AND DEVELOPMENT
1516
Sen, Development as Freedom
1517
Comment on the Millennium Development Goals
1520
Melamed, After
2015:
Contexts, Politics and Processes for a Post-2015
Global Agreement on Development
1520
Darrow, Lies, Damned Lies, and the Millennium Development Goals:
Human Rights Priorities for the Post-20
15
Development Agenda
1522
B. THE RIGHT TO DEVELOPMENT
1525
Declaration on the Right to Development
1526
Abi-Saab, The Legal Formulation of a Right to Development
1529
Bedjaoui, The Right to Development
1530
Donnelly, In Search of the Unicorn: The Jurisprudence and Politics of the
Right to Development
1532
Moyn, The Last Utopia
1534
С
ENVIRONMENT, DEVELOPMENT AND HUMAN RIGHTS
1536
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, Climate Change
2007:
Impacts,
Adaptation and Vulnerability
1538
Opening Remarks by Ms
Navi Pillay,
UN Human Rights Council Seminar
on the Adverse Impacts of Climate Change on the Full Enjoyment of
Human Rights
1540
Mclnerney-Lankford, Darrow
&
Rajamani, Human Rights and
Climate Change: A Review of the International Legal Dimensions
1542
Documents Supplement
1547
Index of Topics
1549
Index of Names
1577
|
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author | Alston, Philip 1950- Goodman, Ryan 1970- |
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language | English |
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spelling | Alston, Philip 1950- Verfasser (DE-588)136474349 aut International human rights the successor to International human rights in context: law, politics and morals ; text and materials Philip Alston ; Ryan Goodman Oxford Oxford Univ. Press 2013 XXXIX, 1580 S. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Voraufl. teilw. u.d.T.: International human rights in context / Henry Steiner Völkerrecht (DE-588)4063693-8 gnd rswk-swf Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 gnd rswk-swf Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 s Völkerrecht (DE-588)4063693-8 s DE-604 Goodman, Ryan 1970- Verfasser (DE-588)137100671 aut Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025435567&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Alston, Philip 1950- Goodman, Ryan 1970- International human rights the successor to International human rights in context: law, politics and morals ; text and materials Völkerrecht (DE-588)4063693-8 gnd Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4063693-8 (DE-588)4074725-6 |
title | International human rights the successor to International human rights in context: law, politics and morals ; text and materials |
title_auth | International human rights the successor to International human rights in context: law, politics and morals ; text and materials |
title_exact_search | International human rights the successor to International human rights in context: law, politics and morals ; text and materials |
title_full | International human rights the successor to International human rights in context: law, politics and morals ; text and materials Philip Alston ; Ryan Goodman |
title_fullStr | International human rights the successor to International human rights in context: law, politics and morals ; text and materials Philip Alston ; Ryan Goodman |
title_full_unstemmed | International human rights the successor to International human rights in context: law, politics and morals ; text and materials Philip Alston ; Ryan Goodman |
title_short | International human rights |
title_sort | international human rights the successor to international human rights in context law politics and morals text and materials |
title_sub | the successor to International human rights in context: law, politics and morals ; text and materials |
topic | Völkerrecht (DE-588)4063693-8 gnd Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Völkerrecht Menschenrecht |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=025435567&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT alstonphilip internationalhumanrightsthesuccessortointernationalhumanrightsincontextlawpoliticsandmoralstextandmaterials AT goodmanryan internationalhumanrightsthesuccessortointernationalhumanrightsincontextlawpoliticsandmoralstextandmaterials |