Introduction to international human rights law:
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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<<The>> Hague
T.M.C. Asser Press
[2023]
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | xvi, 294 Seiten |
ISBN: | 9789462655621 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Introduction to international human rights law |c Pietro Pustorino. [Foreword by Prof. Guido Raimondi] |
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Contents 1 2 3 Historie Evolution of Human Rights Law: From National to International Protection . 1.1 The Overcoming of the Domestic Jurisdiction of States . 1.2 The Origins of International Human Rights Law—The Protection of Foreigners. 2 1.3 The Old and New Holders of Foreigners’ Rights . 1.4 Diplomatic Protection and Its Development . References . Theoretical Foundations and General Characteristics of Human Rights. 9 2.1 Natural Law Theories . 2.2 The Theory of Social Consent. 2.3 The Positivist Approach . 2.4 Universality, Indivisibility and Inalienability of Human Rights and Its Practical Implications . 2.4.1 Universality. 2.4.2 Indivisibility and Interdependency. 2.4.3 Inalienability. 2.5 Universality Versus Relativism: The Necessity to Balance Universality and Multiculturalism on Human
Rights. 2.5.1 Relativism and Opposing Conceptions of Cultures. 2.6 The New Perspective Based on Individual and Collective Human Rights . 24 References . 1 1 4 5 7 9 12 13 14 15 18 19 20 22 26 International Legal Sources on Human Rights: The Universal Level. 27 3.1 Jus Cogens and Customary International Law: Connections and Overlapping between the Two Legal Sources 28 3.2 Specific Features of the Peremptory Norms Regarding HumanRights . 29 ix
Contents x The General Principles of Law . International Treaties: An Overview. Particular Nature of Human Rights Treaties Obligations—Limits to the Application of the General Regime on the Law of Treaties . 3.6 The Notion of Jurisdiction in Human Rights Treaties and Their Extraterritorial Application . 36 3.6.1 The Territorial or Spatial Control Criterion . 3.6.2 The “Personal” Control Criterion . 3.6.3 Extraterritorial or Indirect Application of Human Rights Norms and the Expulsion of Individuals . 3.7 Human Rights Treaties and Their Horizontal Application {Drittwirkung) . 42 3.7.1 State’s Due Diligence and Domestic Violence. 3.8 Human Rights Treaties and International Humanitarian Law . 3.9 Derogation and Limitation Clauses in Human Rights Treaties . 3.10 Human Rights Treaties and National Implementation: Domestic Rank, Direct Applicability and Direct Effect—The Difference between Immediate and Progressive Obligations . 3.11 Soft Law. References
. 3.3 3.4 3.5 4 International Legal Sources on Human Rights: The Regional Level. 55 4.1 The European Convention on Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights. 55 4.2 Individual and Inter-State Applications to the ECtHR: The Admissibility Conditions . 59 4.3 Scrutiny by the ECtHR—Nature and Scope of ECtHR Judgments and the Role of the Committee of Ministers . 4.3.1 ECtHR General Measures. 4.3.2 ECtHR Individual Measures. 4.3.3 ECtHR “Warning” Judgments . 4.3.4 Supervision of the Execution of Judgments . 4.4 The Other Regional Human Rights Courts . 4.4.1 The Inter-American Court of Human Rights . 4.4.2 The African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights and the New African Court of Justice and Human Rights. 4.5 The Arab and Asian Systems of Human Rights Protection. 4.5.1 The Arab System . 4.5.2 The Asian System . 32 33 34 37 39 42 43 44 46 49 52 53 61 63 64 64 66 67 67 69 70 70
71
