International human rights law and practice:
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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Cambridge University Press
[2016]
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Ausgabe: | Second edition |
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Beschreibung: | Literaturangaben Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke |
Beschreibung: | lxiii, 860 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9781107562110 9781107125049 9780521152365 9780521196420 |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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adam_text | CONTENTS
List of abbreviations page xviii
Table of cases xxvi
Introduction l
1 International human rights law and notions of human rights:
foundations, achievements and challenges 4
1.1 Introduction 4
1.2 The development of human rights and international human rights law 6
1.2.1 Foundations 6
1.2.2 The American and French declarations of rights 8
1.2.3 The struggle for rights in the nineteenth century 10
1.2.4 World War I, the League of Nations and human rights 12
1.2.5 World War II, the Holocaust and the foundations of the
international human rights system 14
1.2.6 The UDHR: origins, content and significance 15
1.2.7 Cold War and decolonisation 19
1.2.8 The growth of international human rights law 21
1.3 Current challenges 23
1.3.1 International/cross-border dimension of violations 24
1.3.2 Responsibility of multiple actors 25
1.3.3 Effective monitoring and implementation 26
1.3.4 Human rights imperialism and exceptionalism 27
1.4 The idea of human rights: theories and critiques 29
1.4.1 Moral and liberal human rights theories 30
1.4.2 Meeting the challenge: reconstructing human rights 32
1.5 Universal human rights: contestations and practices 35
1.5.1 The debate 35
Interview 1.1: Human rights and the uprisings in the Arab world
(Moataz El Fegiery) 40
1.5.2 Experiences in combating female genital cutting/mutilation 44
Further reading 48
vi Contents
2 International human rights law: the normative framework 49
2.1 Introduction 49
2.2 Sources 52
2.2.1 Treaties 52
2.2.1.1 Treaty-making 52
2.2.1.2 Reservations 55
2.2.2 Customary international law 59
2.2.2.1 The UDHR and customary international law 61
2.2.3 Judicial decisions as source of law 62
2.2.4 Soft law 65
2.2.5 UNDRIP: a soft law success story? 66
2.2.6 Jus cogens and erga omnes 67
2.3 Principles, rights, obligations and scope of application 71
2.3.1 Principles 71
2.3.2 The concept of rights 72
2.3.3 The right to equality, non-discrimination and sexual orientation 76
2.3.4 Obligations 79
2.3.5 Derogation in times of emergency 80
2.3.6 Scope of application 82
2.4 Implementation 83
2.4.1 The role of national human rights institutions 87
Interview 2.1: Reflections on the work of Uganda’s Human Rights
Commission (Med. S. K. Kaggwa) 88
2.5 State responsibility and human rights treaties as self-contained regimes 91
2.6 Practical application: the role of law reform 93
Interview 2.2: The campaign to repeal Pakistan’s Hudood laws (Sohail
A. Warraich) 98
Further reading 101
3 Human rights in practice 102
3.1 Introduction 102
3.2 Civil society 103
3.3 Social movements 105
3.4 NGOs 107
3.4.1 General considerations 107
3.4.2 Human rights NGOs 109
3.4.3 Assessing the role of human rights NGOs 111
3.5 Human rights defenders 116
Case Study 3.1: NGOs and human rights protection in Sudan 119
3.6 Legal professionals and human rights 121
3.7 Health professionals and human rights 124
3.8 Human rights field officers 126
vii Contents
Interview 3.1: Experiences of a UN human rights officer
(Huma Shakeb Khan) 127
3.9 Human rights strategies 130
3.9.1 Documentation and fact-finding 130
Interview 3.2: Documenting human rights violations in volatile
environments: the Libyan experience (Elham Saudi) 134
3.9.2 Human rights reporting 138
3.9.3 Monitoring 140
3.9.4 Advocacy 142
