|
Books > Law > International law > Public international law > International human rights law
This edited collection explores the topic of disclosure of evidence
and information in the criminal justice process. The book
critically analyses the major issues driving the long-standing
problem of dysfunctional disclosure practice, with contributions
from academics, lawyers, former police officers, and current police
policymakers. The ultimate objective is to review the key problems
at the investigative, trial and post-conviction stages of criminal
proceedings, and to suggest a way forward through potential routes
of reform, both legal and cultural. The collection represents a
significant and novel contribution to the policy debate regarding
disclosure, and advances thought on resolving this issue in a fair
and sustainable manner. The book provides a valuable resource for
academics, practitioners and policymakers working on this vital
aspect of criminal procedure.
The interaction between military and civilian courts, the political
power that legal prerogatives can provide to the armed forces, and
the difficult process civilian politicians face in reforming
military justice remain glaringly under-examined, despite their
implications for the quality and survival of democracy. This book
breaks new ground by providing a theoretically rich, global
examination of the operation and reform of military courts in
democratic countries. Drawing on a newly created dataset of 120
countries over more than two centuries, it presents the first
comprehensive picture of the evolution of military justice across
states and over time. Combined with qualitative historical case
studies of Colombia, Portugal, Indonesia, Fiji, Brazil, Pakistan,
and the United States, the book presents a new framework for
understanding how civilian actors are able to gain or lose legal
control of the armed forces. The book's findings have important
lessons for scholars and policymakers working in the fields of
democracy, civil-military relations, human rights, and the rule of
law.
The high profile cases of Charlie Gard, Alfie Evans, and Tafida
Raqeeb raised the questions as to why the state intrudes into the
exercise of parental responsibility concerning the medical
treatment of children and why parents may not be permitted to
decide what is in the best interests of their child. This book
answers these questions. It argues for a reframing of the law
concerned with the medical treatment of children to one which
better protects the welfare of the individual child, within the
context of family relationships recognising the duties which
professionals have to care for the child and that the welfare of
children is a matter of public interest, protected through the
intervention of the state. This book undertakes a rigorous critical
analysis of the case law concerned with the provision of medical
treatment to children since the first reported cases over forty
years ago. It argues that understanding of the cases only as
disputes over the best interests of the child, and judicial
resolution thereof, fails to recognise professional duties and
public responsibilities for the welfare and protection of children
that exist alongside parental responsibilities and which justify
public, or state, intervention into family life and parental
decision-making. Whilst the principles and approach of the court
established in the early cases endure, the nature and balance of
these responsibilities to children in their care need to be
understood in the changing social, legal, and political context in
which they are exercised and enforced by the court. The book will
be a valuable resource for academics, students, and practitioners
of Medical Law, Healthcare Law, Family Law, Social Work, Medicine,
Nursing, and Bioethics.
The book provides an in-depth discussion of democratic theory
questions in relation to refugee law. The work introduces readers
to the evolution of refugee law and its core issues today, as well
as central lines in the debate about democracy and migration.
Bringing together these fields, the book links theoretical
considerations and legal analysis. Based on its specific
understanding of the refugee concept, it offers a reconstruction of
refugee law as constantly confronted with the question of how to
secure rights to those who have no voice in the democratic process.
In this reconstruction, the book highlights, on the one hand, the
need to look beyond the legal regulations for understanding the
challenges and gaps in refugee protection. It is also the
structural lack of political voice, the book argues, which shapes
the refugee's situation. On the other hand, the book opposes a view
of law as mere expression of power and points out the dynamics
within the law which reflect endeavors towards mitigating
exclusion. The book will be essential reading for academics and
researchers working in the areas of migration and refugee law,
legal theory and political theory.