xi Contents 5 The United Nations and Human Rights. 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 6 The Contribution of the UN to the Development of the International Protection of Human Rights . 74 The Monitoring Bodies Set Up in the UN Human Rights Treaties . 75 5.2.1 The Human Rights Committee. 5.2.2 The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. 5.2.3 The Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination . 79 5.2.4 The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women . 81 5.2.5 The Committee Against Torture. 5.2.6 The Committee on Enforced Disappearances . The Role of the UN General Assembly, Economic and Social Council and Human Rights Council . 84 5.3.1 The UNGA and ECOSOC . 5.3.2 The Human Rights Council . The UN Security Council and Serious Violations of Human Rights—The Sanctions Against States. 87 The UN Security Council and Individual Sanctions—Scrutiny of the Lawfulness of Targeted Sanctions from a Human Rights Perspective. The UN Security Council and the International Criminal
Court. 91 Individual and Collective Human Rights: Right to Life . 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 Classification of Human Rights. Right to Life: General Scope and State Obligations. 6.2.1 Right to Life: Negative and Positive Obligations of the State . 98 6.2.2 Extraterritorial or Indirect Application of the International Rules on the Right to Life—Relevance of Climate Change Issues. 101 6.2.3 Right to Life and Prohibition of Trafficking of Human Organs. 103 6.2.4 Right to Life, Protection of the Unborn and Abortion. 103 6.2.5 Right to Life and the Death Penalty. Right to Life, Medically Assisted Procreation and Surrogacy . 6.3.1 Medically Assisted Procreation . 6.3.2 Surrogacy . 6.3.3 Donation of Embryos and Scientific Research. End-of-Life Issues: ECtHR Case Law . 73 75 77 82 82 85 86 89 95 95 97 105 107 108 110 Ill 112
xii Contents 6.5 7 8 The Rights Linked to the Right to Life—The Protection of Human Dignity . 114 6.5.1 Right to Health and Right to Access to Essential Medical Services . 6.5.2 Right to Food and Right to Water . Other Grave Breaches of Human Rights: Prohibition of Genocide, Prohibition of Torture and Inhuman and Degrading Punishment or Treatment, Prohibition of Slavery and Forced Labour and Prohibition of Racial Discrimination and Apartheid . 119 7.1 Prohibition of Genocide . 7.1.1 Genocide Denial. 7.2 Prohibition of Torture and Inhuman and Degrading Treatment: Scope of the International Law Rules. 124 7.2.1 Prohibition of Torture, Rape and Sexual Violence. 7.2.2 Inhuman and Degrading Treatment and Detainees’ Conditions. 7.2.3 Inhuman and Degrading Treatment and End-of-Life Issues . 130 7.3 Broad Interpretation of the Prohibition of Torture and Inhuman and Degrading Treatment: The Formation of New Rights . 7.3.1 Right to Hope . 7.4 Extraterritorial
Application of the Norms on the Prohibition of Torture and Principle of Non-refoulement. 132 7.5 International Crimes and Universal Criminal Jurisdiction. 7.6 International Crimes, State Immunity and Immunity of State Organs . 7.6.1 State Immunity . 7.6.2 State Organs’Immunity . Ί.Ί Prohibition of Slavery, Servitude and Forced Labour . 7.7.1 Human Trafficking and Prohibitionof Slavery . 7.7.2 Labour Exploitation, Slavery and ForcedLabour . 7.8 Prohibition of Racial Discrimination and Apartheid—Other Forms of Discrimination . References . Right to Liberty and Security, Right to a Fair Trial and Principle of No Punishment Without Law . 151 8.1 Right to Liberty and Security, Enforced Disappearances and Extraordinary Renditions . 151 8.1.1 Enforced Disappearances and the Right to Truth. 8.1.2 Extraordinary Renditions . 8.1.3 Right to Liberty and Measures Against COVID-19 . 8.2 Right to a Fair Trial. 115 116 120 122 127 128 130 131 134 135 135 138 140
142 144 145 149 153 155 156 157
