Human Rights Before International Criminal Courts
In: HUMAN RIGHTS LAW: FROM DISSEMINATION TO APPLICATION: ESSAYS IN HONOUR OF GÖRAN MELANDER, Jonas Grimheden, Rolf Ring, eds., Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2006
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In: HUMAN RIGHTS LAW: FROM DISSEMINATION TO APPLICATION: ESSAYS IN HONOUR OF GÖRAN MELANDER, Jonas Grimheden, Rolf Ring, eds., Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2006
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In: International journal of human rights, Band 17, Heft 3, S. 391-410
ISSN: 1744-053X
In: Routledge Research in Human Rights Law Series
This book addresses how international human rights law can be applied at the domestic level through a case study of the Indonesian judiciary. It discusses the position of human rights within specific areas of Indonesian law: constitutional law, criminal law and private law. It also incorporates international comparative perspectives.
In: in Sage Handbook of Human Rights (Eds. A. Mihr and M. Gibney), 2014. 749-767.
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This book provides an innovative analysis of the complex issue of judicial convergence and fragmentation in international human rights law, moving the conversation forward from the assessment of the two phenomena and investigating their triggering factors. With a wide geographical focus that include the most up-to-date case-law from the three main regional systems (the African, European and Inter-American) and the UN Human Rights Committee, the book confirms the predominant judicial convergence across international human rights law. On this basis, the book engages with an interdisciplinary investigation into the legal and non-legal factors that could explain both convergence and fragmentation, ranging from the use of judicial dialogue and the notions of necessity and proportionality to the composition of the courts and the role of NGOs. The aim is to provide the tools to understand the dynamics between human rights adjudicatory bodies and possibly foresee future instances of judicial fragmentation
In: International human rights
This book introduces readers to the major human rights institutions, courts, and tribunals and critically assesses their legacy as well as the promise they hold for realizing human rights globally, and the challenges they face in doing so. It traces the rationale of setting up international institutions, courts, and tribunals with the aim of ensuring respect for international human rights law and presents their historic development, and critically analyzes their contribution to the promotion and protection of human rights. At the same time, it asks which promises old and new (and envisaged) human rights institutions hold for safeguarding human rights in light of continuing violations and recent global trends in human rights and politics. The first section presents institutions created within the framework of the United Nations. The second part of the volume assesses how international criminal tribunals have reframed human rights violations as individual criminal acts. The third part of the volume is devoted to established and emerging regional human rights bodies and courts around the world
In: Nienke Grossman, Populism, International Courts, and Women's Human Rights, 35 MD. J. INT'L L. (Nov. 2020)
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In: The Slave Trade and the Origins of International Human Rights Law, S. 158-172
In: Studies on international courts and tribunals
In: Mashood Baderin and Manisuli Ssenyonjo (eds.), International Human Rights Law: Six Decades after the UDHR and Beyond, (Ashgate, 2010), pp. 289-304
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In: American journal of international law, Band 91, Heft 4, S. 755-756
ISSN: 0002-9300
In: Gosudarstvo i pravo, Heft 1, S. 12
The article raises and examines the problem of the possibility of Russia's participation in one of the future regional international human rights courts, which has matured after the termination of the Russian Federation's membership in the European Court of Human Rights. The author considers the following options: the Court of Human Rights in the Commonwealth of Independent States, the Court of Human Rights of the Union State of Belarus – Russia, the Asian Court of Human Rights (on the legal platform of the Association of Asian Constitutional Courts and Equivalent Institutions), etc. Being sure that Russia cannot be a member of two or more international human rights courts at the same time, the author justifies the need for States intending to create an International Human Rights Court to develop and adopt an appropriate international human rights act. Only by focusing and relying on this act, the International Court of Human Rights will be able to determine whether the rights of a person who has applied to the Court have been violated and make an appropriate ruling.
In: in Arman Sarvarian, Filippo Fontanelli, Rudy Baker, and Vassilis P Tzevelekos (eds.), Procedural Fairness in International Courts and Tribunals (British Institute of International and Comparative Law, 2015) 325-342
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