3.9.5 Awareness-raising, capacity-building and human rights education 145
Case Study 3.2: Responding to serious human rights violations
in Darfur, Sudan - strategies, critiques, impact 149
Further reading 152
4 The United Nations Charter system 154
4.1 Introduction 154
4.2 The human rights dimension of the charter 156
4.3 The HRC 159
4.3.1 The UPR 164
4.3.2 The HRC’s complaints procedure 167
4.4 Special procedures 170
Interview 4.1: With former UN Special Rapporteur (Cephas Lumina) 173
4.4.1 Communications 175
4.4.2 Country visits 176
4.4.3 Annual reports 177
Case Study 4.1: Reprisals against those collaborating with UN
human rights procedures 177
4.5 The UNGA and human rights 179
4.6 The UNSC 180
Case Study 4.2: The UNSC and human rights in North Korea 185
4.6.1 Fact-finding in practice: the UN mission in the Gaza conflict 187
Further reading 191
5 The UN human rights treaty system 192
5.1 Introduction 192
5.2 Common features of international human rights treaty bodies 194
5.3 Reporting procedure 198
5.3.1 Overview 198
Interview 5.1: Using shadow reports to promote gender equality and
combat sexual violence: South Africa (Lesley Ann Foster) 202
5.3.2 Strengthening the reporting procedure 205
5.4 General comments/recommendations 208
5.5 Complaints procedures and jurisprudence of treaty bodies 212
viii Contents
5.5.1 Overview 212
5.5.2 The HRCtee 215
5.5.3 Breadwinners, social security and discrimination:
Zwaan-de Vries v. The Netherlands 218
5.5.4 The CERD 219
5.5.5 Still facing discrimination: Durmic v. Serbia and
Montenegro 220
5.5.6 The CtAT 222
5.5.7 Rendered defenceless: Agiza v. Sweden 223
5.5.8 The CtEDAW 224
5.5.9 ‘We don’t believe you’: Vertido v. The Philippines 225
5.5.10 The CtRPD 227
5.5.11 Shortchanged: Nyusti and Takâcs v. Hungary 228
5.5.12 Achievements and challenges 229
Interview 5.2: Working for the CESCR (Eibe Riedel) 231
Further reading 233
6 Regional human rights treaty systems 235
6.1 Introduction 235
6.2 The European human rights system 237
6.2.1 Overview 237
6.2.2 The ECHR 239
6.2.3 Key institutions 240
6.2.4 The ECtHR: structure and functions 241
6.2.5 Jurisprudence of the ECtHR 242
6.2.5.1 Development of the ECtHR’s jurisprudence 242
6.2.5.2 The ECtHR’s interpretation of the ECHR 244
6.2.5.3 Responses to the ECtHR’s jurisprudence 246
6.2.6 Impact 249
Interview 6.1 : The nature and impact of litigation concerning Turkey
(Dr Baçak Çali) 250
Interview 6.2: Nature and impact of litigation concerning Turkey and
Russia (Bill Bowring) 253
6.2.7 The struggle for efficiency, effectiveness and institutional reforms 256
6.2.8 The EU 260
6.3 The Inter-American human rights system 262
6.3.1 Overview 262
6.3.2 The IACHR 264
6.3.3 The IACtHR 266
6.3.4 Impact 270
Interview 6.3: An intimate experience of the Court as litigant and
Senior Staff Attorney (Oswaldo Ruiz-Chiriboga) 271
6.4 The African human rights system 274
ix Contents
6.4.1 Overview 274
6.4.2 The ACmHPR 277
Case Study 6.1: Modise v. Botswana and the question of nationality
rights 280
6.4.3 Impact 281
6.4.4 The ACtHPR 282
6.4.5 African regional economic courts 284
Interview 6.4: Making the system work (Ibrahima Kane) 286
6.5 Towards an Asian human rights system? 290
6.6 Comparison of regional systems 291
Further reading 292
7 Individual complaints procedures 295
7.1 Introduction 295
7.2 Admissibility 297
7.2.1 Jurisdiction 298
7.2.1.1 Rationae personae: who can bring a complaint? 298
7.2.1.2 Against whom can a complaint be brought? 300
Case Study 7.1: Protection against the implementation of UN Security
Council sanctions: Sayadi and Vinck v. Belgium 302
7.2.1.3 Rationae materiae: what rights? 303
7.2.1.4 Jurisdiction in respect of extraterritorial conduct 304
7.2.1.5 The long reach of the ECHR: Al-Skeini v. United Kingdom 306
7.2.1.6 Rationae temporis: when? 308
7.2.2 Exhaustion of domestic remedies 310
7.2.2.1 What remedies must be exhausted? 310
1.2.2.2 ‘An affront to common sense and logic’: Dawda Jawara v.
