International Human Rights Law

Höfundur Douglas Lee Donoho

Útgefandi Carolina Academic Press

Snið ePub

Print ISBN 9781531026158

Útgáfa 2

Útgáfuár 2023

8.890 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Introduction and Preface
  • Chapter 1 | What Is the International Human Rights System?
  • A. Introduction
  • B. Historical Antecedents: World War II & the Holocaust
  • 1. The Limited Scope of International Law Prior to World War II
  • 2. Catalyst for Change: The Atrocities of World War II
  • C. Crimes Against Humanity and Evolving Recognition of Human Rights as an Essential Component of International Law
  • D. The Complex Nature of “Rights” As a Legal Concept
  • 1. The Western Conception of Rights
  • 2. A Broader International Perspective on the Nature of Rights
  • E. Putting It Together: The Founding Premises of International Human Rights
  • F. Review Questions: The Grim Reality — “Never Again” Or “Again and Again”?
  • Chapter 2 | Basic Principles of International Law Relevant to Human Rights
  • A. Introduction
  • B. General Characteristics of the International Legal System
  • C. Sources of International Law: Treaties, Customary International Law, and General Principles
  • 1. Overview
  • 2. Treaties (“Conventional Law”)
  • 3. Customary International Law
  • 4. Jus Cogens
  • D. Review Questions
  • Chapter 3 | What Rights Are Humans Entitled to Under International Law?
  • A. Introduction & Overview
  • B. Treaty-Based Human Rights
  • 1. U.N. Charter
  • 2. The “International Bill of Rights”
  • 3. Post-Covenant Developments: The Evolving Network of Global Human Rights Treaties
  • 4. United States’ Ratification of Human Rights Treaties
  • C. Customary International Human Rights
  • D. Review Questions
  • Chapter 4 | International Rights as Domestic Obligations
  • A. Introduction & Overview
  • 1. Incorporation: Traditional Distinctions between Monism and Dualism
  • B. The Critical Role of Incorporation: Domestication of International Norms
  • C. Incorporation of Human Rights Obligations into Domestic Legal Orders: The Contrasting European and U.S. Examples
  • 1. The Shining European Example
  • 2. The Not So Shiny Example: The United States’ Failure to Domesticate International Obligations
  • 3. Growing Movement Toward Domestic Implementation by Other Nations?
  • 4. The Domestic Legal Status of Customary International Law
  • D. Treaties within U.S. Domestic Law: Case Study of Capital Punishment & the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations
  • 1. Interpretation of the Eighth Amendment and the Execution of Juveniles
  • 2. Violations of the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations
  • E. Review Questions
  • Chapter 5 | Civil Liability as a Method of Domestic Enforcement of International Human Rights
  • A. Introduction & Overview
  • 1. Methods of Domestic Enforcement of International Human Rights in the United States Generally
  • 2. The “Domestication Gap”: U.S. Failure to Incorporate International Human Rights Obligations
  • 3. Caso Quemados
  • B. Civil Suits in American Courts for Foreign Human Rights Violations: ATS Litigation Against Foreign Defendants
  • 1. The Promise of Filartiga
  • 2. Sosa, Kiobel, and Jesner: The Slow Dismantling of Filartiga
  • 3. The Aftermath & Alternative Paths to Accountability
  • C. Congressionally Authorized Causes of Action: The Torture Victim Protection Act of 1991
  • 1. Overview
  • 2. Applications of the TVPA & Secondary Liability
  • 3. Common Defenses to ATS and TVPA Claims
  • 4. Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act
  • D. Domestic Enforcement of Human Rights Against U.S. Government Actors
  • 1. Overview
  • 2. Hawkins v. Comparet-Cassani
  • 3. Arguments for Domestic Accountability of U.S. Officials for Actions Overseas
  • E. Review Questions
  • Chapter 6 | Using Domestic Criminal Prosecutions to Enforce International Human Rights
  • A. Introduction and Overview
  • B. International Law Limits on Domestic Jurisdiction and the Rise of Universal Jurisdiction
