The rise of privately enforceable rights in national courts based on substantive international law is an undeniable global phenomenon. Private rights are one response to the necessity of legal institutions to cope with globalisation. Our examination centres on one aspect of this complex of problems: the availability and limits of private law remedies to human rights violations - largely, torts. This thesis presents a comparative inquiry into those rights and duties based on international law recognized in national legal orders. The thesis limits its inquiry to a few countries. Principally, the United States, and secondarily Britain, France, Belgium, and Germany. The law of Senegal, a former French colony, is also examined briefly as is Isra...
The search for means to hold accountable those responsible for egregious human rights abuses has ass...
This thesis seeks to determine how remedies inter-relate with the European rules on international pr...
International audienceThis book attempts to establish how courts of general jurisdiction differ from...
Examining the impact, both actual and potential, of human rights concerns on private international l...
The second half of the twentieth century saw an explosion of human rights law. Before World War II, ...
The article sums up the state of international human rights law as concerns the issue of responsibil...
Human rights norms have caused some evolutions in the scope of forum conflicts, conflict of laws and...
This thesis addresses the complicated and controversial relationship between the international doctr...
Under which circumstances can the European Convention on Human Rights be applied to human rights vio...
© 2003 Shanta MartinSince its elaboration in the aftermath of the Second World War, international hu...
This Article will attempt to make the case for the domestic civil action in defense of...
LL.D.The starting point of this research is the observation that the protection of human rights and ...
This second volume examines laws relating to the civil liabilities of corporations and states in con...
The research question of this thesis is if and to what extent international does international law a...
Individual human rights (political, civil, but also economic, cultural and social) may be threatened...
The search for means to hold accountable those responsible for egregious human rights abuses has ass...
This thesis seeks to determine how remedies inter-relate with the European rules on international pr...
International audienceThis book attempts to establish how courts of general jurisdiction differ from...
Examining the impact, both actual and potential, of human rights concerns on private international l...
The second half of the twentieth century saw an explosion of human rights law. Before World War II, ...
The article sums up the state of international human rights law as concerns the issue of responsibil...
Human rights norms have caused some evolutions in the scope of forum conflicts, conflict of laws and...
This thesis addresses the complicated and controversial relationship between the international doctr...
Under which circumstances can the European Convention on Human Rights be applied to human rights vio...
© 2003 Shanta MartinSince its elaboration in the aftermath of the Second World War, international hu...
This Article will attempt to make the case for the domestic civil action in defense of...
LL.D.The starting point of this research is the observation that the protection of human rights and ...
This second volume examines laws relating to the civil liabilities of corporations and states in con...
The research question of this thesis is if and to what extent international does international law a...
Individual human rights (political, civil, but also economic, cultural and social) may be threatened...
The search for means to hold accountable those responsible for egregious human rights abuses has ass...
This thesis seeks to determine how remedies inter-relate with the European rules on international pr...
International audienceThis book attempts to establish how courts of general jurisdiction differ from...