31. | Husa, Jaakko : A new introduction to comparative law, 2015 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph A new introduction to comparative law / Husa, Jaakko, xii, 284 p. - Oxford : Hart, 2015. ISBN 978-1-84946-796-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction. 2. Comparative law as a discipline: a short history. 3. Comparative law: definitions and distinctions. 4. Comparative law: one of the legal disciplines. 5. Why compare?. 6. Basic strategies in comparison. 7. Comparing: differences and similarities. 8. Comparison: obstacles and difficulties. 9. Macro-comparison. 10. Legal evolution?. 11. Groupings, classifications, categories. INDEX WORDS:
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32. | Andreassen, Bård A. (ed.) : Research methods in human rights, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Research methods in human rights : a handbook / Andreassen, Bård A. (ed.) ; Sano, Hans-Otto (ed.) ; McInerney-Lankford, Siobhán (ed.), 480 p. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Publishing, 2017. ISBN 978-1-789536-778-6 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Bård A. Andreassen, Hans-Otto Sano and Siobhán McInerney-Lankford: Human rights research methods. PART I: HUMAN RIGHTS RESEARCH METHODS INSIDE DISCIPLINES. 2. Martin Scheinin: The art and science of interpretation in human rights law. 3. Siobhán McInerney-Lankford: Legal methodologies and human rights research: challenges and opportunities. 4. Hilde Bondevik and Inga Bostad: Core principles in argumentation and understanding: hermeneutics and human rights. 5. Edward Anderson: Economics and human rights. 6. Steven L.B. Jensen and Roland Burke: From the normative to the transnational: methods in the study of human rights history. 7. Sally Engle Merry: The potential of ethnographic methods for human rights research. PART II: HUMAN RIGHTS RESEARCH METHODS ACROSS DISCIPLINES. 8. Malcolm Langford: Interdisciplinarity and multimethod research. 9. George Ulrich: Research ethics for human rights researchers. 10. Bård A. Andreassen: Comparative analyses of human rights performance. 11. Hans-Otto Sano and Tomas Max Martin: Inside the organization: methods of researching human rights and organizational dynamics. 12. Margaret Satterthwaite and Daniel Kacinski: Quantitative methods in advocacy-oriented human rights research. 13. Simon Walker: Challenges of human rights measurement. 14. Kirsteen Shields: Methods of monitoring the right to food. 15. Anna-Luise Chané and Arjun Sharma: Social network analysis in human rights research. 16. Dimitrina Petrova: Researching discrimination. 17. Laura Ferguson: Assessing work at the intersection of health and human rights: why, how and who?. 18. Anne Hellum: How to study human rights in plural legal contexts: an exploration of plural water laws in Zimbabwe. INDEX WORDS:
LIBRARY LOCATION: Inst.ref. |
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33. | Van Hoekce, Mark (ed.) : Methodologies of legal research, 2013 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Methodologies of legal research : which kind of method for what kind of discipline? / Van Hoekce, Mark (ed.), 294 p. - Oxford : Hart Publishing, 2013. ISBN 978-1-8494-6499-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Mark Van Hoecke: Legal doctrine: which method(s) for what kind of discipline?. 2. Jaap Hage: The method of truly normative legal science. 3. Anne Ruth Mackor: Explanatory non-normative legal doctrine: taking the distinction between theoretical and practical reason seriously. 4. Mathias M. Siems: A world without law professors. 5. Pauline C. Westerman: Open or autonomous? The debate on legal methodology as a reflection of the debate on law. 6. Jan Vranken: Methodology of legal doctrinal research: a comment on Westerman. 7. Horatia Muir Watt: The epistemological function of 'la Doctrine'. 8. Roger Brownsword: Maps, methodologies and critiques: confessions of a contract lawyer. 9. John Bell: Legal research and the distinctiveness of comparative law. 10. Geoffrey Samuel: Does one need an understanding of methodology in law before one can understand methodology in comparative law?. 11. Jaakko Husa: Comparative law, legal linguistics and methodology of legal doctrine. 12. Maurice Adams: Doing what doesn't come naturally: on the distinctiveness of comparative law. 13. Bart Du Laing: Promises and pitfalls of interdisciplinary legal research: the case of evolutionary analysis in law. 14. Julie De Coninck: Behavioural economics and legal research. 15. Bert Van Roermund: Theory and object in law: the case for legal scholarship as indirect speech. INDEX WORDS:
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34. | Guide on poverty measurement, 2017 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Guide on poverty measurement /, 205 p. - New York : United Nations. Economic Commission for Europe, 2017. ISBN 978-92-1-117137-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Introduction. 2. Conceptual background. 3. Monetary poverty. 4. Poverty dashboards and the material deprivation indices. 5. Multidimensional poverty indices. 6. Challenges for the future. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN Millennium declaration LIBRARY LOCATION: UN library SHELF CODE: E.II.E |
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35. | McConnell, Lee (ed.) : Research methods in human rights, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Research methods in human rights / McConnell, Lee (ed.) ; Smith, Rhona (ed.), 169 p. - London : Routledge, 2018. ISBN 978-1-138-94324-7 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Rhona Smith and Lee McConnell: Introduction to human rights and research methods. 2. Rhona Smith: Human rights based approaches to research. 3. Suzanne Egan: The doctrinal approach in international human rights law scholarship. 4. Lee McConnell: Legal theory as a research methodology. 5. Rhona Smith and Lorna Smith: Qualitative method. 6. Todd Landman: Quantitative analysis. 7. William Paul Simmons and Lindsey Raisa Feldman: Critical ethnography and human rights research. 8. Sue Farran: Comparative approaches to human rights. 9. Lee McConnell and Rhona Smith: 'Mixing methods': reflections on compatibility. INDEX WORDS:
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36. | Brems, Eva (ed.) : Fragmentation and integration in human rights law, 2018 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Fragmentation and integration in human rights law : users' perspectives / Brems, Eva (ed.) ; Ouald-Chaib, Saïla (ed.), xiii, 208 p. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar Publishing, 2018. ISBN 978-1-78811-391-5 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. 1. Ellen Desmet: Methodologies to study human rights law as an integrated whole from a users' perspective: lessons learnt. 2. Mathias Holvoet and Paul De Hert: Understanding international criminal law from a users' perspective: pluralism due to contestation, integration through collaboration. 3. Derek Inman, Stefaan Smis and Edson 'Krenak' Dorneles de Andrade: Fragmentation, harmonization and the users' perspective: the Munduruku peoples' view on land and the developing standards on indigenous peoples' land rights. 4. Barbara Oomen: Fragmentation/integration of human rights law - a users' perspective on the CRPD. 5. Emmanuelle Bribosia and Isabelle Rorive: Human rights integration in action: making equality law work for trans people in Belgium. 6. Sébastien Van Drooghenbroeck and Olivier Van der Noot: Between assimilation and exclusion: is there room for an 'integrated' approach towards constitutional and international protection of human rights?. 7. Eva Brems: Smart human rights integration. INDEX WORDS:
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