  • 1. International Limits on Extraterritorial Extensions of Domestic Law
  • 2. The Expanding Use of Universal Jurisdiction
  • C. Prosecuting Human Rights Crimes in the United States
  • 1. Current U.S. Statutes Criminalizing International Human Rights Violations
  • 2. Institutional Framework
  • 3. U.S. v. Belfast
  • 4. Potential Prosecution of American Actors for Human Rights Violations in the War on Terror
  • D. U.S. Immigration-Based Civil and Criminal Actions Against Human Rights Violators
  • 1. Civil Removal Proceedings
  • 2. Immigration-Related Criminal Prosecutions
  • E. The Pinochet Paradigm: Use and Limits of Universal Jurisdiction to Prosecute Foreign-Based Human Rights Crimes Unrelated to the Forum
  • 1. Overview
  • 2. The Decision: Regina v. Pinochet Ugarte
  • 3. The Aftermath: Exportation of the Pinochet Paradigm Outside of Spain
  • 4. The Case of Henry Kissinger
  • F. Domestic Prosecutions Outside of the United States
  • 1. Overview
  • 2. Elisabeth Malkin, Former Leader of Guatemala Is Guilty of Genocide against Mayan Group
  • G. Review Questions
  • Chapter 7 | International Promotion and Enforcement Under the United Nations Charter-Based System
  • A. Introduction & Overview
  • B. Human Rights in China: The Suppression of Uyghur & Tibetan Minorities
  • 1. Generally
  • 2. Author Nurmuhemmet Yasin
  • 3. Professor Ilham Tohti
  • 4. China’s Uighurs: Islamic Extremists or Oppressed Minority?
  • C. Principal U.N. Institutions and Their Role in the Protection of Human Rights
  • 1. The United Nations Generally
  • 2. Principal U.N. Institutions
  • D. Charter-Based Institutions and Mechanisms with Dedicated Human Rights Mandates
  • 1. Overview & Historical Evolution
  • 2. Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights
  • 3. Human Rights Council
  • E. Review Questions
  • Chapter 8 | International Promotion and Enforcement of Rights Through the U.N. Treaty-Based System
  • A. Introduction & Overview
  • 1. The Treaties
  • 2. The Treaty-Based Mechanisms: General Characteristics
  • 3. Distinctions from Charter-Based Mechanisms
  • B. Case Study: Human Rights, Free Speech & the Judiciary in Venezuela
  • 1. General Conditions
  • 2. Some Specific Case Examples: The Petitioners?
  • C. How Treaty-Based Processes Function
  • 1. Periodic State Reports
  • 2. Consideration of Individual Complaints and Communications
  • 3. General Comments
  • D. Critiquing the U.N. Treaty-Based System
  • 1. Is It Really Working to Alter State Behavior?
  • 2. Are There Problems with the Premises?
  • E. U.N. Humanitarian Work and Human Rights
  • F. Review Questions
  • Chapter 9 | Regional Systems for the Protection of Human Rights: Examination of the European System
  • A. Introduction to Regional Systems of Human Rights Protection
  • 1. Overview
  • 2. James Wilets, Lessons from Kosovo: Towards a Multiple Track System of Human Rights Protection
  • 3. Chart of International and Regional Institutions with Significant Human Rights Mandates
  • B. European System for the Protection of Human Rights
  • 1. Overview
  • 2. Historical Evolution of the CoE “European System”
  • 3. Nuts & Bolts: How the ECHR Works
  • 4. Enforcement
  • 5. Critical Jurisprudence: ECHR Doctrines Relating to Its Legal Authority and Function
  • C. The Increasing Role of the European Union (“EU”) as an Enforcer of Human Rights Norms
  • 1. Overview: The EU’s Historical Development Culminating in Charter of Fundamental Rights
  • 2. Enforcement of the Charter and Relationship to the ECHR
  • D. Somewhere Between International Human Rights Law and Domestic Incorporation: The “Federalization of Human Rights Law”
  • 1. J. Wilets, The Thin Line between International Law and Federalism: A Comparative Legal and Historical Perspective on US Federalism and European Union Law
  • E. OSCE: Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe & the “Human Dimension”
  • F. Review Questions
  • Chapter 10 | Regional Human Rights Systems: The Inter-American and African Systems