This book critiques the dominant physical and biological
interpretation of the Genocide Convention and argues that the idea
of "culture" is central to properly understanding the crime of
genocide. Using Raphael Lemkin's personal papers, archival
materials from the State Department and the UN, as well as the
mid-century secondary literature, it situates the convention in the
longstanding debate between Enlightenment notions of universality
and individualism, and Romantic notions of particularism and
holism. The author conducts a thorough review of the treaty and its
preparatory work to show that the drafters brought strong
culturalist ideas to the debate and that Lemkin's ideas were held
widely in the immediate postwar period. Reconstructing the
mid-century conversation on genocide and situating it in the much
broader mid-century discourse on justice and society he
demonstrates that culture is not a distraction to be read out of
the Genocide Convention; it is the very reason it exists. This
volume poses a forceful challenge to the materialist interpretation
and calls into question decades of international case law. It will
be of interest to scholars of genocide, human rights, international
law, the history of international law and human rights, and treaty
interpretation.
This book challenges the idea that the Rule of Law is still a
universal European value given its relatively rapid deterioration
in Hungary and Poland, and the apparent inability of the European
institutions to adequately address the illiberalization of these
Member States. The book begins from the general presumption that
the Rule of Law, since its emergence, has been a universal European
value, a political ideal and legal conception. It also acknowledges
that the EU has been struggling in the area of value enforcement,
even if the necessary mechanisms are available and, given an
innovative outlook and more political commitment, could be
successfully used. The authors appreciate the different approaches
toward the Rule of Law, both as a concept and as a measurable
indicator, and while addressing the core question of the volume,
widely rely on them. Ultimately, the book provides a snapshot of
how the Rule of Law ideal has been dismantled and offers a theory
of the Rule of Law in illiberal constitutionalism. It discusses why
voters keep illiberal populist leaders in power when they are
undeniably acting contrary to the Rule of Law ideal. The book will
be of interest to academics and researchers engaged with the
foundational questions of constitutionalism. The structure and
nature of the subject matter covered ensure that the book will be a
useful addition for comparative and national constitutional law
classes. It will also appeal to legal practitioners wondering about
the boundaries of the Rule of Law.
The American Convention on Human Rights contains an in-depth
analysis of and comment on crucial rights protected under the
American Convention on Human Rights in the light of the decisions
of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.It shows the initially
hesitant steps of the Inter-American Court in developing its
position on five basic rights in the first years of its existence
(1979-2003). Violations of the core rights - namely the right to
life, the right to personal freedom, the right to personal
integrity, the right to due process of law and the right to a
judicial remedy - formed the majority of complaints before the
Court at a time when many of the contracting States had either just
left, or were still immersed in, a dictatorship and were only just
attempting to introduce the idea of human rights in a democratic
society into their own legal systems.This fully revised and updated
second edition now also covers the Inter-American Court's steps
towards maturity (2004-2014). Due to the political and social
changes in the region, since 2003 the Court has had to examine and
consider a greater variety of rights, such as freedom of speech,
structural discrimination, and the lack of proper protection for
womens human rights and for people with different sexual
orientations. The human rights problems of indigenous peoples have
also come to the Court's attention, because the lack of judicial
protection of their rights leads to State responsibility by
omission. In addition, systematic and gross violations of human
rights continue to be a significant part of the Court's work, but
their treatment has allowed the Court to develop better and more
precise and effective responses.Taking into consideration the
changes that have taken place, this book has given more attention
to certain topics. A chapter on disappearances is now included.
Developments in the way the Court understands its own functions,
such as the idea of the State agents' conventionality control, are
also discussed. In addition, a new introductory chapter provides a
good overview of the social and political landscape of the region
and a wider analysis of discrimination and equality.The American
Convention on Human Rights is a scholarly yet practical book on a
relatively new system for the protection of human rights. It is a
useful tool for practitioners to support their work and for
academics in their teaching of the inter-American System.
Human Rights is an introductory text that is both innovative and
challenging. Its unique interdisciplinary approach invites students
to think imaginatively and rigorously about one of the most
important and influential political concepts of our time. Tracing
the history of the concept, the book shows that there are
fundamental tensions between legal, philosophical and
social-scientific approaches to human rights. This analysis throws
light on some of the most controversial issues in the field: Is the
idea of the universality of human rights consistent with respect
for cultural difference? Are there collective human rights? What
are the underlying causes of human-rights violations? And why do
some countries have much worse human-rights records than others?
