|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
A vital reference work for navigating the language of international
human rights related to law, jurisprudence, politics, diplomacy,
and philosophy Contains over four hundred new commonly used key
terms and acronyms as well as corrections to terms that have taken
on new meaning since the publication of the original This newly
revised, greatly expanded, and updated edition is the essential
tool for navigating the language of international human rights
related to law, jurisprudence, politics, diplomacy, and philosophy.
Broadening the scope and enhancing our understanding of
international human rights, the second edition of A Handbook of
International Human Rights Terminology contains over four hundred
new commonly used key terms and acronyms as well as corrections to
terms that have taken on new meaning since the publication of the
original. It also includes new treaty instruments and citations of
important human rights instruments. Designed to be accessible to
persons from different systems and regions of the world, this
handbook fills an important void in the burgeoning discourse of
international human rights and will become a vital reference work
for specialists, students, and new
The many terms and legal expressions in the discourse of human
rights are often unknown or misunderstood in their international
context. Yet human rights have their ultimate expression in the
international legal context: in international treaties,
declarations, country-specific or thematic reports, decisions of
administrative or quasi-judicial bodies, and court judgments, all
of which employ legal terminology. The same is increasingly so in
the national legal context, which looks to the international
context as a source of law and legal interpretation. "A Handbook of
International Human Rights Terminology" is a much-needed tool that
provides access to the developing language of human rights and aids
in full comprehension of human rights theory and issues. In this
convenient handbook almost eight hundred key terms and acronyms
commonly used in international and national human rights discourse
are defined in non-technical language. Included are definitions of
foreign language terminology, including many Latin terms. A useful
appendix contains the full text of the four principal international
human rights instruments that constitute the International Bill of
Rights, along with an internationally accepted list of the specific
substantive human rights contained in those instruments. An
accessible introduction for students and newcomers to the field of
human rights, this handbook will also serve as an indispensable
reference for specialists.
|
|