The Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) was adopted on 10 December 1948 by the United Nations General Assembly. We have thus seen 65 years of the international project of addressing human rights issues at a global level through the United Nations and associated organisations. Human rights occupy a paradoxical place in international politics. Human rights treaties address the most intimate issues of personal freedom, autonomy and self-determination, but the institutions developed for the promotion of human rights operate at a global level seemingly distanced from this intimate and individual scale. In human rights advocacy there is thus constant mediation between the individual, the local, the national, the regional and the global. ...
Over the past few decades, the human rights movement has made impressive inroads in Asia: human righ...
Human rights are everywhere —. in constitutions, in the courts, in the media, in international dipl...
In 2007, Andrew Byrnes and Andrea Durbach received a grant from the Australian Research Council to i...
Many challenges exist regarding the discourse over human rights in South East Asia due to the comple...
The purpose of my dissertation is to examine whether and how national human rights institutions (NHR...
The Asia-Pacific region is the only area of the world without. a human rights regime. This piece ev...
This study analyses the progress made toward establishing a cohesive regional human rights framework...
Report from the Human Rights in Asia 2010 conference held at the Human Rights Centre at the Universi...
This is the first book that explicitly outlines Asian contributions to the elaboration of universal ...
Report from the Human Rights in Asia 2013 conference held at the Human Rights Centre at the Universi...
Contents: Editor\u27s Note by John Nelson and Dayna Barnes Languages of Human Rights in Timor-Leste ...
Runner-up entry for the 2013 Lexis Nexis Rule of Law Essay Competition, organised by the Chief Justi...
The present research investigates how the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and its Mem...
Programme from the Human Rights in Asia 2009 conference held at the Human Rights Centre at the Unive...
The Asian values debate has been one of the preeminent human rights debates in the world for the pas...
Over the past few decades, the human rights movement has made impressive inroads in Asia: human righ...
Human rights are everywhere —. in constitutions, in the courts, in the media, in international dipl...
In 2007, Andrew Byrnes and Andrea Durbach received a grant from the Australian Research Council to i...
Many challenges exist regarding the discourse over human rights in South East Asia due to the comple...
The purpose of my dissertation is to examine whether and how national human rights institutions (NHR...
The Asia-Pacific region is the only area of the world without. a human rights regime. This piece ev...
This study analyses the progress made toward establishing a cohesive regional human rights framework...
Report from the Human Rights in Asia 2010 conference held at the Human Rights Centre at the Universi...
This is the first book that explicitly outlines Asian contributions to the elaboration of universal ...
Report from the Human Rights in Asia 2013 conference held at the Human Rights Centre at the Universi...
Contents: Editor\u27s Note by John Nelson and Dayna Barnes Languages of Human Rights in Timor-Leste ...
Runner-up entry for the 2013 Lexis Nexis Rule of Law Essay Competition, organised by the Chief Justi...
The present research investigates how the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and its Mem...
Programme from the Human Rights in Asia 2009 conference held at the Human Rights Centre at the Unive...
The Asian values debate has been one of the preeminent human rights debates in the world for the pas...
Over the past few decades, the human rights movement has made impressive inroads in Asia: human righ...
Human rights are everywhere —. in constitutions, in the courts, in the media, in international dipl...
In 2007, Andrew Byrnes and Andrea Durbach received a grant from the Australian Research Council to i...