The Gambia 313
7.2.3 Other procedural requirements 314
7.2.3.1 Timelimits 314
7.2.3.2 Duplication 315
7.2.3.3 Well-foundedness 316
7.2.3.4 Abuse of rights 316
7.2.3.5 Anonymity 317
7.3 Merits 317
7.4 Decisions by human rights treaty bodies 320
7.5 Implementation of decisions and judgments 322
Case Study 7.2: Restoring ancestral lands to indigenous peoples -
Mayagna (Sumo) Awas Tingni Community v. Nicaragua 326
7.6 Additional procedural options 327
7.6.1 Interim measures 327
7.6.2 Friendly settlements 329
x Contents
Interview 7.1: Nepal before the Human Rights Committee (Mandira
Sharma) 331
7.7 The Hisséne Habré case: the interplay between domestic,
regional and international proceedings 334
Further reading 337
8 Civil and political rights 339
8.1 Introduction 339
8.2 The right to life 340
8.2.1 Practice 340
8.2.2 Sources 342
8.2.3 The prohibition of arbitraiy deprivation of life 342
8.2.4 McCann v. United Kingdom: absolute necessity in the
European Court of Human Rights’s jurisprudence 343
Case Study 8.1: The killing of Bin Laden and the right to life 344
8.2.5 The death penalty under international law 345
8.2.6 Positive obligations to protect the right to life 348
8.2.6.1 Providing protection against threats to life 348
8.2.6.2 Duty to investigate, prosecute and punish and to
provide redress 350
8.2.7 A right to survival? 352
8.3 The right to be free from torture and other ill-treatment 353
8.3.1 Practice 353
8.3.2 Sources 355
8.3.3 The absolute prohibition of torture 355
8.3.4 The case of Gafgen and the German torture debate 356
8.3.5 The definition of torture and other forms of ill-treatment
and punishment 358
8.3.6 Obligations 363
Interview 8.1: The role of medical documentation in combating torture:
Istanbul Protocol (Dr Ónder Ozkalip^i) 364
8.4 The right to liberty and security of person 367
8.4.1 Practice 367
8.4.2 Sources 368
8.4.3 Scope of the right to liberty and security 369
8.4.4 Justification of arrest and detention 369
8.4.5 Administrative detention: law and power in the pursuit of policy 372
8.5 The right to a fair trial 376
8.5.1 Practice 376
8.5.2 Sources 377
8.5.3 Main features of the right to a fair trial 378
8.5.3.1 General principles 378
8.5.3.2 Criminal proceedings 379
xi Contents
Case Study 8.2: The problem with military and special courts 381
8.6 Enforced disappearance as multiple human rights violation 382
Interview 8.2: Inquiries into enforced disappearances in Sri Lanka
(M. C. M. Iqbal) 386
8.7 Qualified rights, with a particular focus on freedom of expression 390
8.7.1 Practice 390
8.7.2 Sources 391
8.7.3 Freedom of religion vs. freedom of expression 393
8.7.4 To wear or not to wear: freedom of conscience and religion,
the rights of women and the veil 395
Further reading 397
9 Economic, social and cultural rights 399
9.1 Introduction 399
9.2 Brief historical context of ESC rights 400
