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Transnational Human Rights Litigation - Challenging the Death Penalty and Criminalization of Homosexuality in the Commonwealth (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2020)
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Transnational Human Rights Litigation - Challenging the Death Penalty and Criminalization of Homosexuality in the Commonwealth (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2020)
Series: Ius Gentium: Comparative Perspectives on Law and Justice, 75
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This book analyzes the role of strategic human rights litigation in
the dissemination and migration of transnational constitutional
norms and provides a detailed analysis of how transnational human
rights advocates and their local partners have used international
and foreign law to promote abolition of the death penalty and
decriminalization of homosexuality. The "sharing" of human rights
jurisprudence among judges across legal systems is currently
spreading emerging norms among domestic courts and contributing to
the evolution of international law. While prior studies have
focused on international and foreign citations in judicial
decisions, this global migration of constitutional norms is driven
not by judges but by legal advocates themselves, who cite and apply
international and foreign law in their pleadings in pursuit of a
specific human rights agenda. Local and transnational legal
advocates form partnerships and networks that transmit legal
strategy and comparative doctrine, taking advantage of similarities
in postcolonial legal and constitutional frameworks. Using examples
such as the abolition of the death penalty and decriminalization of
same-sex relations, this book traces the transnational networks of
human rights lawyers and advocacy groups who engage in
constitutional litigation before domestic and supranational
tribunals in order to embed international human rights norms in
local contexts. In turn, domestic human rights litigation
influences the evolution of international law to reflect state
practice in a mutually reinforcing process. Accordingly,
international and foreign legal citations offer transnational human
rights advocates powerful tools for legal reform.
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