The Legal Protection of Human Rights
Sceptical Essays
Herausgeber: Campbell, Tom; Tomkins, Adam; Ewing, K D
The Legal Protection of Human Rights
Sceptical Essays
Herausgeber: Campbell, Tom; Tomkins, Adam; Ewing, K D
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The value and legitimacy of using courts to limit the powers of governments in the domain of human rights is a significant ongoing debate. This book provides a critical review that explores the alternative means for protecting and promoting human rights.
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The value and legitimacy of using courts to limit the powers of governments in the domain of human rights is a significant ongoing debate. This book provides a critical review that explores the alternative means for protecting and promoting human rights.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 548
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Mai 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 152mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 975g
- ISBN-13: 9780199606078
- ISBN-10: 0199606072
- Artikelnr.: 33159338
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 548
- Erscheinungstermin: 15. Mai 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 152mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 975g
- ISBN-13: 9780199606078
- ISBN-10: 0199606072
- Artikelnr.: 33159338
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- 06621 890
Educated in Britain, Tom Campbell was Professor of Philosophy at the University of Stirling and Professor of Jurisprudence at the University of Glasgow before being appointed Professor of Law at the Australian National University and then Professorial Fellow in the Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics (CAPPE) at Charles Sturt University. He is the author and editor of several books, including Seven Theories of Human Society, Rights, and Justice. Keith Ewing is Professor of Public Law at King's College London, and is one of the country's leading civil liberties lawyers. He is the author of Freedom under Thatcher: Civil Liberties in Modern Britain (with Conor Gearty) and his other books include Bonfire of the Liberties, The Right to Strike and The Struggle for Civil Liberties (also with Conor Gearty). Adam Tomkins has held the John Millar Chair in Public Law at the University of Glasgow since 2003. Prior to that he taught at St Catherine's College, Oxford, and at King's College London. He is the author of a number of books, including the Clarendon Law Series title Public Law and also British Government and the Constitution (with Colin Turpin).
* 1: Tom Campbell, K. D. Ewing, and Adam Tomkins: Introduction
* Part One: Failures of Juridification
* 2: Adam Tomkins: Parliament, Human Rights and Counter-Terrorism
* 3: Janet L. Hiebert: Governing Like Judges?
* 4: Christopher Himsworth: . Human Rights at the Interface of State
and Sub-State: the Case of Scotland
* 5: Andrew Geddis: Inter-Institutional "Rights Dialogue" under the New
Zealand Bill of Rights Act
* 6: James Allan: Statutory Bills of Rights: You Read Words In, You
Read Words Out, You Take Parliament's Clear Intention and You Shake
It All About
* 7: Joan Mahoney: Constitutionalism, the Rule of Law and the Cold War
* 8: K. D. Ewing: The Cold War, Civil Liberties and the House of Lords
* 9: Aileen McColgan: Lessons from the Past? Northern Ireland,
Terrorism Now and Then and the Human Rights Act
* 10: Ran Hirschl and Evan Rosevear: Constitutional Law Meets
Comparative Politics: Socio-Economic Rights and Political Realities
* 11: Danny Nicol: Business Rights as Human Rights
* 12: Judy Fudge: Constitutionalizing Labour Rights in Europe
* 13: Sionaidh Douglas-Scott: Freedom, Security and Justice in the
European Court of Justice: The Ambiguous Nature of Judicial Review
* Part Two: Politicising Human Rights
* 14: Mark Tushnet: The Political Institutions of Rights Protection
* 15: Joo-Cheong Tham: Reclaiming the Political Protection of Rights: A
Defence of Australian Party Politics
* 16: Carolyn Evans and Simon Evans: Messages from the Front Line:
Parliamentarians' Perspectives on Rights Protection
* 17: Gavin W. Anderson: Human Rights and the Global South:
Transformation from Below?
* 18: Kaarlo Tuori: Judicial Constitutional Review as a Last Resort:
The Finnish Case
* 19: Thomas Bull: Preview the Swedish Way - The Law Council
* 20: Jeremy Waldron: Rights and the Citation of Foreign Law
* 21: Jonathan Morgan: Amateur Operatics: The Realization of
Parliamentary Protection of Civil Liberties
* 22: Tom Campbell: Parliamentary Review with a Democratic Charter of
Rights
* 23: Conor Gearty: Beyond the Human Rights Act
* Part One: Failures of Juridification
* 2: Adam Tomkins: Parliament, Human Rights and Counter-Terrorism
* 3: Janet L. Hiebert: Governing Like Judges?
* 4: Christopher Himsworth: . Human Rights at the Interface of State
and Sub-State: the Case of Scotland
* 5: Andrew Geddis: Inter-Institutional "Rights Dialogue" under the New
Zealand Bill of Rights Act
* 6: James Allan: Statutory Bills of Rights: You Read Words In, You
Read Words Out, You Take Parliament's Clear Intention and You Shake
It All About
* 7: Joan Mahoney: Constitutionalism, the Rule of Law and the Cold War
* 8: K. D. Ewing: The Cold War, Civil Liberties and the House of Lords
* 9: Aileen McColgan: Lessons from the Past? Northern Ireland,
Terrorism Now and Then and the Human Rights Act
* 10: Ran Hirschl and Evan Rosevear: Constitutional Law Meets
Comparative Politics: Socio-Economic Rights and Political Realities
* 11: Danny Nicol: Business Rights as Human Rights
* 12: Judy Fudge: Constitutionalizing Labour Rights in Europe
* 13: Sionaidh Douglas-Scott: Freedom, Security and Justice in the
European Court of Justice: The Ambiguous Nature of Judicial Review
* Part Two: Politicising Human Rights
* 14: Mark Tushnet: The Political Institutions of Rights Protection
* 15: Joo-Cheong Tham: Reclaiming the Political Protection of Rights: A
Defence of Australian Party Politics
* 16: Carolyn Evans and Simon Evans: Messages from the Front Line:
Parliamentarians' Perspectives on Rights Protection
* 17: Gavin W. Anderson: Human Rights and the Global South:
Transformation from Below?
