Blackstone's international human rights documents
In: Blackstone's statutes series
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In: Blackstone's statutes series
In: The Fletcher forum of world affairs, Band 17, Heft 1, S. 33-52
ISSN: 1046-1868
FEMININE ANALYSIS MAKES IT CLEAR HOW AND WHY THE ARTICULATION OF HUMAN RIGHTS IS TO BE UNDERSTOOD IN A GENDER INCLUSIVE MANNER AND IMPLEMENTED IN A NON-DISCRIMINATORY FASHION. MOREOEVER, FEMINISM PROVIDES A CONTEMPORARY CHALLENGE TO HUMAN RIGHTS THEORY, DEMANDING THAT IT BECOME MORE INCLUSIVE ALONG THE LINES OF GENDER. THIS CHALLENGE, AND ITS IMPLICATIONS, ARE THE CENTRAL CONCERN OF THIS PAPER, WHICH EXAMINES INTERNATIONAL CONCERN WITH WOMEN'S ISSUES HISTORICALLY, FEMINIST CHALLENGES TO THE NOTION OF RIGHTS, AND AN ATTEMPTED RECONSTRUCTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS GENERALLY IN LIGHTS OF WOMEN'S EXPERIENCES.
In: The Fletcher forum of world affairs, Band 17, Heft 2, S. 33
ISSN: 1046-1868
In: European journal of international law, Band 21, Heft 1, S. 41-55
ISSN: 1464-3596
World Affairs Online
In: Michigan Journal of International Law, Band 45, Heft 1
SSRN
"It was from Argentina, in the years 1976 to1983, that the world first heard the cries of the families of los desaparecidos, the disappeared. The scope and range of governmentally sanctioned kidnappings has spread, making enforced disappearances a truly global problem. This volume provides an in-depth legal investigation of involuntary disappearances as defined by national and international law"--Provided by publisher
In: Canadian foreign policy journal: La politique étrangère du Canada, Band 6, Heft 1, S. [np]
ISSN: 1192-6422
In: Social Inequality and Social Injustice, S. 13-30
In: Routledge research in human rights law
In: Proceedings of the ASIL Annual Meeting, Band 112, S. 83-84
ISSN: 2169-1118
Human rights advocacy today engages with criminal law at international
and national levels with a new and rather conflicted posture. It is
reorienting from an approach that primarily treated human rights as a shield
from (unjust) prosecutorial and carceral power, and toward one calling for
criminal penalties and vigorous prosecutions as a remedy for harms. The
human rights abuses for which state prosecution is invoked today include not
only past and present state violations, such as torture, but crimes by
non-state actors, such as sexual and gender-based violence. At the same
time, paradoxically, many rights groups are calling for the review and
reduction of criminal regulation of a range of sexual and reproductive
health practices, including abortion, consensual sexual conduct outside of
marriage (same sex, heterosexual, and sex for money), and HIV
transmission.