Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law. Vol. 8.
Annotation
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Otros Autores: | , |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Leiden : Boston :
Brill Academic Publishers Brill Academic Publishers [distributor]
Feb. 2005
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Contents
- List of Contributors
- Abbreviations
- Indigenous Peoples' Right to Land
- I. Introduction
- II. The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
- 1. Article 1
- 2. Article 27
- III. ILO Convention No. 169 Concerning Indigenous and Tribal Peoples in Independent Countries
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Methodological Issues
- 3. Right of Participation
- 4. Land Rights
- IV. Sami Land Rights and the Proposed Finnmark Act
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Article 14
- 3. Article 34
- 4. Case Law
- 5. Consent of the Sami Parliament
- V. ConclusionsFact-Finding by UN Human Rights Complaints Bodies
- Analysis and Suggested Reforms
- I. Introduction
- II. Forms of Human Rights Fact-Finding
- 1. Investigative Fact-Finding
- 2. Indirect Fact-Finding through the Examination of State Reports
- 3. Complaints-Based Fact-Finding
- III. Fact-Finding under the Treaty-Based Complaints Procedure
- 1. Pre-Admissibility Phase
- 2. Admissibility Phase
- 3. Merits
- IV. Fact-Finding by the Working Group on Arbitrary Detention as Complaints Body
- V. Some Implications of Current Complaints-Based Fact-Finding1. Fundamental Contradiction between Greater Judicialisation and Written Fact-Finding
- 2. Domestic Remedies: Between Usurpation and Deference
- 3. Delays due to Written Procedures
- 4. Defensive Strategies adopted by Complaints Bodies
- VI. Some Suggested Solutions
- 1. Intra-Institutional Solutions
- 2. Inter-Institutional Solutions
- VII. Conclusion
- Access to Medication as a Human Right
- I. Background
- 1. International Human Rights
- 2. Health and Human Rights
- II. The Interpretation of Human Rights ConventionsIII. Justiciability
- 1. Terminology
- 2. Economic, Social and Cultural Rights as Justiciable Rights
- IV. Conventions
- 1. ICESCR
- 2. The WHO
- 3. ICCPR
- 4. Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- 5. Other Agreements
- V. General International Law
- 1. Customary International Law
- 2. General Principles
- VI. Conclusion
- U.S. Bilateral Non-Surrender Agreements and Article 98 of the Statute of the International Criminal Court: An Exercise in the Law of Treaties
- I. Introduction
- II. U.S. Objections to the International Criminal Court and Efforts to Prevent the Exercise of Jurisdiction by the Court over U.S. nationals1. U.S. Objections to the ICC
- 2. Activities undertaken by the U.S. to exempt U.S. Nationals from the Jurisdiction of the Court
- III. The Consistency of Bilateral Non-Surrender Agreements with the ICC Statute
- 1. Article 98 in the Context of the ICC Statute
- 2. Article 98 (1): State or Diplomatic Immunity
- 3. Article 98 (2): Requirement of Consent of a Sending State
- 4. Preliminary Conclusions