xiii Contents 8.3 9 10 11 8.2.1 Right to a Fair Trial and Access to Justice . 8.2.2 Right to a Fair Trial and Other Linked Rights . Principle of Legality and of Non-retroactivity of Criminal Law . 163 8.3.1 Principle of Legality in Criminal Matters and International Crimes. Right to Respect for Private and Family Life, Freedom of Thought, Conscience and Religion, Freedom of Expression and Freedom of Assembly and Association . 169 9.1 Right to Respect for Private and Family Life . 9.1.1 Notion of Private Life . 9.1.2 Notion of Family Life . 9.1.3 Right to Image, Reputation and Personal Identity. 9.1.4 Protection of Personal Data and the Right to Be Forgotten . 177 9.1.5 Protection of Same-Sex Couples . 9.2 Freedom of Thought, Conscience and Religion . 9.2.1 Islamic Veil . 9.2.2 Crucifix and Religious Ceremonies. 9.2.3 Post-mortem Examinations and Religious Convictions . 9.3 Freedom of Opinion and Expression
. 9.3.1 Obligation of States and Horizontal Application of Human Rights Norms on Freedom of Thought. 9.3.2 Freedom of Information and Protection of the Press . 9.3.3 Information Pluralism . 9.3.4 Right of Access to the Internet. 9.4 Freedom of Assembly and Association . 9.5 Freedom of Movement . Refugees’ Rights, Right to Citizenship and Other Political Rights. 199 10.1 Rights of Refugees and Migrants . 10.1.1 Subsidiary and Temporary Protection . 10.2 Right to Citizenship . 10.2.1 Deprivation of Citizenship and Its Limits. 10.3 Other Political Rights . Economic, Social and Cultural Rights . 11.1 Right to Property. 11.2 Right to Work . 11.3 Right to Education . 11.4 Right to Cultural Goods—The Principle of
Common Heritage of Mankind. 220 159 160 166 170 171 174 176 179 181 183 184 185 185 188 189 191 193 195 197 199 203 204 206 208 211 211 214 218
xiv 12 Contents Right to Self-determination of Peoples, Right to Development and Right to a Clean and Healthy Environment . 223 Right to Self-determination . Right to Development and the Concept of Sustainable Development . 228 12.3 Right to a Healthy Environment . 12.4 Protection of the Environment and Climate Change . References . 12.1 12.2 13 Human Rights, States and Non-state Actors . 13.1 States and International Organisations . 13.2 National Liberation Movements, Insurgents and Terrorist Groups . 237 13.3 Natural Persons . 13.4 Minorities and Indigenous Peoples. 13.4.1 Minorities . 13.4.2 Indigenous and Tribal Peoples . 13.4.3 Indigenous Peoples, Use of Territory and Protection of the Environment . 13.5 Multinational Corporations . 13.5.1 US Case Law
. 13.5.2 UK, Canadian and Dutch Case Law . 13.5.3 MNCs and States’ Responsibility . 13.5.4 MNCs and Individual Criminal Responsibility . 13.6 Non-governmental Organisations . 14 223 229 231 233 235 235 240 242 242 245 248 250 251 252 253 254 256 International Responsibility of States for Violations of Human Rights. 259 Erga Omnes Nature of International Obligations on Human Rights and Effects on State Responsibility . 259 14.2 Aggravated State Responsibility for Violations of Peremptory Norms . 261 14.3 Developments Regarding the Individual Right to Reparation for Serious Violations of Human Rights . 14.4 Individual and Collective Countermeasures for Serious Violations of Human Rights . 14.5 Humanitarian Interventionand Responsibility to Protect . References . 14.1 263 265 267 271 Table of Cases and Table of UN Treaty Bodies’ Comments and Decisions . 273
Bibliography. 293 |
adam_txt |
Contents 1 2 3 Historie Evolution of Human Rights Law: From National to International Protection . 1.1 The Overcoming of the Domestic Jurisdiction of States . 1.2 The Origins of International Human Rights Law—The Protection of Foreigners. 2 1.3 The Old and New Holders of Foreigners’ Rights . 1.4 Diplomatic Protection and Its Development . References . Theoretical Foundations and General Characteristics of Human Rights. 9 2.1 Natural Law Theories . 2.2 The Theory of Social Consent. 2.3 The Positivist Approach . 2.4 Universality, Indivisibility and Inalienability of Human Rights and Its Practical Implications . 2.4.1 Universality. 2.4.2 Indivisibility and Interdependency. 2.4.3 Inalienability. 2.5 Universality Versus Relativism: The Necessity to Balance Universality and Multiculturalism on Human
