It is sadly academic to ask whether international human rights law should trump US domestic law. That is because, on the few occasions when the US government has ratified a human rights treaty, it has done so in a way designed to preclude the treaty from having any domestic effect. Washington pretends to join the international human rights system, but it refuses to permit this system to improve the rights of US citizens. This approach reflects an attitude toward international human rights law of fear and arrogance-fear that international standards might constrain the unfettered latitude of the global superpower, and arrogance in the conviction that the United States, with its long and proud history of domestic rights protections, has nothin...
The human rights community has fiercely criticized the United States\u27 failure to make internation...
The United States practice of attaching a package of reservations, understandings, and declarations ...
The U.S. Constitution, Article VI provides that ... all Treaties made, or which shall be made, und...
It is sadly academic to ask whether international human rights law should trump US domestic law. Tha...
Does international human rights law make a difference? Does it protect rights in practice? The impor...
Does international human rights law make a difference? Does it protect rights in practice? The impor...
Does international human rights law make a difference? Does it protect rights in practice? The impor...
Does international human rights law make a difference? Does it protect rights in practice? The impor...
Published as Chapter 8 in The Sword and the Scales: The United States and International Courts and T...
America\u27s troubled relationship with international law, in particular human rights law, is well d...
America\u27s troubled relationship with international law, in particular human rights law, is well d...
Article II of the Constitution grants the President the Power, by and with the Advice and Consent o...
In recent years, the United States has appeared before four different treaty bodies to defend its hu...
The human rights community has fiercely criticized the United States\u27 failure to make internation...
This article will catalogue the various contexts in which United States courts have agreed or refuse...
The human rights community has fiercely criticized the United States\u27 failure to make internation...
The United States practice of attaching a package of reservations, understandings, and declarations ...
The U.S. Constitution, Article VI provides that ... all Treaties made, or which shall be made, und...
It is sadly academic to ask whether international human rights law should trump US domestic law. Tha...
Does international human rights law make a difference? Does it protect rights in practice? The impor...
Does international human rights law make a difference? Does it protect rights in practice? The impor...
Does international human rights law make a difference? Does it protect rights in practice? The impor...
Does international human rights law make a difference? Does it protect rights in practice? The impor...
Published as Chapter 8 in The Sword and the Scales: The United States and International Courts and T...
America\u27s troubled relationship with international law, in particular human rights law, is well d...
America\u27s troubled relationship with international law, in particular human rights law, is well d...
Article II of the Constitution grants the President the Power, by and with the Advice and Consent o...
In recent years, the United States has appeared before four different treaty bodies to defend its hu...
The human rights community has fiercely criticized the United States\u27 failure to make internation...
This article will catalogue the various contexts in which United States courts have agreed or refuse...
The human rights community has fiercely criticized the United States\u27 failure to make internation...
The United States practice of attaching a package of reservations, understandings, and declarations ...
The U.S. Constitution, Article VI provides that ... all Treaties made, or which shall be made, und...