The third edition has been substantially revised and updated to
take account of recent developments, including the Arab Spring ,
the civil war in Syria, the refugee crisis, ISIS and international
terrorism, and climate change politics. Widely admired and assigned
for its clarity and comprehensiveness, this book remains a go-to
text for students in the social sciences, as well as students of
human-rights law who want an introduction to the non-legal aspects
of their subject.
Since the nineteenth century, the development of international
humanitarian law has been marked by complex entanglements of legal
theory, historical trauma, criminal prosecution, historiography,
and politics. All of these factors have played a role in changing
views on the applicability of international law and human-rights
ideas to state-organized violence, which in turn have been largely
driven by transnational responses to German state crimes. Here,
Annette Weinke gives a groundbreaking long-term history of the
political, legal and academic debates concerning German state and
mass violence in the First World War, during the National Socialist
era and the Holocaust, and under the GDR.
This book offers an original and insightful analysis of the human
rights inadequacies that arise in the practice of UN territorial
administration by analysing and assessing the practice of UNMIK. It
provides arguments based on law and principles to support the
thesis that a comprehensive legal framework governing the
activities of the UN mission is a crucial prerequisite for its
proper functioning. This is complemented by a discussion of several
emerging issues surrounding the UN activity on the ground, namely,
its legislative, judicial, and executive power. The author offers
an extensive and well-documented analysis of the UN's capacity as a
surrogate state administration to respond to the needs of the
governed population and, above all, protect its fundamental rights.
Based on her findings, Murati concludes that only a comprehensive
mandate can serve the long term interests of the international
community's objective to efficiently promote, protect, and fulfil
human rights in a war-torn society. UN Territorial Administration
and Human Rights provides a detailed critical legal analysis of one
of the major UN administrations of territory after the Cold War,
namely, the UN administration of Kosovo from 1999 to 2008. The
analysis in this book will be beneficial to international law and
international relations scholars and students, as well as
policymakers and persons working for international organisations.
The analysis and the lessons learned through this study shed light
on the challenges entailed in governing territories and rebuilding
state institutions while upholding the rule of law and ensuring
respect for human rights.
Archives, Recordkeeping, and Social Justice expands the burgeoning
literature on archival social justice and impact. Illuminating how
diverse factors shape the relationship between archives,
recordkeeping systems, and recordkeepers, this book depicts
struggles for different social justice objectives. Discussions and
debates about social justice are playing out across many
disciplines, fields of practice, societal sectors, and governments,
and yet one dimension cross-cutting these actors and engagement
spaces has remained unexplored: the role of recordkeeping and
archiving. To clarify and elaborate this connection, this volume
provides a rigorous account of the engagement of archives and
records-and their keepers-in struggles for social justice. Drawing
upon multidisciplinary praxis and scholarship, contributors to the
volume examine social justice from historical and contemporary
perspectives and promote impact methodologies that align with
culturally responsive, democratic, Indigenous, and transformative
assessment. Underscoring the multiplicity of transformative social
justice impacts influenced by recordmaking, recordkeeping, and
archiving, the book presents nine case studies from around the
world that link the past to the present and offer pathways towards
a more just future. Archives, Recordkeeping, and Social Justice
will be an essential reading for researchers and students engaged
in the study of archives, truth and reconciliation processes,
social justice, and human rights. It should also be of great
interest to archivists, records managers, and information
professionals.
