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Taschenbuch (113 Seiten)
1. Auflage
Sprache: Englisch
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Today a plenitude of legal instruments for the protection of a vast number of human rights exists. Many of these rights have reached almost universal ratification. Regional courts have developed and their jurisdiction has brought relief to individual victims of human rights violations and has influenced national legislation and practice. The perpetrators of the most severe human rights violations can be held responsible before the International Criminal Court. Why is it, then, that we are still facing systematic and widespread violations, and that the gap between the high aspirations and the sobering reality, between human rights law and its implementation still exists? The establishment of a World Court of Human Rights could help bridging the gap between codified rights and reality. The idea of such a Court dates back to 1947. Due to the Cold War, however, the proposal did not find consensus among States. Thus the World Court of Human Rights was never realised and remained stigmatised as utopian. Probably due to this sense of political infeasibility, scholars have never undertaken to look into the legal possibilities of drafting a statute for the Court. The authors of this publication tried not only to come up with a solid statute but also took into consideration major challenges to the protection of human rights in our time.
| ISBN-10: | 3-7083-0734-8 |
|---|---|
| EAN: | 9783708307343 |
| Erschienen: | 17.01.2011 |
| Verlag: | NWV Verlag |
| Einband: | Taschenbuch |
| Sprache(n): | Englisch |
| Auflage: | 1. Auflage |
| Seitenzahl: | 113 |
| Länge/Breite: | 220mm/140mm |
Manfred Nowak ist Professor für internationales Recht und Menschenrechte an der Universität Wien sowie Gründer und wissenschaftlicher Leiter des Ludwig Boltzmann Instituts für Menschenrechte in Wien. Zwischen 1993 und 2006 hatte er verschiedene Funktionen als UNO-Experte für erzwungenes Verschwindenlassen inne; von 1996 bis 2003 war er einer von acht internationalen Richtern an der Menschenrechtskammer für Bosnien und Herzegowina in Sarajevo; und zwischen 2004 und 2010 übte er das Mandat des UNO-Sonderberichterstatters über Folter aus.