Rights. 2.5.1 Relativism and Opposing Conceptions of Cultures. 2.6 The New Perspective Based on Individual and Collective Human Rights . 24 References . 1 1 4 5 7 9 12 13 14 15 18 19 20 22 26 International Legal Sources on Human Rights: The Universal Level. 27 3.1 Jus Cogens and Customary International Law: Connections and Overlapping between the Two Legal Sources 28 3.2 Specific Features of the Peremptory Norms Regarding HumanRights . 29 ix
Contents x The General Principles of Law . International Treaties: An Overview. Particular Nature of Human Rights Treaties Obligations—Limits to the Application of the General Regime on the Law of Treaties . 3.6 The Notion of Jurisdiction in Human Rights Treaties and Their Extraterritorial Application . 36 3.6.1 The Territorial or Spatial Control Criterion . 3.6.2 The “Personal” Control Criterion . 3.6.3 Extraterritorial or Indirect Application of Human Rights Norms and the Expulsion of Individuals . 3.7 Human Rights Treaties and Their Horizontal Application {Drittwirkung) . 42 3.7.1 State’s Due Diligence and Domestic Violence. 3.8 Human Rights Treaties and International Humanitarian Law . 3.9 Derogation and Limitation Clauses in Human Rights Treaties . 3.10 Human Rights Treaties and National Implementation: Domestic Rank, Direct Applicability and Direct Effect—The Difference between Immediate and Progressive Obligations . 3.11 Soft Law. References
. 3.3 3.4 3.5 4 International Legal Sources on Human Rights: The Regional Level. 55 4.1 The European Convention on Human Rights and the European Court of Human Rights. 55 4.2 Individual and Inter-State Applications to the ECtHR: The Admissibility Conditions . 59 4.3 Scrutiny by the ECtHR—Nature and Scope of ECtHR Judgments and the Role of the Committee of Ministers . 4.3.1 ECtHR General Measures. 4.3.2 ECtHR Individual Measures. 4.3.3 ECtHR “Warning” Judgments . 4.3.4 Supervision of the Execution of Judgments . 4.4 The Other Regional Human Rights Courts . 4.4.1 The Inter-American Court of Human Rights . 4.4.2 The African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights and the New African Court of Justice and Human Rights. 4.5 The Arab and Asian Systems of Human Rights Protection. 4.5.1 The Arab System . 4.5.2 The Asian System . 32 33 34 37 39 42 43 44 46 49 52 53 61 63 64 64 66 67 67 69 70 70
71
xi Contents 5 The United Nations and Human Rights. 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 6 The Contribution of the UN to the Development of the International Protection of Human Rights . 74 The Monitoring Bodies Set Up in the UN Human Rights Treaties . 75 5.2.1 The Human Rights Committee. 5.2.2 The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. 5.2.3 The Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination . 79 5.2.4 The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women . 81 5.2.5 The Committee Against Torture. 5.2.6 The Committee on Enforced Disappearances . The Role of the UN General Assembly, Economic and Social Council and Human Rights Council . 84 5.3.1 The UNGA and ECOSOC . 5.3.2 The Human Rights Council . The UN Security Council and Serious Violations of Human Rights—The Sanctions Against States. 87 The UN Security Council and Individual Sanctions—Scrutiny of the Lawfulness of Targeted Sanctions from a Human Rights Perspective. The UN Security Council and the International Criminal
Court. 91 Individual and Collective Human Rights: Right to Life . 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 Classification of Human Rights. Right to Life: General Scope and State Obligations. 6.2.1 Right to Life: Negative and Positive Obligations of the State . 98 6.2.2 Extraterritorial or Indirect Application of the International Rules on the Right to Life—Relevance of Climate Change Issues. 101 6.2.3 Right to Life and Prohibition of Trafficking of Human Organs. 103 6.2.4 Right to Life, Protection of the Unborn and Abortion. 103 6.2.5 Right to Life and the Death Penalty. Right to Life, Medically Assisted Procreation and Surrogacy . 6.3.1 Medically Assisted Procreation . 6.3.2 Surrogacy . 6.3.3 Donation of Embryos and Scientific Research. End-of-Life Issues: ECtHR Case Law . 73 75 77 82 82 85 86 89 95 95 97 105 107 108 110 Ill 112