The protection of vulnerable groups varies under international
human rights law. Depending on the group at stake, protection may
be more or less advanced. In some cases, the international
community has deemed it necessary to adopt conventions providing
for the rights of certain vulnerable groups and establishing
mechanisms to verify State compliance. Other groups have not been
the focus of States' standard-setting endeavours, but their
protection still falls within the scope of human rights treaties of
general application and the mandate of their respective monitoring
bodies. This book takes an innovative approach to the investigation
of the international legal protection of vulnerable groups. Rather
than examining the situation of a number of vulnerable groups and
applicable international or regional conventions, this book reviews
the overall scope of the protection of vulnerable groups under
International Human Rights Law. This book conceptualizes the
protection of vulnerable groups as an underlying and essential
component of International Human Rights Law through a systematic
and comprehensive analysis of international human rights law
instruments and relevant practice of international and regional
human rights monitoring bodies. The book illuminates how human
rights monitoring bodies foster protection of vulnerable groups and
their members at the domestic level, and underscores and assesses
vulnerability paradigms these bodies have elaborated. The book also
puts forward a legal definition of vulnerable groups. This book
will be of great interest to students and scholars of international
human rights law.
This book offers a comprehensive yet concise take on the legal
regulation of the various phases in the complex cycle of armed
conflicts, from prevention to reconstruction, and covering
everything in between, in particular the vast body of rules laid
down in current international humanitarian law. The manual combines
a general theoretical approach with modern practice in order to
offer a complete picture of the law before, during and after
warfareThrough a series of fourteen thematic chapters that
logically follow from one to another, scholars and practitioners
tackle core issues relating to the international regulation of
armed conflicts, while situating them in a broader societal
context. Particular attention is given to the emergence of the
European Union as an increasingly important regional and global
player in international peace and security. In combination with the
broad scope and accessible nature of the collection, the experience
and ambition on display in this volume makes it a unique reference
tool for students, scholars, practitioners, civil servants,
diplomats and humanitarian and human rights workers around the
globe. It is complemented by, and a helpful companion to, J.
Wouters and P. De Man, Humanitarian and Security Law: A Compendium
of International and European Instruments.
The only up-to-date textbook that provides a systematic, critical
overview of the human rights-development nexus. The book will
provide students and practitioners with an in-depth understanding
of human rights as a development challenge, delineate the responses
and alternative critical approaches from a theoretical and
practical perspective Equips readers with the conceptual frameworks
and analytical tools for independent investigation of key issues at
the human rights/development interface. Wide-ranging in scope,
multi-scalar in looking at global policy initiatives or vulnerable
groups such as indigenous peoples Well developed pedagogy
including: a student briefing in the introduction, questions for
discussion at the end of each chapter, text boxes to highlight
particular issues, theoretical approaches, examples, cases and
annotated further reading.
Locating assisted suicide within the broader medical end-of-life
context and drawing on the empirical data available from the
increasing number of permissive jurisdictions, this book provides a
novel examination of the human rights implications of the
prohibition on assisted suicide in England and Wales and beyond.
Assisted suicide is a contentious topic and one which has been the
subject of judicial and academic debate internationally. The
central objective of the book is to approach the question of the
ban's compatibility with the European Convention on Human Rights
afresh; freed from the constraints of the existing case law and its
erroneous approach to the legal issues and selective reliance on
empirical data. The book also examines the compatibility of the ban
on assisted suicide with rights which have either been erroneously
disregarded or not considered by either the domestic courts or the
European Court of Human Rights. Having regard to human rights
jurisprudence more broadly, including in the context of abortion,
the research and analysis undertaken here demonstrates that the ban
on assisted suicide violates the rights of a significant number of
individuals to life, to freedom from torture or inhuman or
degrading treatment and to private life. Such analysis does not
depend on a strained or contrived approach to the rights at issue.
Rather, the conclusions flow naturally from a coherent, logical
application of the established principles governing those rights.
While the focus of the book is the Suicide Act 1961, the
conclusions reached have implications beyond England and Wales,
including for the other devolved jurisdictions and international
jurisdictions. Beyond courts and legislators, it will be a valuable
resource for students of human rights and medical law, as well as
medical and legal practitioners and academics working in human
rights and end-of-life care.
Do states have a duty to assimilate refugees to their own citizens?