9.3 Progressive realisation and the nature of state obligations 403
9.4 Resource implications: the obligation to utilise ‘maximum
available resources’ 408
Case Study 9.1: United States budget allocated to primary and
secondary education 412
9.5 Minimum core obligations 413
9.6 Justiciability of ESC rights 415
9.6.1 Individual communications and the ICESCR Optional Protocol 419
9.6.2 The ECSR 420
9.7 Extraterritoriality of ESC rights 422
9.8 Indicators and benchmarks for measuring compliance 423
Case Study 9.2: Indicators on the right to food 427
9.9 The right to health 428
Interview 9.1: Greek NGO implements the right to health for the
socially excluded (Tzanetos Antypas) 430
9.10 The right to water 432
Case Study 9.3: The deprivation of water rights as cruel and inhuman
treatment 435
9.11 The right to education 436
9.12 The right to food 439
9.13 Links between unemployment, debt crises and mental illness 443
Further reading 446
10 Group rights: self-determination, minorities and indigenous peoples 448
10.1 Introduction 448
10.2 The nature of collective rights 449
10.2.1 External self-determination 451
10.2.2 Exceptionalism in the external dimension of self-determination 455
458
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Contents
10.2.3 The essence of internal self-determination
Case Study 10.1: Participatory budgeting in Porto Alegre, Brazil
Minorities as a subject of human rights
10.3.1 The historical and political context: should minorities be treated
differently from majorities?
10.3.2 Membership rights
Case Study 10.2: The Malay Bumiputra policy
Indigenous peoples: is there a need for additional protection?
10.4.1 Indigenous rights over traditional lands
10.4.2 Indigenous land rights in contemporary international law
10.4.3 Indigenous ownership as a right to property
10.4.4 Special considerations in the design of indigenous
peoples’ development plans within the World Bank
10.4.5 The Chad-Cameroon pipeline and the Baka/Bakola:
what to look for in social impact assessments
Further reading
The human rights of women
Introduction
Normative framework
11.2.1 Key violations of women’s human rights: the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women
11.2.2 Critiques of CEDAW
11.2.3 CEDAW, violence against women and reproductive rights
Conceptual development
11.3.1 The development of feminist legal theory and women’s
human rights
11.3.2 Critiques of liberal and non-discrimination approaches to
• women’s human rights
11.3.3 Critiques of‘Western’ feminist approaches to women’s
human rights
11.3.4 Sex, gender and sexuality
Women’s human rights and domestic contexts: ‘honour crimes’
in the English legal system
11.4.1 Definitions and concepts of‘honour’
11.4.2 Practical legal approaches to ‘honour crimes’: culture,
gender and mainstreaming
11.4.3 Non-state actors and due diligence: a human rights
response?
