The purpose of this article is to evaluate the institutional and normative capacity of international human rights to effectively serve such enhanced roles in global peace and security matters. In particular, the analysis focuses on key normative and institutional weaknesses in the existing U.N. human rights system and addresses their implications for the roles which human rights might serve to enhance peace. By describing some of the system\u27s fundamental weaknesses, this analysis also indicates important areas for reform within the U.N. system
The purposes of the United Nations, as specified in Article 1 of the United Nations Charter, are to ...
The debate about the simultaneous applicability of international humanitarian law and human rights l...
This article outlines the role of international organizations in integrating human rights in the con...
The purpose of this article is to evaluate the institutional and normative capacity of international...
Douglas Donoho, The Role of Human Rights in Global Security Issues: A Normative and Institutional Cr...
In the current era of political globalization, States maintain their traditional role of protagonist...
The fiftieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1998, coming in the decade ...
The shift in sovereignty accompanying globalization has meant that non-state actors are more involve...
The aspiration towards protection of the human dignity of all human beings is central to the concept...
This Essay examines the globalization of human rights law, a rather recent legal development which h...
Does international human rights law make a difference? Does it protect rights in practice? The impor...
The continuous transfer of authority from the national sphere to inter-governmental organizations gi...
For many years, territorial principles anchored an international system organized around nation-stat...
This Article will first review how nongovernmental organizations attempt to apply human rights law a...
Does international human rights law make a difference? Does it protect rights in practice? The impor...
The purposes of the United Nations, as specified in Article 1 of the United Nations Charter, are to ...
The debate about the simultaneous applicability of international humanitarian law and human rights l...
This article outlines the role of international organizations in integrating human rights in the con...
The purpose of this article is to evaluate the institutional and normative capacity of international...
Douglas Donoho, The Role of Human Rights in Global Security Issues: A Normative and Institutional Cr...
In the current era of political globalization, States maintain their traditional role of protagonist...
The fiftieth anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1998, coming in the decade ...
The shift in sovereignty accompanying globalization has meant that non-state actors are more involve...
The aspiration towards protection of the human dignity of all human beings is central to the concept...
This Essay examines the globalization of human rights law, a rather recent legal development which h...
Does international human rights law make a difference? Does it protect rights in practice? The impor...
The continuous transfer of authority from the national sphere to inter-governmental organizations gi...
For many years, territorial principles anchored an international system organized around nation-stat...
This Article will first review how nongovernmental organizations attempt to apply human rights law a...
Does international human rights law make a difference? Does it protect rights in practice? The impor...
The purposes of the United Nations, as specified in Article 1 of the United Nations Charter, are to ...
The debate about the simultaneous applicability of international humanitarian law and human rights l...
This article outlines the role of international organizations in integrating human rights in the con...