31. | Örücü, Esin (ed.) : Judicial comparativism in human rights cases, 2003 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Judicial comparativism in human rights cases / Örücü, Esin (ed.) - (United Kingdom comparative law series [=UKNCCL] ; vol. 22), 269 p.. - London : British Institute of International & Comparative Law, 2003. ISBN 0-904281-18-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Human Rights and the Judicial Use of Comparative Law , by Christopher McCrudden. 2. Comparative law and the European convention on human rights in French human rights cases, by Luc Heuschling. 3. The impact of the European convention on human rights on German jurisprudence, by Norman Weiss. 4. United Kingdom judges and human rights cases, by Paul Kearns. 5. Comparative law, the European convention onhuman rights and the Scottish judges, by jim Murdoch. 6. The European Court of Justice and the European Court of Human Rights : comparative approaches, by Steve Peers. 7. The Turkish experience with judicial comparativism in human rights cases, by Esin Örücü. 8. Rejected organs? The efficacy of legal transplantation and the ends of human rights in the Russian Federation, by Bill Bowring. 9. Comparative case law in human rights cases in the Commonwealth : the emerging common law of human rights, by Andrew Harding. 10. The great trek to humanr ights : the role of comparative law inthe development of human rights inpost-reform South Africa, by David L. Carey-Miller. 11. Whither comparativism in human rights cases?, by Esin Örücü. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Turkey / Malaysia / Russian Federation / United Kingdom / France LOCAL GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Scotland NOTE (GENERAL): ECHR; |
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32. | Leslie, Francis Pickering (ed.) : Americans with disabilities, 2000 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Americans with disabilities : exploring implications of the law for individuals and institutions / Leslie, Francis Pickering (ed.) ; Silvers, Anita, xxx, 410 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2000. ISBN 0-415-92368-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. Introduction: Achieving the Right to Live in the World: Americans with Disabilities and the Civil Rights Tradition / Leslie Francis and Anita Silvers. PART A : Foundations: Justice, Goodness and Disability Rights:. 1. Positively Disabled: The Relationship between the Definition of Disability and Rights under the ADA, by Patricia Illingworth and Wendy E. Parmet. 2. Disability, 3. Discrimination and Priority, by Richard A. Arneson. 4. Justice for People with Disabilities: The Semiconsequentialist Approach, by Thomas Pogge. 5. The Good of Agency, by Lowrence C. Becker. 6. At Home with My Daughter, by Eva Feder Kittay. 7. The Need for a Standard of Care, by Alasdair MacIntyre. PART B. Definitions: Who is Disabled? Who Is Protected?. 1. Does Disability Status Matter?, by Mark Kelman. 2. Biological Normality and the ADA, by Ron Amundson. 3. Impairment and Embodiment, by Mary Crossley. 4. The Supreme Court's Nearsighted View of the ADA, by Arlene Mayerson and Matthew Diller. 5. The Unprotected: Constructing Disability in the Context of Antidiscrimination Law, by Anita Silvers. 6. Stigma without Impairment: Demedicalizing Disability Discrimination, by David Wasserman. PART C.: Practical Applications: Work, Health, Congress and the Courts:. 1. Disability and the Definition of Work, by Iris Marion Young. 2. Disability and the Right to Work, by Gregory S. Kavka. 3. Market Failure and ADA Title I, by Michael Ashley Stein. 4. Studying Disability, Employment Policy and the ADA, by Peter David Blanck. PART C-2 Health:. 1. Health Care Resource Prioritization and Discrimination against Persons with Disabilities, by Dan W. Brock. 2. Utility, Equality and Health Care Needs of Persons with Disabilities: Interpreting the ADA's Requirement of Reasonable Accommodations, by David Orentlicher. 3. Disability and Illness, by Joel Feinberg. 4. Mental Disabilities, Equal Opportunity and the ADA, by Norman Daniels. PART C-3: Congess and the Courts:. 1. Disputing the Doctrine of Benign Neglect: A Challenge to the Disparate Treatment of Americans with Disabilities, by Harlan Hahn. 2. Making Change: The ADA as an Instrument of Social Reform, by Richard K. Scotch. 3. Ten Years Later: The ADA and the Future of Disability Policy, by Andrew I. Batavia. 4. ADA Title III : a fragile compromise, by Ruth Colker. 5. Courts andd wrongful birth : can disability itself be viewed as a legal wrong?, by Lori B. Andrews and Michelle Hibbert. 6. Go to the Margins of the Class: Hate Crimes and Disability, by Lennard J. Davis. PART. D. Viewing U.S. Law from Elsewhere: Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia. 1. The ADA v. the Canadian Charter of Rights: Disability Rights and the Social Model of Disability, by Jerome E. Bickenbach. 2. The U.K. Disability Discrimination Act: disabling language, justifying inequitable social participation, by Mairian Corker. 3. A Bright New Era of Equality, Independence and Freedom: Casting an Australian Gaze on the ADA, by Melinda Jones and Ann Basser Marks. Appendix. Texts of Laws and Court Decisions. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: USA / United Kingdom / Canada NOTE (GENERAL): Canadian charter of rights and freedoms; ECHR; |
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33. | Gevers, J.K.M (ed.) : Health law, human rights and Biomedicine convention, 2005 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph series Health law, human rights and Biomedicine convention : essays in honour of Henriette Roscam Abbing / Gevers, J.K.M (ed.) ; Hondius, E.H. ; Hubben, J.H. - (International studies in human rights ; vol. 85), xiv, 271 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff Publ., 2005. ISBN 90-04-14822-1 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Part A General:. The Leading Principles of the Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine, Jos Dute. Science, Law and Ethics: the Biomedicine Convention as an Ethico-legal Response to Current Scientific Challenges, Ludger Honnefelder. The Biomedicine Convention in Relation to Other International Instruments, Emmanuel Roucounas. The Global Significance of the Convention on Human Rights and Biomedicine, Elaine Gadd. Part B Provision of Services:. Right to Health Care and Scarcity of Resources, Rolf de Groot. Equal Access and Financing of Health Services in Europe, Geert Jan Hamilton. Quality of Care, Patient Safety, and the Role of the Patient, Gerrit van der Wal. Decisions on Competency and Professional Standards, Joep Hubben. The Kelly Case—Compensation for Undue Damage for Wrongful Treatment, Ewoud Hondius. Part C Rights of Patients:. Psychiatry and Human Rights, Johan Legemaate. Previously Expressed Wishes Relating to End of Life Decisions, Constantijn Kelk. Private Life: “frappez toujours”, Frank Kuitenbrouwer. Part D Research:. Freedom of Research and its Relation to the Right to Privacy, Corrette Ploem. Research on Human Subjects, Salla Lötjönen. Research on Human Embryos, Trees te Braake. Part E Human Tissue and Genetics: Protection Against Genetic Discrimination and the Biomedicine Convention, Aart Hendriks. Organ Transplantation, Herman Nys. Human Tissue Research, with Particular Reference to DNA Banking, Sjef Gevers. Part F Implementation of the Convention:. The Role of Public Debate and Politics in the Implementation of the Convention, Els Borst-Eilers. Implementation of the Convention in Central Europe: the Case of Poland, Maria E. Sokalska. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Biomedicine convention |