31. | MacKinnon, Catharine : Are women human, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Are women human : and other international dialogues / MacKinnon, Catharine, x, 419 p.. - Cambridge : The Belknap Press of Harvard U. P., 2006. ISBN 978-0-674-02555-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Part one : theory and reality:. 1 On Torture (1990) 2 Human Rights and Global Violence Against Women (1992) 3 Theory Is Not a Luxury (1993) 4 Are Women Human? (1999) 5 Postmodernism and Human Rights (2000) 6 The Promise of CEDAW's Optional Protocol (2004). Part two : struggles within states:. 7 Making Sex Equality Real (1985) 8 Nationbuilding in Canada (1988) 9 Misogyny's Cold Heart (1987) 10 On Sex and Violence: Introducing the Antipornography Civil Rights Law in Sweden (1990) 11 Equality Remade: Violence Against Women (1991) 12 Pornography's Empire (1995) 13 Sex Equality Under the Constitution of India: Problems, Prospects, and "Personal Laws" (2006). Part three : through the bosnian lens:. 14 Crimes of War, Crimes of Peace (1993) 15 Turning Rape into Pornography: Postmodern Genocide (1993) 16 Rape as Nation building (1994) 17 From Auschwitz to Omarska, Nuremberg to The Hague (1994) 18 Rape, Genocide, and Women's Human Rights (1994) 19 Gender-Based Crimes in Humanitarian Law (1997) 20 War Crimes Remedies at the National Level (1997) 21 Collective Harms Under the Alien Tort Statute: A Cautionary Note on Class Actions (1999) 22 Genocide's Sexuality (2005). Part four - on the cutting edge 23 Defining Rape Internationally: A Comment on Akayesu (2006) 24 Pornography as Trafficking (2005) 25 Women's September 11th: Rethinking the International Law of Conflict (2006) INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CEDAW; CEDAW-OP; |
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32. | Protecting children from sexual violence, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Protecting children from sexual violence : a comprehensive approach / ; Prepared by the Council of Europe programme "Building a Europe for and with children", 32 p.. - Strasbourg : Council of Europe, 2010. ISBN 978-92-871-6972-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. PART ONE: The reality of sexual violence against children in Europe and existing legal frameworks:. 1. Overview of the nature and extent of child sexual abuse in Europe. 2. The United Nations legislative framework for the protection of children from sexual violence, including sexual abuse and exploitation. 3. Sexual violence against children - The European legislative framework and outline of Council of Europe conventions and European Union policy. PART TWO: Sexual violence against children - Preventing and reporting:. 4. Children's participation in policy and practice to prevent child sexual abuse - Developing empowering interventions. 5. Towards a child-friendly justice and support for child victims of sexual abuse. 6. Against all odds - Communicating about sexual violence. 7. Sexual abuse of children with disabilities. 8. Preventing and signalling sexual violence against children - Policies and standards for child care in Europe. 9. Child helplines as awareness-raising, referral and reporting mechanisms on sexual violence against children. 10. Training professionals - An essential strategy for eradicating child sexual abuse. 11. The responsibility and co-ordination of professionals in tackling child sexual abuse. 12.Teaching children to protect themselves from sexual abuse. 13. Sexuality education and the prevention of sexual violence. 14. Gathering data on sexual violence against children. 15. Preventing sexual violence against children through citizenship and human rights education. PRT THREE: Rehabilitation and social reintegration of child victims, including child perpetrators:. 16. Recovery services for child victims of sexual violence and their families - What can be offered?. 17. Child and adolescent sexual abusers - For a rehabilitative approach driven by scientific evidence. 18. Children and young people exhibiting sexually harmful behaviour - What have we learned and what do we need to know to propose effective intervention?. PART FOUR: Sexual violence on the Internet:. 19. The Internet dimension of sexual violence against children. 20. Awareness raising to combat online sexual violence. PART FIVE: Public and private partnerships to eliminate sexual violence against children:. 21. Engaging the travel and tourism sector in protecting children from sexual exploitation. 22.Stop sex trafficking of children and young people - a unique ECPAT and Body Shop campaign. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): CRC; Convention for the suppression of the traffic in persons and of the exploitation of the prostitution of others; CEDAW; The worst forms of child labour (ILO convention no. 182); ECHR; LIBRARY LOCATION: CoE-2010 |
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33. | Gibney, Mark (ed.) : Litigating transnational human rights obligations, 2014 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Litigating transnational human rights obligations : alternative judgments / Gibney, Mark (ed.) ; Vandenhole, Wouter - (Routledge research in human rights law), xviii, 366 p.. - New York : Routledge, 2014. ISBN 978-0-415-85811-3 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction: Transnational human rights obligations, by Mark Gibney and Wouter Vandenhole. PART I: INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC GOVERNANCE BODIES:. 2. U.S. Trade Santions (World Trade Organization, Panel, by Claire Buggenhoudt. 3. Biofuel and the Right to Food (World Trade Organization, Panel), by Alexia Herwig. 4.Land Grabbing and Gender Issues (International Finance Corporation and Compliance Advisor Ombudsman), by Joss Saunders. PART II: GLOBAL (HUMAN RIGHTS) MONITORING BODIES:. 5. Putting an End to Victims without Bo rders: Child pornography (Committee on the Rights of the Child), by Gamze Erdem Türkelli. 6. Extraterritorial Shared Responsibility for the Right to Health (Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights), by Rachel Hammonds and Gorik Ooms. 7. Economic, Social and Cultural Rights of Nuba Peoples (Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights), by Jernej Letnar Cernic. 8. "Only the Little People Pay Taxes": Tax evasion and Switzerland’s extraterritorial obligations to economic, social and cultural rights (Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights), by Nicholas Lusiani. 9. Labour Rights in a Transnational Perspective (Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights), by Arne Vandenbogaerde. 10. Climate Change (Human Rights Committee, Ad hoc Conciliation Commission), by Margreet Wewerinke. 11. Land Grabbing in Uganda by a Multinational Coporation (World Court of Justice), by Christopher Mbazira. 13. Structural Adjustment and Farmers' Suicide in India (International Court of Justice), by Anita Punj. 14. (Economic) Crimes against Humanity (International Criminal Court), by Michael Wabwile. PART III: REGIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS MONITORING BODIES:. 15. Public Duties for Private Wrongs: Regulation of multinationals (African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights), by Takele Soboka Bulto. 16. Forced Evictions in Zimbabwe (African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights), by Khulekani Moyo. 17. Land Grabbing in South America (Inter-American Human Rights Commission), by Ana Maria Suarez-Franco. 18. Enforcing Extraterritorial Social Rights in the Eurozone Crisis (European Committee of Social Rights), by Matthias Sant'Ana. 19. Military Interventions in Non-European States (European Court of Human Rights), by Nico Moons. PART IV: DOMESTIC COURTS: 20. Extraordinary Rendition (U.S. Supreme Court), by Mark Gibney. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Canada / Chad / Germany / Iraq / Japan / Kenya / Korea / Nigeria / Serbia / Syria / Thailand / Uganda / Zaire / Zambia / Zimbabwe NOTE (GENERAL): AMR; Protocol of San salvador; ACHPR; CRC; ICESCR; CRPD; Genocide convention; CEDAW; CAT;ECHR; ESC; ICCPR; Kyoto protocol; Maastricht guidelines on violations of economic, social and cultural rights; Maastricht principles on the extraterritorial obligations of states in area of economic, social and cultural rights; ICCPR-OP; ICESCR-OP; CRC-OP; CRC-OP; ICC statute; UN charter; UDHR; Vienna convention onthe law of treaties; |