Case Study 11.1: Banaz Mahmod
Further reading
xiii Contents
12 Children s rights 526
12.1 Introduction 526
12.2 Childhood: a non-static concept 527
12.3 The need for a specialised protection regime 528
12.4 Fundamental principles 531
12.4.1 The child’s best interests 531
12.4.2 The child’s right to be heard 532
12.4.3 Right to life, survival and development 533
12.4.3.1 Child soldiers 534
12.4.4 Non-discrimination 537
Case Study 12.1: Discrimination against fathers in custody proceedings:
the critical role of neuroscience 538
12.5. Children’s right to be free from poverty 541
Case Study 12.2: Anti-child poverty legislation in the United Kingdom
and austerity measures 545
Further reading 549
13 The right to development, poverty and related rights 550
13.1 Introduction 550
13.2 The human dimension of development 551
13.3 The RTD 555
13.3.1 Making the RTD justiciable 559
Case Study 13.1: The International Monetary Fund’s structural
adjustment programmes 561
13.4 Global partnerships for the financing of development 562
13.5 Practical application 567
13.5.1 Microfmance: breaking the cycle of poverty by
small loans to the ultra-poor 567
Case Study 13.2: Grameen microlending: access to credit as a human right 569
Interview 13.1: Microfmance non-governmental organisation (NGO)
(Ramanou Nassirou) 571
13.6 Sovereign debt and the enjoyment of fundamental rights 574
13.6.1 Accumulation of sovereign debt and its human rights dimension 574
13.6.2 Odious, illegal and illegitimate debt 578
13.6.3 Unsustainable debt 581
Case Study 13.3: The Parliamentary Committee on the Truth about the
Greek Debt: the artificiality of Greek debt and
its odious nature 583
13.7 The right to a corruption-free society 587
13.8 The right to a healthy environment 591
Case Study 13.4: The Minors Oposa case: intergenerational
environmental equity/rights 595
596
Further reading
xiv Contents
14 Victims rights and reparation 598
14.1 Introduction 598
14.2 The development of the right to reparation 601
14.3 The right to reparation in international human rights law 602
14.3.1 Treaties and UN declarations 602
14.3.2 Practice at the inter-state level 605
14.3.3 State practice at the national and transnational level 607
14.4 The right to reparation in international humanitarian law 608
14.5 The right to reparation in international criminal law 609
14.6 The right to reparation and violations by non-state actors 611
14.7 The right to reparation for historical injustices and violations 612
14.8 The notion and legal significance of the term‘victim’ 614
14.9 The procedural right to an effective remedy 615
14.9.1 Overview 615
14.9.2 The nexus between civil and criminal proceedings:
Rajapakse v. Sri Lanka 617
14.9.3 The right to property, and the choice between investment
arbitration and human rights avenues 618
14.10 The substantive right to reparation 620
14.10.1 State responsibility 620
14.10.2 Liability 620
14.10.3 Standard of reparation 620
14.10.4 Forms of reparation 621
14.10.5 Restitution 622
14.10.6 Compensation 623
14.10.7 Types of damages 623
14.10.8 Proyecto de vida: Loayza Tamayo v. Peru 625
14.10.9 Should previous conduct be taken into consideration
when awarding compensation? 627
14.10.10 Rehabilitation 628
14.10.11 Satisfaction 629
14.10.12 Guarantees of non-repetition 631
14.10.13 Reparation for the violation of collective rights:
Saramaka People v. Suriname 631
14.10.14 A brief assessment and outlook 632
14.11 The double-edged sword of victims’ politics 633
14.12 Negotiating, litigating and administering reparations:
experiences from the Holocaust and World War II reparations 636
14.13 Reparation in action: litigating human rights cases 638
14.13.1 Litigation strategies 638
14.13.2 Pursuing reparation claims, with particular reference to
litigating torture cases 640
xv Contents
Interview 14.1: Litigation, advocacy and social change (Basil Fernando) 641
Further reading 647
15 The application of human rights in armed conflict 649
15.1 Introduction 649
15.2 The fundamental premises of IHL 650
15.2.1 Distinction between combatants and non-combatants 650
15.2.2 Restricted targeting of military objects 652
15.2.3 Means and methods of warfare are not unlimited 654
15.3 Rights and obligations in humanitarian law 654
15.4 Humanitarian law as lex specialis to human rights law 657
15.5 Why human rights bodies find the application of humanitarian
law problematic 659
15.6 Human rights in situations of military occupation 662
15.6.1 The extraterritorial application of human rights in
occupied territories 666
15.6.2 The effective control test 667
15.6.3 The decisive influence test 669
15.7 The relevance of the law to battlefield conditions 670
15.7.1 Human physiology in combat situations 670
Interview 15.1: Battlefield compliance (Charles Garraway and anon) 674
