This article explores the historical roots of the Latin American region\u27s strong commitment to the idea of universal human rights, focusing on four key intellectual moments: the ethical response to the Spanish conquest; the rights ideology of the continent\u27s liberal republican revolutions; the articulation of social and economic rights in the Mexican Constitution of 1917; and the Latin American contributions to the genesis of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Constructing a narrative from these examples, the article argues for the recognition of a distinct Latin American tradition within the global discourse of human rights
As many Central and South American nations continue to experience the human rights violations that c...
Presents the history of the 1948 adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, focusing on ...
For years, historians depicted the history of human rights as the inexorable triumph of universal no...
This article explores the historical roots of the Latin American region\u27s strong commitment to th...
Roberto Gargarella surveys the landscape of Latin American Constitutionalism from 1810 to 2010, with...
Through the language of human rights, law can both reflect and constitute some of our most basic ide...
The international community focused its attention on protecting human rights in response to horrendo...
This article discusses the tension between the two constituent elements of the international regime ...
The goal of this article is to map and analyse Western and Latin American contributions to human rig...
As with many regions of the world, human rights are an issue of enduring concern for Latin America. ...
textThe Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) was adopted in 1948 as a response to the atroci...
Der Aufsatz behandelt die Entwicklung der Menschenrechte in Lateinamerika seit der zweiten Hälfte de...
A former President of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Paolo Carozza draws on his pers...
This Article consists of four parts. The first, which is more general, addresses the question to wha...
In this introduction to the issue on New Trends in Latin American Constitutionalism, Santiago Legarr...
As many Central and South American nations continue to experience the human rights violations that c...
Presents the history of the 1948 adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, focusing on ...
For years, historians depicted the history of human rights as the inexorable triumph of universal no...
This article explores the historical roots of the Latin American region\u27s strong commitment to th...
Roberto Gargarella surveys the landscape of Latin American Constitutionalism from 1810 to 2010, with...
Through the language of human rights, law can both reflect and constitute some of our most basic ide...
The international community focused its attention on protecting human rights in response to horrendo...
This article discusses the tension between the two constituent elements of the international regime ...
The goal of this article is to map and analyse Western and Latin American contributions to human rig...
As with many regions of the world, human rights are an issue of enduring concern for Latin America. ...
textThe Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) was adopted in 1948 as a response to the atroci...
Der Aufsatz behandelt die Entwicklung der Menschenrechte in Lateinamerika seit der zweiten Hälfte de...
A former President of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Paolo Carozza draws on his pers...
This Article consists of four parts. The first, which is more general, addresses the question to wha...
In this introduction to the issue on New Trends in Latin American Constitutionalism, Santiago Legarr...
As many Central and South American nations continue to experience the human rights violations that c...
Presents the history of the 1948 adoption of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, focusing on ...
For years, historians depicted the history of human rights as the inexorable triumph of universal no...