xii Contents 6.5 7 8 The Rights Linked to the Right to Life—The Protection of Human Dignity . 114 6.5.1 Right to Health and Right to Access to Essential Medical Services . 6.5.2 Right to Food and Right to Water . Other Grave Breaches of Human Rights: Prohibition of Genocide, Prohibition of Torture and Inhuman and Degrading Punishment or Treatment, Prohibition of Slavery and Forced Labour and Prohibition of Racial Discrimination and Apartheid . 119 7.1 Prohibition of Genocide . 7.1.1 Genocide Denial. 7.2 Prohibition of Torture and Inhuman and Degrading Treatment: Scope of the International Law Rules. 124 7.2.1 Prohibition of Torture, Rape and Sexual Violence. 7.2.2 Inhuman and Degrading Treatment and Detainees’ Conditions. 7.2.3 Inhuman and Degrading Treatment and End-of-Life Issues . 130 7.3 Broad Interpretation of the Prohibition of Torture and Inhuman and Degrading Treatment: The Formation of New Rights . 7.3.1 Right to Hope . 7.4 Extraterritorial
Application of the Norms on the Prohibition of Torture and Principle of Non-refoulement. 132 7.5 International Crimes and Universal Criminal Jurisdiction. 7.6 International Crimes, State Immunity and Immunity of State Organs . 7.6.1 State Immunity . 7.6.2 State Organs’Immunity . Ί.Ί Prohibition of Slavery, Servitude and Forced Labour . 7.7.1 Human Trafficking and Prohibitionof Slavery . 7.7.2 Labour Exploitation, Slavery and ForcedLabour . 7.8 Prohibition of Racial Discrimination and Apartheid—Other Forms of Discrimination . References . Right to Liberty and Security, Right to a Fair Trial and Principle of No Punishment Without Law . 151 8.1 Right to Liberty and Security, Enforced Disappearances and Extraordinary Renditions . 151 8.1.1 Enforced Disappearances and the Right to Truth. 8.1.2 Extraordinary Renditions . 8.1.3 Right to Liberty and Measures Against COVID-19 . 8.2 Right to a Fair Trial. 115 116 120 122 127 128 130 131 134 135 135 138 140
142 144 145 149 153 155 156 157
xiii Contents 8.3 9 10 11 8.2.1 Right to a Fair Trial and Access to Justice . 8.2.2 Right to a Fair Trial and Other Linked Rights . Principle of Legality and of Non-retroactivity of Criminal Law . 163 8.3.1 Principle of Legality in Criminal Matters and International Crimes. Right to Respect for Private and Family Life, Freedom of Thought, Conscience and Religion, Freedom of Expression and Freedom of Assembly and Association . 169 9.1 Right to Respect for Private and Family Life . 9.1.1 Notion of Private Life . 9.1.2 Notion of Family Life . 9.1.3 Right to Image, Reputation and Personal Identity. 9.1.4 Protection of Personal Data and the Right to Be Forgotten . 177 9.1.5 Protection of Same-Sex Couples . 9.2 Freedom of Thought, Conscience and Religion . 9.2.1 Islamic Veil . 9.2.2 Crucifix and Religious Ceremonies. 9.2.3 Post-mortem Examinations and Religious Convictions . 9.3 Freedom of Opinion and Expression
. 9.3.1 Obligation of States and Horizontal Application of Human Rights Norms on Freedom of Thought. 9.3.2 Freedom of Information and Protection of the Press . 9.3.3 Information Pluralism . 9.3.4 Right of Access to the Internet. 9.4 Freedom of Assembly and Association . 9.5 Freedom of Movement . Refugees’ Rights, Right to Citizenship and Other Political Rights. 199 10.1 Rights of Refugees and Migrants . 10.1.1 Subsidiary and Temporary Protection . 10.2 Right to Citizenship . 10.2.1 Deprivation of Citizenship and Its Limits. 10.3 Other Political Rights . Economic, Social and Cultural Rights . 11.1 Right to Property. 11.2 Right to Work . 11.3 Right to Education . 11.4 Right to Cultural Goods—The Principle of
Common Heritage of Mankind. 220 159 160 166 170 171 174 176 179 181 183 184 185 185 188 189 191 193 195 197 199 203 204 206 208 211 211 214 218
