Beyond Rights

Beyond Rights
Author: Carole Blackburn
Publsiher: UBC Press
Total Pages: 202
Release: 2021-12-15
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780774866484

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In 2000, the Nisg̱a’a treaty marked the culmination of over one hundred years of Nisg̱a’a people protesting, petitioning, litigating, and negotiating for recognition of their rights. Beyond Rights explores this ground-breaking achievement and its impact. The Nisg̱a’a were trailblazers in gaining Supreme Court recognition of unextinguished Aboriginal title, and the treaty marked a turning point in the relationship between First Nations and provincial and federal governments. Using this treaty as a pivotal case study, Carole Blackburn analyzes treaty making as a way to address historical injustice and to achieve contemporary legal recognition, and explores the possibilities for a distinct Indigenous citizenship in a settler state.

Beyond Intellectual Property

Beyond Intellectual Property
Author: Darrell Addison Posey,Graham Dutfield
Publsiher: IDRC
Total Pages: 324
Release: 1996
Genre: Cultural property
ISBN: 9780889367999

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Cultural property, aboriginal people, ethnobiology, legal status, laws.

Lawyers Beyond Borders

Lawyers Beyond Borders
Author: Maria Armoudian
Publsiher: University of Michigan Press
Total Pages: 263
Release: 2021-09-07
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9780472038855

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Despite international conventions and human rights declarations, millions of people have suffered and continue to suffer torture, slavery, or violent deaths, with no remedy or recourse. They have fallen, in essence, “below the law,” outside of law’s protection. Often violated by their own governments, sometimes with support from transnational corporations, or nations benefiting from human rights violations, how can these victims find justice? Lawyers Beyond Borders reveals the inner workings of the advances and retreats in the quest for redress and restoration of human rights for those whom international legal-political systems have failed. The process of justice begins in the US, with a handful of human rights lawyers steeped in the American tradition of advancing civil rights through civil litigation. As the civil rights movement gained traction and an ample supply of lawyers, this small cadre turned their attention toward advancing international human rights, via the US legal system. They sought to build another piece of the rights revolution, this time for survivors of egregious human rights violations in faraway lands. These cases were among the most unlikely to be slated for victory: The abuses occurred abroad; the victims are aliens, usually with few, if any, resources; the perpetrators are politically powerful, resourced, and well connected, often members of governments, militaries, or multinational corporations. The legal and political systems’ structures are mostly stacked against these survivors, many who bear the scars of trauma and terror. Lawyers Beyond Borders is about agency. It is about how, in the face of powerful interests and seemingly insurmountable obstacles—political, psychological, economic, geographical, and physical—a small group of lawyers and survivors navigated a terrain of daunting barriers to begin building, case-by-case, new pathways to justice for those who otherwise would have none.

Beyond Human Rights

Beyond Human Rights
Author: Anne Peters
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 645
Release: 2016-10-27
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9781107164307

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Beyond Human Rights, previously published in German and now available in English, is a historical and doctrinal study about the legal status of individuals in international law.

Beyond Human Rights and the War on Terror

Beyond Human Rights and the War on Terror
Author: Satvinder S. Juss
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 256
Release: 2018-10-26
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9781351006040

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This edited collection provides a comprehensive, insightful, and detailed study of a vital area of public policy debate as it is currently occurring in countries across the world from India to South Africa and the United Kingdom to Australia. Bringing together academics and experts from a variety of jurisdictions, it reflects upon the impact on human rights of the application of more than a decade of the "War on Terror" as enunciated soon after 9/11. The volume identifies and critically examines the principal and enduring resonances of the concept of the "War on Terror". The examination covers not only the obvious impacts but also the more insidious and enduring changes within domestic laws. The rationale for this collection is therefore not just to plot how the "War on Terror" has operated within the folds of the cloak of liberal democracy, but how they render that cloak ragged, especially in the sight of those sections of society who pay the heaviest price in terms of their human rights. This book engages with the public policy strand of the last decade that has arguably most shaped perceptions of human rights and engendered debates about their worth and meaning. It will be of interest to researchers, academics, practitioners, and students in the fields of human rights law, criminal justice, criminology, politics, and international studies.

Human Rights Discourse in a Global Network

Human Rights Discourse in a Global Network
Author: Lena Khor
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2016-05-13
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781317119807

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In her innovative study of human rights discourse, Lena Khor takes up the prevailing concern by scholars who charge that the globalization of human rights discourse is becoming yet another form of cultural, legal, and political imperialism imposed from above by an international human rights regime based in the Global North. To counter these charges, she argues for a paradigmatic shift away from human rights as a hegemonic, immutable, and ill-defined entity toward one that recognizes human rights as a social construct comprised of language and of language use. She proposes a new theoretical framework based on a global discourse network of human rights, supporting her model with case studies that examine the words and actions of witnesses to genocide (Paul Rusesabagina) and humanitarian organizations (Doctors Without Borders). She also analyzes the language of texts such as Michael Ondaatje's Anil's Ghost. Khor's idea of a globally networked structure of human rights discourse enables actors (textual and human) who tap into or are linked into this rapidly globalizing system of networks to increase their power as speaking subjects and, in so doing, to influence the range of acceptable meanings and practices of human rights in the cultural sphere. Khor’s book is a unique and important contribution to the study of human rights in the humanities that revitalizes viable notions of agency and liberatory network power in fields that have been dominated by negative visions of human capacity and moral action.

Beyond Listening

Beyond Listening
Author: Clark, Alison,Peter Moss,Kjørholt, Anne Trine
Publsiher: Policy Press
Total Pages: 208
Release: 2005-10-19
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9781861346124

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From both an international perspective and through combining theory, practice and reflection, this book examines critically how listening to young children in early childhood services is understood and practiced.

Rights Beyond Borders

Rights Beyond Borders
Author: Rosemary Foot
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 309
Release: 2000
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780198297758

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Part One: The setting