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Non-State Actors, Soft Law and Protective Regimes : From the Margins.

This volume of essays examines challenges presented by non-state actors, quasi-legal norms, and gaps within normative and institutional frameworks.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Bailliet, Cecilia M.
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2012.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; NON-STATE ACTORS, SOFT LAW AND PROTECTIVE REGIMES; Title; Copyright; Dedication; CONTENTS; NOTES ON CONTRIBUTORS; ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS; 1 Introduction; Overview of the chapters; PART I Protection gaps within international criminal law; 2 Creating international law: gender as new paradigm; 3 Legal redress for children on the front line: the invisibility of the female child; 1 Introduction; 2 Crimes against humanity; 3 War crimes; 3.1 International armed conflicts; 3.2 Non-international armed conflicts; 4 Command responsibility; 5 Conclusion.
  • 4 International law, gender regimes and fragmentation: 1325 and beyond1 Gendering conflict and its aftermath; 2 Getting to 1325; 3 Lawmaking, enforcement, and 1325; 5 Who is most able and willing?: Complementarity and victim reparations at the International Criminal Court; 1 Introduction; 2 Competence of the ICC with respect to reparations; 2.1 A test of admissibility; 2.2 The Trust Fund for Victims; 2.3 Available remedies; 3 Competence of states with respect to reparations; 3.1 Domestic implementation of the Rome Statute; 4 'The false precision of geometry'; 4.1 Positive complementarity.
  • 4.2 Mass claims5 The need for guidance; PART II Measuring the impact of non-state actors within international human rights; 6 What is to become of the human rights international order in an age of neo-medievalism?; 1 The enjoyment and protection of human rights; 1.1 Reports on freedom and governance; 1.2 Overview of the international institutional human rights system; 2 The need for reevaluation of the normative underpinnings of human rights; 2.1 Cultural differentiation in human rights; 2.2 Duties; 3 Corporate responsibility for human rights.
  • 3.1 New soft law on human rights and transnational corporations4 Conclusion; 7 Productive tensions: women's rights NGOs, the mainstream human rights movement, and international lawmaking; Introduction; 1 NGO-ology: the many faces of NGOs; 2 NGOs as international legal actors; 3 Defining the women's human rights movement and the mainstream human rights movement; 4 Case studies of productive tensions
  • 4.1 Going after husbands: the reconceptualization of torture; 4.2 Human rights, Muslim fundamentalism and the war on terror
  • 5 Conclusion: rethinking the role of NGOs in international legal process, re-conceptualizing the process of women's human rights lawmaking8 Transnational challenges to international and national law: Norwegian-Pakistani women at the interface; 1 Transnational challenges to international and national law; 2 Challenges for international feminist jurisprudence: gender and legal pluralities; 3 The right to legal information without discrimination: emerging international trends; 4 Situating the case study: the Norwegian context; 5 Norwegian state law: between the international and the local.