* 18: Kaarlo Tuori: Judicial Constitutional Review as a Last Resort:
The Finnish Case
* 19: Thomas Bull: Preview the Swedish Way - The Law Council
* 20: Jeremy Waldron: Rights and the Citation of Foreign Law
* 21: Jonathan Morgan: Amateur Operatics: The Realization of
Parliamentary Protection of Civil Liberties
* 22: Tom Campbell: Parliamentary Review with a Democratic Charter of
Rights
* 23: Conor Gearty: Beyond the Human Rights Act
* 1: Tom Campbell, K. D. Ewing, and Adam Tomkins: Introduction
* Part One: Failures of Juridification
* 2: Adam Tomkins: Parliament, Human Rights and Counter-Terrorism
* 3: Janet L. Hiebert: Governing Like Judges?
* 4: Christopher Himsworth: . Human Rights at the Interface of State
and Sub-State: the Case of Scotland
* 5: Andrew Geddis: Inter-Institutional "Rights Dialogue" under the New
Zealand Bill of Rights Act
* 6: James Allan: Statutory Bills of Rights: You Read Words In, You
Read Words Out, You Take Parliament's Clear Intention and You Shake
It All About
* 7: Joan Mahoney: Constitutionalism, the Rule of Law and the Cold War
* 8: K. D. Ewing: The Cold War, Civil Liberties and the House of Lords
* 9: Aileen McColgan: Lessons from the Past? Northern Ireland,
Terrorism Now and Then and the Human Rights Act
* 10: Ran Hirschl and Evan Rosevear: Constitutional Law Meets
Comparative Politics: Socio-Economic Rights and Political Realities
* 11: Danny Nicol: Business Rights as Human Rights
* 12: Judy Fudge: Constitutionalizing Labour Rights in Europe
* 13: Sionaidh Douglas-Scott: Freedom, Security and Justice in the
European Court of Justice: The Ambiguous Nature of Judicial Review
* Part Two: Politicising Human Rights
* 14: Mark Tushnet: The Political Institutions of Rights Protection
* 15: Joo-Cheong Tham: Reclaiming the Political Protection of Rights: A
Defence of Australian Party Politics
* 16: Carolyn Evans and Simon Evans: Messages from the Front Line:
Parliamentarians' Perspectives on Rights Protection
* 17: Gavin W. Anderson: Human Rights and the Global South:
Transformation from Below?
* 18: Kaarlo Tuori: Judicial Constitutional Review as a Last Resort:
The Finnish Case
* 19: Thomas Bull: Preview the Swedish Way - The Law Council
* 20: Jeremy Waldron: Rights and the Citation of Foreign Law
* 21: Jonathan Morgan: Amateur Operatics: The Realization of
Parliamentary Protection of Civil Liberties
* 22: Tom Campbell: Parliamentary Review with a Democratic Charter of
Rights
* 23: Conor Gearty: Beyond the Human Rights Act
* Part One: Failures of Juridification
* 2: Adam Tomkins: Parliament, Human Rights and Counter-Terrorism
* 3: Janet L. Hiebert: Governing Like Judges?
* 4: Christopher Himsworth: . Human Rights at the Interface of State
and Sub-State: the Case of Scotland
* 5: Andrew Geddis: Inter-Institutional "Rights Dialogue" under the New
Zealand Bill of Rights Act
* 6: James Allan: Statutory Bills of Rights: You Read Words In, You
Read Words Out, You Take Parliament's Clear Intention and You Shake
It All About
* 7: Joan Mahoney: Constitutionalism, the Rule of Law and the Cold War
* 8: K. D. Ewing: The Cold War, Civil Liberties and the House of Lords
* 9: Aileen McColgan: Lessons from the Past? Northern Ireland,
Terrorism Now and Then and the Human Rights Act
* 10: Ran Hirschl and Evan Rosevear: Constitutional Law Meets
Comparative Politics: Socio-Economic Rights and Political Realities
* 11: Danny Nicol: Business Rights as Human Rights
* 12: Judy Fudge: Constitutionalizing Labour Rights in Europe
* 13: Sionaidh Douglas-Scott: Freedom, Security and Justice in the
European Court of Justice: The Ambiguous Nature of Judicial Review
* Part Two: Politicising Human Rights
* 14: Mark Tushnet: The Political Institutions of Rights Protection
* 15: Joo-Cheong Tham: Reclaiming the Political Protection of Rights: A
Defence of Australian Party Politics
* 16: Carolyn Evans and Simon Evans: Messages from the Front Line:
Parliamentarians' Perspectives on Rights Protection
* 17: Gavin W. Anderson: Human Rights and the Global South:
Transformation from Below?
* 18: Kaarlo Tuori: Judicial Constitutional Review as a Last Resort:
The Finnish Case
* 19: Thomas Bull: Preview the Swedish Way - The Law Council
* 20: Jeremy Waldron: Rights and the Citation of Foreign Law
* 21: Jonathan Morgan: Amateur Operatics: The Realization of
Parliamentary Protection of Civil Liberties
* 22: Tom Campbell: Parliamentary Review with a Democratic Charter of
Rights
* 23: Conor Gearty: Beyond the Human Rights Act