15.7.2 The dilution of humanitarian law and problems in ensuring
compliance 677
Further reading 681
16 Human rights and international criminal justice 682
16.1 Introduction 682
16.2 Relationship between international criminal law and
human rights 683
16.3 Individual criminal liability under international law 686
Case Study 16.1: International Criminal liability at the Nürnberg Trial 687
16.4 The enforcement of international criminal law 688
16.5 Universal jurisdiction 692
16.6 Peace vs. international criminal justice 695
Interview 16.1: Sin Frigaard; Former Chief Public Prosecutor and
Director of the Norwegian National Authority for
Prosecution of Organised and Other Serious Crime 702
16.7 Core international crimes 705
16.7.1 Genocide 706
16.7.2 Crimes against humanity 709
16.8 The place of immunities in human rights and international
criminal justice 711
Further reading 714
xvi Contents
17 Human rights and counter-terrorism 715
17.1 Introduction 715
17.2 The legal nature of terrorism 717
17.3 The discussion on underlying or root causes 719
17.4 The obligation of states to protect their populations from terrorism 721
Case Study 17.1: Finogenov and Chemetsova v. Russia: European
Court of Human Rights admissibility decision of 18
March 2010 723
17.5 Human rights in counter-terrorism operations 725
17.5.1 Anti-terrorist legislation and the principle of legality 727
17.5.2 Permissible restrictions and derogations arising from
terrorist threats 729
17.6 The right to life in counter-terrorism operations 733
17.6.1 Situations when lethal force is permissible 733
17.6.2 Targeted killings and ‘shoot-to-kill’ strategies 735
17.7 Attempts to justify arbitrary detention 738
17.8 Unlawful extraditions and illegal renditions of suspected
terrorists 742
17.8.1 Washing one’s hands and hiding every trace 742
17.8.2 From arbitrary detention and unlawful extradition
the road to torture is open... 745
Case Study 17.2: Al-Rabiah v. USA 748
17.9 Legal and other strategies regarding disappeared terrorist suspects 750
17.9.1 The potency of advocacy and outreach 750
17.9.2 Tracing strategies and release arguments 751
17.9.3 Advocacy strategies 754
17.9.4 Counter-terrorism: the real testing ground for erga omnes 756
Interview 17.1: Legal defender of Guantanamo detainees (Clive
Stafford Smith) 758
Further reading 7 59
18 Human rights obligations of non-state actors 761
18.1 Introduction 761
18.2 The status of NSAs in human rights law 762
18.3 Multinational corporations in the human rights architecture 767
18.3.1 Human rights obligations of MNCs 771
18.3.2 Human rights and foreign direct investment 778
Case Study 18.1: Unilateral repudiation of arbitral awards violating
constitutional guarantees 782
18.3.3 Corporate social responsibility 783
18.4 Human rights obligations of international organisations 785
18.4.1 General obligations 785
xvii Contents
Case Study 18.2: Non-consideration of economic and social rights
by the IMF in Tanzania 790
18.4.2 International organisations as violators of human rights:
the need for dual attribution 790
Case Study 18.3: Complicity of states through/with IGOs 796
18.5 National liberation movements and armed rebel groups 797
18.5.1 ‘To Suffer thy Comrades’: responding to human rights
abuses by NSAs in the Philippines 798
Interview 18.1: Judge and activist on Philippines’ armed groups
(Soliman M. Santos) 800
Further reading 804
19 Globalisation and its impact on human rights 805
19.1 Introduction 805
19.2 The origins and nature of globalisation 807
19.3 Does the existing model of trade liberalisation promote
development and alleviate poverty? 810
19.3.1 Liberalisation of agriculture and its impact on food
security 815
Case Study 19.1: Liberalisation of Zambia’s maize production 817
Interview 19.1: The director of Food First (Eric Holt-Giménez) 817
19.4 How intellectual property rights hinder access to essential
medicines for the poorest 819
Case Study 19.2: Biopiracy and the mayocoba bean 821
19.5 The protection of persons in flight or movement 822
19.5.1 The protection of refugees in international law 824
19.5.2 The protection of migrants 831
19.6 The McLibel case: sales globalisation and its impact on rights 835
Further reading 838
Index 840
Human rights law is a complex but compelling subject that fascinates,
but often confuses, students. International Human Rights Law and Practice
explores the subject from a theoretical and practical perspective, guiding
students to a rich understanding of the law. The second edition has been
fully revised and updated, including two new chapters on childrens rights
and international criminal law, and new sections on a variety of topics,
including the right to equality, the protection of refugees, and the effect of
foreign investment and sovereign debt on the enjoyment of human rights.
