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Environmental victims : an argument for compensationLayard, Antonia January 2000 (has links)
No description available.
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Indigenous peoples in international lawKingsbury, Benedict January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
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The convergence and divergence of International Humanitarian Law and International Human Rights Law.Loos, Clemens January 2005 (has links)
<p>In this minithesis, I demonstrate that International Humanitarian Law and International Human Rights Law are two distinct but related fields of law. First, the examination deals with the instance that the aim of both branches of law, the protection of human rights, is common, but the approach to reach this aim is different. In this regard, I show numerous points of divergence of both branches of law which have their origin in the fundamentally different historical developments of International Humanitarian Law and International Human Rights Law. I give the main attention to the application of both sets of law, whereby the contractions and legal gaps of the protection of human rights become apparent. The proposals dealing with the solution of these issues are discussed. I argue that a new legal instrument for a comprehensive and compatible protection of human rights is necessary, especially in times of internal strife. Regarding the question as to whether International Humanitarian Law or International Human Rights Law should apply if both branches are applicable, I take the view to apply the roman principle of law lex specialis derogat legi generali in such a way that the more specific rule whenever they have a specific justification for dealing with specific problems is applicable. Both branches of law do not merge to one, but they converge to a harmonious relationship, where they complement each other and provide the highest protection of human rights.</p>
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Reclaiming the Actual Humanness of the Subject of Rights: Learned Lessons from Rwanda and New Ethical PerspectivesRutagambwa, Elisee January 2010 (has links)
Thesis advisor: David Hollenbach / Despite the triumphalistic story of human rights progress, the twentieth century has witnessed the bloodiest human rights violation in of all of human history and the death toll of these atrocities has yet to decrease as we proceed into the new millennium. If it is evident that the egregious reality of violation of human rights is widespread and covers a large part of the globe, it is nonetheless also crucial to note that it has particularly taken on unbearable proportions on the African continent. Strangely enough, despite this extremely alarming situation, the world remains stonily undisturbed. One of the most flagrant and upsetting examples of this reality, which has distressed even the most skeptical, is the 1994 genocide of Rwandan Tutsis. In fact, nowhere else has the abstract and idealistic rhetoric of human rights, as well as the international community and the Church's commitment to human rights protection been as deeply demystified and radically questioned as in Rwanda. Hence, the present dissertation raises the question of how human rights discourse can articulate a vision of the subject of right that is not purely abstract and idealistic, but also takes into account the actual humanness of the subject of rights in his or her socio-historical condition. Furthermore, it asks how such a vision, one that is consistent with human rights exercise, can help reconstruct human rights ethics in a way that promotes greater respect for human rights for all, and how it can resolve the problem of apathy in the face of the human cry. In response to the above questions, the dissertation suggests an alternative to the inadequacy of the present human rights discourse that it articulates in two important moments. First, in a critical moment, it uses the tools of both political and liberation theologies in their respective critiques of modernity and colonial legacy of exploitative systems to formulate a threefold argument. This is an argument that challenges the epistemological assumptions, the ideological practical stance, and the perverse operation of human rights in the historical context of Africa in general, and that of Rwanda in particular. In its second moment, the argument relies on the dialogue between political and liberation theologies and, through a creative and internalized reading of their mutually constructive contributions, suggests new possible paths towards a new ethics of human rights. Such an approach not only reclaims the socio-historical conditions of the subject of rights, but it also places her suffering and its redemptive praxis at the heart of ethical concern and the struggle for human rights. Finally, it proposes an ethics that fosters a revolutionary anthropology of the suffering subject as a call to liberation and solidarity, as well as its consequential promotion of social structural transformation. / Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2010. / Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences. / Discipline: Theology.
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Access to health care in South Africa: an ethical and human rights obligationMeyer, Ellenore Dorette 15 October 2010 (has links)
MSc (Med), (Bioethics and Health Law), Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand / Access to health care is a constitutionally recognized right, under section 27
of the South African Constitution. Fifteen years post the first democratic
election in South Africa the realization of this right is the focus of this research
report. In 1997 the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC), a
statutory body assigned to evaluate the realization of access to health care,
held a public enquiry into the matter. The report was released in early 2009.
The public health care system was found to be in a „lamentable state‟. South
Africa faces a number of challenges that complicate the progressive
realization of access to health care . For example, the country is currently in
recession; the HIV / AIDS statistics is among the highest in the world placing a
huge burden on public health; South Africa has the highest income inequality
globally and the gap between public and private health care, with regards to
affordability and quality of service remains a great concern. A way of
addressing this problem is to engage ethical principles such as beneficence,
non-maleficence, autonomy and (distributive) justice. Each of these in
application can argue a case for the moral obligation to initiate a more
effective national health care system. Rawls1 (1999) emphasized the
centrality of justice in consideration of the bio-medical principles.
1 Rawls, J. 1999. A Theory of Justice. Revised edition. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University Press., 1971. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1972.
