This year marks the tenth anniversary of the founding of the Human Rights Institute (HRI) at Columbia Law School. Appropriately, it also marks the sixtieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the foundational instrument of the modern international human rights regime. When HRI was founded in 1998, it was established as a crossroads for human rights at Columbia, which would bridge theory and practice, human rights and constitutional rights, and law and other disciplines. From its inception, HRI has been a partner with the university-wide Center for the Study of Human Rights, which was established twenty years earlier as an interdisciplinary program to bring human rights scholarship into many academic fields. The Law Sch...
Compared to other Western democracies, references to “human rights” are rare in domestic American la...
One of the most important issues facing the international human rights movement is the claim that hu...
This article provides a substantive discussion of international human rights law and how it can be u...
This year marks the tenth anniversary of the founding of the Human Rights Institute (HRI) at Columbi...
In this foreword, Powell and Cleveland introduce a special volume celebrating one of a signature pro...
With this issue, the Columbia Human Rights Law Review—the first law school publication dedicated to ...
The author, who was the U.S. Ambassador to the human rights conference, discusses the American tradi...
In this century\u27s last issue of Law Quadrangle Notes, 10 faculty members reflect on their profess...
Human rights are among society’s most powerful ideals. The notion that all people have rights, simpl...
In the early 1990s, all but one Master’s degree programme on human rights in the world approached th...
The United States prides itself on being a champion of human rights and pressures other countries to...
To celebrate the 20th anniversary of the MA in Understanding and Securing Human Rights offered at th...
What effect has Professor Henkin\u27s work had upon your own thoughts or scholarship in the human ri...
Contrary to the view that the rejection of human rights treaty membership has left the United States...
This handbook was created to share the experiences of alumni of the Human Rights Advocates Program a...
Compared to other Western democracies, references to “human rights” are rare in domestic American la...
One of the most important issues facing the international human rights movement is the claim that hu...
This article provides a substantive discussion of international human rights law and how it can be u...
This year marks the tenth anniversary of the founding of the Human Rights Institute (HRI) at Columbi...
In this foreword, Powell and Cleveland introduce a special volume celebrating one of a signature pro...
With this issue, the Columbia Human Rights Law Review—the first law school publication dedicated to ...
The author, who was the U.S. Ambassador to the human rights conference, discusses the American tradi...
In this century\u27s last issue of Law Quadrangle Notes, 10 faculty members reflect on their profess...
Human rights are among society’s most powerful ideals. The notion that all people have rights, simpl...
In the early 1990s, all but one Master’s degree programme on human rights in the world approached th...
The United States prides itself on being a champion of human rights and pressures other countries to...
To celebrate the 20th anniversary of the MA in Understanding and Securing Human Rights offered at th...
What effect has Professor Henkin\u27s work had upon your own thoughts or scholarship in the human ri...
Contrary to the view that the rejection of human rights treaty membership has left the United States...
This handbook was created to share the experiences of alumni of the Human Rights Advocates Program a...
Compared to other Western democracies, references to “human rights” are rare in domestic American la...
One of the most important issues facing the international human rights movement is the claim that hu...
This article provides a substantive discussion of international human rights law and how it can be u...