jueves, diciembre 5, 2024
The International Journal of Human Rights - Volume 27, Issue 2 (2023)

The International Journal of Human Rights – Volume 27, Issue 2 (2023)

ISSN: 1364-2987, EISSN: 1744-053X

The International Journal of Human Rights covers an exceptionally broad spectrum of human rights issues: human rights and the law, race, religion, gender, children, class, refugees and immigration. In addition to these general areas, the journal publishes articles and reports on the human rights aspects of: genocide, torture, capital punishment and the laws of war and war crimes. To encourage debate, the editors publish Forum pieces and discussion papers from authorative writers in the field. They also welcome comments, reflections, thematic essays and review articles and critical surveys of the literature.

The journal is essential reading for academics and students of political science and international law, officers in relevant NGOs, lawyers, politicians and civil servants, human rights activists, and the interested general public.

CONTENIDO

Articles
‘Lost in translation’: United Nations commentaries on gender stereotypes to Muslim countries
Chen Kertcher & Ornat Turin

The Rohingya refugee crisis: analysing the international law implications of its environmental impacts on Bangladesh
Mohammad Pizuar Hossain

Localised medical moralities: organ trafficking and Israeli medical professionals
Zvika Orr

Do codes of conduct really mean a change in corporate practices with regard to human rights? Evidence from the largest garment companies worldwide
Cristina Aibar-Guzmán, Isabel-María García-Sánchez & Celia Salvador-González

Conceptualising the transformative justice potential of peace processes
Sean Molloy

Repoliticising indigenous participation: FPIC protocols in Canada and Brazil
Françoise Montambeault & Martin Papillon

From human rights to human wrongs. How local government can negatively influence the situation of an individual. The case of Polish LGBT ideology-free zones*
Adam Ploszka

Refusing reconciliation with settler colonialism: wider lessons from the Maine Wabanaki-State Child Welfare Truth and Reconciliation Commission
Bennett Collins & Ali Watson

Ver también

Nicolas Boeglin

Gaza / Israël : à propos des mandats d’arrêt délivrés par la Cour Pénale Internationale (CPI)

Nicolas Boeglin, Professeur de droit international public, Faculté de droit, Université du Costa Rica (UCR). …