  • A. Introduction & Overview
  • B. Abuse and Exploitation of Children: Street Children, Child Labor & Child Soldiers
  • 1. Overview
  • 2. Homelessness & “Streetism”
  • 3. Child Soldiers and Child Victims of Conflict
  • 4. Exploitation of Child Labor
  • C. The Inter-American Human Rights System
  • 1. The OAS
  • 2. Overview of the Inter-American System for Human Rights
  • 3. Inter-American Commission
  • 4. The Inter-American Court (IACtHR)
  • D. Critiquing the Inter-American and Other Regional Systems
  • 1. James Cavallaro & Stephanie Erin Brewer, Re-evaluating Regional Human Rights Litigation in the Twenty-First Century: The Case of the Inter-American Court
  • E. African System for Human Rights Protection
  • 1. Introduction and Overview
  • 2. The African Union
  • 3. Institutional Framework of the African Human Rights System
  • F. Review Questions
  • Chapter 11 | International Criminal Law, Humanitarian Law & Human Rights
  • A. Introduction & Overview
  • B. Historical Antecedents: Nuremberg & Tokyo Trials
  • 1. Nuremberg Trials
  • 2. The Nuremberg Principles
  • 3. Tokyo Trials
  • 4. Defining the Crimes: Some Distinctions
  • C. Evolution of International Humanitarian Law: The Geneva Conventions
  • D. Contemporary International Criminal Processes Involving Humanitarian Law and Human Rights
  • 1. Ad Hoc International Criminal Tribunals
  • E. International Criminal Court (ICC)
  • 1. Overview
  • 2. Statute of ICC
  • 3. Institutional Structure and Process
  • 4. Situations and Cases under ICC Review
  • 5. Evaluating the ICC
  • F. Review Questions
  • Chapter 12 | Universal Human Rights, Relativism, and the Challenge of Diversity
  • A. Introduction & Overview
  • B. Global Diversity: Can the Meaning of Rights Be Relative to Cultural, Social, or Religious Circumstances?
  • 1. Douglas Donoho, Autonomy, Self-Governance, and the Margin of Appreciation: Developing a Jurisprudence of Diversity within Universal Human Rights
  • 2. When Culture Collides with International Human Rights Norms
  • 3. The European Court of Human Rights Approach to Diversity in the Interpretation of Rights
  • 4. Female Genital Mutilation
  • C. Review Questions
  • Chapter 13 | Gender Rights as Human Rights
  • A. Introduction & Overview
  • B. The Circumstances of Women That Necessitate Gender-Based Rights
  • 1. The Condition of Women Worldwide
  • 2. Education, Marriage, Family Practices: A Question of Culture?
  • C. Religious Law & Women’s Rights
  • 1. Annie Laurie Gaylor, Nontract #10
  • 2. Nicholas D. Kristof, Religion and Women, Opinion
  • 3. Sharia Law
  • 4. Jewish Rabbinical Law
  • D. Cultural Practices (This Is “Culture”?)
  • 1. “Honor” Killing
  • E. Human Rights Law: Convention on Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)
  • 1. Overview
  • 2. Laboni Amena Hoq, The Women’s Convention and Its Optional Protocol, Empowering Women to Claim Their Internationally Protected Rights
  • F. Relativism & the Public–Private Distinction: Are Women’s Issues Different from Other Human Rights Issues?
  • 1. James D. Wilets, Conceptualizing Private Violence Against Sexual Minorities as Gendered Violence: An International and Comparative Law Perspective
  • G. Review Questions
  • Chapter 14 | Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation
  • A. Overview
  • B. Treatment of Sexual Minorities Worldwide
  • C. Potential International Human Rights Law Protections for Sexual Minorities
  • 1. Toonen v. Australia
  • D. Gender Identity and Sexual Orientation as Subsets of Gender Rights
  • 1. Comments by Professor Wilets
  • 2. Wilets, Conceptualizing Private Violence Against Sexual Minorities as Gendered Violence: An International and Comparative Law Perspective
  • E. Comparative Law in the Interpretation of the Indian Constitution in the Context of Transgendered Persons
  • 1. Comments by Professor Wilets
  • 2. In the Supreme Court of India, National Legal Services Authority v. Union of India
  • F. Review Questions
  • Index
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