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Recent events in South America, central Europe, Africa, and Russia
have again brought to the world's attention the complex
interrelationship between states of emergency and the preservation
of fundamental human rights. In Human Rights in Crisis, Joan
Fitzpatrick offers the first systematic and comprehensive effort to
examine the multifaceted system for monitoring human rights abuses
under "states of exception." Unlike previous studies, this book
does not focus on substantive norms governing crises, but rather on
how those norms might best be implemented. Building upon her
six-year study for the International Law Association, the author
confronts the difficulties in defining a coherent concept of
emergency, particularly the various forms of de facto emergencies
that have been relatively neglected by international monitors. She
also profiles and carefully critiques the numerous international
bodies that have monitored human rights abuses during states of
exception. These bodies include not only the treaty organs of the
United Nations, the Council of Europe, and the Organization of
American States but also the political organs of the United Nations
(especially the Commission on Human Rights), the International
Labor Organization, and the emerging structures of the Conference
on Security and Cooperation in Europe.
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