xiv 12 Contents Right to Self-determination of Peoples, Right to Development and Right to a Clean and Healthy Environment . 223 Right to Self-determination . Right to Development and the Concept of Sustainable Development . 228 12.3 Right to a Healthy Environment . 12.4 Protection of the Environment and Climate Change . References . 12.1 12.2 13 Human Rights, States and Non-state Actors . 13.1 States and International Organisations . 13.2 National Liberation Movements, Insurgents and Terrorist Groups . 237 13.3 Natural Persons . 13.4 Minorities and Indigenous Peoples. 13.4.1 Minorities . 13.4.2 Indigenous and Tribal Peoples . 13.4.3 Indigenous Peoples, Use of Territory and Protection of the Environment . 13.5 Multinational Corporations . 13.5.1 US Case Law
. 13.5.2 UK, Canadian and Dutch Case Law . 13.5.3 MNCs and States’ Responsibility . 13.5.4 MNCs and Individual Criminal Responsibility . 13.6 Non-governmental Organisations . 14 223 229 231 233 235 235 240 242 242 245 248 250 251 252 253 254 256 International Responsibility of States for Violations of Human Rights. 259 Erga Omnes Nature of International Obligations on Human Rights and Effects on State Responsibility . 259 14.2 Aggravated State Responsibility for Violations of Peremptory Norms . 261 14.3 Developments Regarding the Individual Right to Reparation for Serious Violations of Human Rights . 14.4 Individual and Collective Countermeasures for Serious Violations of Human Rights . 14.5 Humanitarian Interventionand Responsibility to Protect . References . 14.1 263 265 267 271 Table of Cases and Table of UN Treaty Bodies’ Comments and Decisions . 273
Bibliography. 293 |
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publisher | T.M.C. Asser Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Pustorino, Pietro Verfasser (DE-588)1046663844 aut Introduction to international human rights law Pietro Pustorino. [Foreword by Prof. Guido Raimondi] <<The>> Hague T.M.C. Asser Press [2023] xvi, 294 Seiten txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Human Rights Public International Law Sources and Subjects of International Law, International Organizations Human rights International law Raimondi, Guido 1953- (DE-588)1176533274 wpr Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-94-6265-563-8 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=034027474&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Pustorino, Pietro Introduction to international human rights law Human Rights Public International Law Sources and Subjects of International Law, International Organizations Human rights International law |
title | Introduction to international human rights law |
title_auth | Introduction to international human rights law |
title_exact_search | Introduction to international human rights law |
title_exact_search_txtP | Introduction to international human rights law |
title_full | Introduction to international human rights law Pietro Pustorino. [Foreword by Prof. Guido Raimondi] |
title_fullStr | Introduction to international human rights law Pietro Pustorino. [Foreword by Prof. Guido Raimondi] |
title_full_unstemmed | Introduction to international human rights law Pietro Pustorino. [Foreword by Prof. Guido Raimondi] |
title_short | Introduction to international human rights law |
title_sort | introduction to international human rights law |
topic | Human Rights Public International Law Sources and Subjects of International Law, International Organizations Human rights International law |
topic_facet | Human Rights Public International Law Sources and Subjects of International Law, International Organizations Human rights International law |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=034027474&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT pustorinopietro introductiontointernationalhumanrightslaw AT raimondiguido introductiontointernationalhumanrightslaw |