Since 1945, two developments in human rights law have challenged the dominion of the sovereignty norm. First, the international community has recognized the existence of competing human rights norms, some of which now compete with the sovereignty norm for primacy. Second, a diverse group of institutions has applied these norms to challenge the sovereignty norm by imposing civil and criminal liability on government officials when they commit human rights violations. This essay examines how the sovereignty norm has been challenged through human rights litigation. Two recent human rights cases. Filartiga v. Pena-Irala and Regina v. Bow Street Metropolitan Stipendiary Magistrate, ex parte Pinochet. illustrate the emergence of these normative an...
The Universalism-Cultural Relativism debate proceeds on the assumption that international human ri...
At the time this Article was written, delegations from forty-five countries were in the process of d...
This article explores the interplay between historicized law and normative standards of human rights...
The international legal boundary between states; rights and human rights is not fixed. Long ago, the...
This unique book examines the role and impact of human rights norms in international courts other th...
This Essay contends that popular sovereignty and the other rights enumerated in the Universal Declar...
This inquiry explores the tension between state sovereignty and universal human rights. Research is...
The question for us international lawyers is how, and how much of, public sentiment for human right...
It has been twenty years since the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit issued its landmark de...
In this article it is contended that state practice, as evidenced in the declarations of the judicia...
This article will catalogue the various contexts in which United States courts have agreed or refuse...
In the aftermath of gross human rights abuses, when, if at all, should we forego legal accountabilit...
This thesis addresses the complicated and controversial relationship between the international doctr...
The emergence of an international law of human rights has substantially complicated the application ...
The authors examine the potential of human rights litigation in the context of post-colonial conflic...
The Universalism-Cultural Relativism debate proceeds on the assumption that international human ri...
At the time this Article was written, delegations from forty-five countries were in the process of d...
This article explores the interplay between historicized law and normative standards of human rights...
The international legal boundary between states; rights and human rights is not fixed. Long ago, the...
This unique book examines the role and impact of human rights norms in international courts other th...
This Essay contends that popular sovereignty and the other rights enumerated in the Universal Declar...
This inquiry explores the tension between state sovereignty and universal human rights. Research is...
The question for us international lawyers is how, and how much of, public sentiment for human right...
It has been twenty years since the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit issued its landmark de...
In this article it is contended that state practice, as evidenced in the declarations of the judicia...
This article will catalogue the various contexts in which United States courts have agreed or refuse...
In the aftermath of gross human rights abuses, when, if at all, should we forego legal accountabilit...
This thesis addresses the complicated and controversial relationship between the international doctr...
The emergence of an international law of human rights has substantially complicated the application ...
The authors examine the potential of human rights litigation in the context of post-colonial conflic...
The Universalism-Cultural Relativism debate proceeds on the assumption that international human ri...
At the time this Article was written, delegations from forty-five countries were in the process of d...
This article explores the interplay between historicized law and normative standards of human rights...