The principle of justice and its derivative, distributive justice, is of importance
when making a moral argument for equal access to health care for all. Farmer
and Campos (2004:28) rightly asks2: “What does it mean, for both bioethics
and human rights, when a person living in poverty is able to vote, is protected
from torture or from imprisonment without due process, but dies of untreated
AIDS? What does it mean when a person with renal failure experiences no
abuse of his or her civil and political rights, but dies without ever having been
offered access to dialysis, to say nothing of transplant?” There is a need for
ethicists to become more involved in arguments pertaining to the inequalities
in distribution of social goods.
Legislation and case law in South Africa also affirm the right to access health
care services and have as their grounding normative ethical tenets. The
recommendations made by the SAHRC, together with the planned national
health insurance aimed at addressing the gap between public and private
health care, can only become a reality through successful implementation of a
monitored process based on ethical principles. There is a need for a practical
implementation of current ethico-legal and human rights principles through
every phase of the health care system to serve as monitors to ensure the
success of this guaranteed right that so few people have genuinely seen
realized. The findings of the SAHRC, together with the response from the
Department of Health, serve as a basis for planning towards successful
2 Farmer, P. and Campos, N.G. 2004. Rethinking Medical Ethics: A view from below.
In: Developing World Bioethics, 4 (1), 17-41
implementation of an equitable health service system that is of an excellent
standard. To aid in this process an ethical framework could be of use to
assess the policies formed along the way as well as the practical
implementation thereof. This research report is an analysis of current
literature and data available on access to health care in South Africa in light of
human rights and ethical arguments for its provision. The aim is to reflect on
the realization of greater access to health care since 1994, identifying current
hampering factors in achieving this and proposing a broad set of guidelines
that can be applied to the reform process already underway in South African
health care.
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Justice and trust : the European Arrest Warrant and human rightsChristou, Theodora A. January 2013 (has links)
This thesis considers the relationship between human rights and the principle of mutual recognition as applied in criminal matters. It examines the impact of the European Arrest Warrant (EAW) on human rights and highlights the importance of human rights for the success of mutual recognition measures. Having embarked on the mutual recognition programme, on the basis of largely theoretical presumptions, an attempt by the EU to reposition human rights and to ensure that a genuine area of justice exists for all, can be witnessed through recent Directives on defence rights,. This research addresses the scope and method of human rights protection with focus on the implementation of the EAW. In the first part, mutual recognition and the EAW are defined. The second part considers the practical effect of the EAW on human rights, setting out the ECHR minimum standards and the extended EU scope. The third part evaluates the defence measures adopted to date by the EU under the Stockholm Roadmap. The final part summarises the main research findings which show that human rights are key to promoting mutual trust. The scope of some rights has already been extended and reinforced by the Charter of Fundamental Rights or the EU defence rights measures. The thesis argues that the best method for reinforcing these rights in practice is a tripartite collaborative approach between the EU, Member States and the Council of Europe. In order to address the tension between human rights and mutual recognition, work needs to continue beyond adoption of the Stockholm measures. It requires genuine commitment on the part of the EU institutions and Member States for the necessary amendments, adoptions, implementation and human rights protection to take place and be reflected in practice.
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Literature and the limits of human rightsHogg, Emily Jane January 2015 (has links)
In this thesis I argue that there are qualities of literary writing which can illuminate human rights discourse and, specifically, its limit points. I focus on one such limit-point: the difficulty of fully possessing human rights. Rights are most likely to be securely guaranteed under the legal system of a nation-state. However, such rights – possessed on the basis of citizenship rather than through humanness – are not always considered human rights. The position of the nation-state, the possibility of legal enforcement and the category of the human are therefore ambiguities for the discourse. Literary texts from two countries which have been central to debates about human rights – Uganda and South Africa – will provide the focus for this study. Joseph Slaughter proposes that the plot of the Bildungsroman both resembles and promulgates the citizenship model of human rights-possession. However, in texts addressing the involvement of children in war in Uganda, I read experiments with the Bildungsroman form to indicate human rights discourse’s preoccupation with merely human identity. Child soldier narratives appeal to a decontextualized, universal image of the child, while in the fiction of Goretti Kyomuhendo there is an excessive repetition of familial language and symbol which throws the traditional narrative arc of the Bildungsroman off course. Critics including Slaughter see literature as compensating for the ambivalence of human rights discourse about the possibility of its own enforcement through the law. Instead, I explore the ways in which certain texts, in the context of South Africa, enact their own irreducibility to legal categories. I make this argument through a discussion of the way the literature and the literary appear in the Report of South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission alongside readings of Antjie Krog’s Begging to Be Black and Nadine Gordimer’s Burger’s Daughter and The House Gun.
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The death penalty, the right to life and human rights in ChinaYang, Hongyan. January 1997 (has links)
Thesis (LL.M.)--University of Hong Kong, 1997. / Thesis submitted for the degree of M.Phil. April 1997." Includes bibliographical references (l. 241-250). Also available in print.
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The actual and potential roles played by Chinese NGOs in human rights promotion and protection in ChinaTang, Jie, January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M. Phil.)--University of Hong Kong, 2006. / Title proper from title frame. Also available in printed format.
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Women's human rights a global, comparative analysis /Sheeney, Shawna E. January 2006 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--State University of New York at Binghamton, Political Science Department or Field of Study, 2006. / Includes bibliographical references.
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