Are refugees entitled to freedom of movement, to be allowed to
work, to have access to public welfare programs, or to be reunited
with family members? Indeed, is there even a duty to admit refugees
at all? This fundamentally rewritten second edition of the
award-winning treatise presents the only comprehensive analysis of
the human rights of refugees set by the UN Refugee Convention and
international human rights law. It follows the refugee's journey
from flight to solution, examining every rights issue both
historically and by reference to the decisions of senior courts
from around the world. Nor is this a purely doctrinal book:
Hathaway's incisive legal analysis is tested against and applied to
hundreds of protection challenges around the world, ensuring the
relevance of this book's analysis to responding to the hard facts
of refugee life on the ground.
This book provides an up-to-date interdisciplinary assessment of
the accountability of executive power in different European States
and at the European Union level. From a legal perspective, it
wonders to what extent the forms of responsibility and
accountability of executive power have evolved in terms of legal
technique or framework. From a historical perspective, it looks at
the evolution of responsibility paradigms. From a political science
perspective, it examines responsibility and the expectations of
European democracies in terms of authority and efficiency. The
volume also has a quantitative aspect identifying, gathering and
analysing statistical material on responsibility and accountability
in current political regimes. The book will be a valuable resource
for researchers, academics, and policy-makers in constitutional law
and politics, public law, comparative law, comparative politics,
legal history and government.
Discrimination and the Law provides an exploration and evaluation
of discrimination law, focusing primarily on discrimination in
employment. Introducing readers to the concepts of equality and the
historical origins of discrimination law, Malcolm Sargeant explores
the wider political, social and economic contexts through which
discrimination law has evolved. The second edition has been
thoroughly updated and includes a new chapter considering
discrimination against trade unionists, discrimination against
'non-standard' workers as well as the public sector equality duty.
The book begins with an examination of what is meant by such
concepts as equality and discrimination followed by an analysis of
the Equality Act 2010 and the impact of EU and international law.
All the protected characteristics contained in the Equality Act
2010 are critically considered (age, disability, gender
reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, pregnancy and
maternity, race, religion or belief, sex, sexual orientation).
Issues not covered by the legislation such as those relating to
multiple discrimination and caste discrimination are also analysed.
Important cases from the UK courts as well as international courts
are considered. The book also contains an appendix with the most
relevant parts of the 2010 Act. Important cases are highlighted in
the text and some reflections as the basis for further discussion
are included at the end of each chapter. This is an essential
introduction to the wide-ranging law relating to discrimination in
the UK for law, HRM and business students.
This book uses a practice-driven and empirically founded approach
to address the question of whether and how international attention
can protect and enable domestic human rights activists in
authoritarian settings. It examines the untold origin story of the
‘human rights defender’ term and its uptake among international
advocacy organizations, which coalesced with the rise of a theory
of human rights change centered around the support for local
actors. Rich with analyses of original qualitative and quantitative
data, the author spells out this theory of change and tests its
assumptions in two case studies: the individual casework of the UN
special procedures, and the case of Tunisia under Ben Ali. This
book is of key interest to scholars and students of human rights,
of the United Nations, and more broadly of international relations
and politics in general, and to practitioners working with human
rights defenders at risk.
Since the end of World War II, the ongoing efforts aimed at
criminal prosecution, restitution, and other forms of justice in
the wake of the Holocaust have constituted one of the most
significant episodes in the history of human rights and
international law. As such, they have attracted sustained attention
from historians and legal scholars. This edited collection
substantially enlarges the topical and disciplinary scope of this
burgeoning field, exploring such varied subjects as literary
analysis of Hannah Arendt's work, the restitution case for Gustav
Klimt's Beethoven Frieze, and the ritualistic aspects of criminal
trials.
The question of whether non-state actors have human rights
obligations is ultimately dependent on what we mean when we speak
of human rights and what entities we consider to be non-state
actors. Focusing the debate, this important collection presents an
essential set of contributions which address these questions.This
research review provides the context for the selection of papers
that, first offer a general overview, and then a focus on the roles
and impact of national legal orders, international organizations,
corporations and rebel groups. This title is essential reading for
anyone interested in the fast-moving developments related to the
ways human rights law now applies to non-state actors.
|
You may like...
Sandra Blow
Michael Bird
Paperback
R791
Discovery Miles 7 910
|