In addition, new case studies and interviews with practitioners, NGO
activists and policymakers show how theory is applied in real life. Student
learning is supported by questions to stimulate seminar discussion and
further reading sections that encourage independent study. The authors’
clear and engaging writing style ensures that this new edition will
continue to be required reading for all students of human rights law.
|
any_adam_object | 1 |
author | Bantekas, Ilias 1970- Oette, Lutz 1967- |
author_GND | (DE-588)139929231 (DE-588)124770363 |
author_facet | Bantekas, Ilias 1970- Oette, Lutz 1967- |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Bantekas, Ilias 1970- |
author_variant | i b ib l o lo |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV043791821 |
callnumber-first | K - Law |
callnumber-label | K3240 |
callnumber-raw | K3240 |
callnumber-search | K3240 |
callnumber-sort | K 43240 |
callnumber-subject | K - General Law |
classification_rvk | PR 2213 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)946593727 (DE-599)BVBBV043791821 |
dewey-full | 341.4/8 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 341 - Law of nations |
dewey-raw | 341.4/8 |
dewey-search | 341.4/8 |
dewey-sort | 3341.4 18 |
dewey-tens | 340 - Law |
discipline | Rechtswissenschaft |
edition | Second edition |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV043791821 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-07-10T07:35:16Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9781107562110 9781107125049 9780521152365 9780521196420 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-029202795 |
oclc_num | 946593727 |
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physical | lxiii, 860 Seiten |
publishDate | 2016 |
publishDateSearch | 2016 |
publishDateSort | 2016 |
publisher | Cambridge University Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Bantekas, Ilias 1970- Verfasser (DE-588)139929231 aut International human rights law and practice Ilias Bantekas and Lutz Oette Second edition Cambridge Cambridge University Press [2016] lxiii, 860 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Literaturangaben Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke Vereinte Nationen Universal Declaration of Human Rights (DE-588)4225431-0 gnd rswk-swf Menschenrecht Human rights Practice of law Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 gnd rswk-swf Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 s Vereinte Nationen Universal Declaration of Human Rights (DE-588)4225431-0 u DE-604 Oette, Lutz 1967- Verfasser (DE-588)124770363 aut Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029202795&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis Digitalisierung UB Passau - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029202795&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Klappentext |
spellingShingle | Bantekas, Ilias 1970- Oette, Lutz 1967- International human rights law and practice Vereinte Nationen Universal Declaration of Human Rights (DE-588)4225431-0 gnd Menschenrecht Human rights Practice of law Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4225431-0 (DE-588)4074725-6 |
title | International human rights law and practice |
title_auth | International human rights law and practice |
title_exact_search | International human rights law and practice |
title_full | International human rights law and practice Ilias Bantekas and Lutz Oette |
title_fullStr | International human rights law and practice Ilias Bantekas and Lutz Oette |
title_full_unstemmed | International human rights law and practice Ilias Bantekas and Lutz Oette |
title_short | International human rights law and practice |
title_sort | international human rights law and practice |
topic | Vereinte Nationen Universal Declaration of Human Rights (DE-588)4225431-0 gnd Menschenrecht Human rights Practice of law Menschenrecht (DE-588)4074725-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Vereinte Nationen Universal Declaration of Human Rights Menschenrecht Human rights Practice of law |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029202795&sequence=000003&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=029202795&sequence=000004&line_number=0002&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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