This widely acclaimed interdisciplinary coursebook presents a diverse range of carefully edited primary and secondary materials alongside extensive text, editorial commentary, and study questions. International Human Rights in Context , Third Edition, thoroughly covers the basic characteristics of international law; evolution of the human rights movement; civil, political, economic, and social rights; the humanitarian laws of war; globalization; self-determination; women's rights; universalism and cultural relativism; intergovernmental and nongovernmental institutions; implementation and enforcement; internal application of human rights norms; and the spread of constitutionalism. Extensively revised and restructured, this third edition incorporates new themes and topics including human rights in relation to terrorism and national security; responsibility of non-state actors for human rights violations; recent substantial changes in sources and processes of international law; achieved and potential reform within UN human rights institutions; and theories about international organizations and their influence on state behavior. It is also accompanied by a website housing the Annex of Documents. Its scope, challenging enquiries, and clarity make International Human Rights in Context, Third Edition, an indispensable resource for human rights students, scholars, advocates, and practitioners alike.
Henry J. Steiner is an Emeritus Jeremiah Smith, Jr. Professor of Law at Harvard University. His research interests concern issues of human rights and international law.
He is the founder of the Human Rights Program (HRP) at Harvard Law School, a nearly thirty-year-old program dedicated to incorporating students, faculty, and human rights organizations into the study of international human rights through applied research, regular speaker series, as well as conferences and reports.
He received his B.A. in Modern European History and Literature, M.A. in International Affairs, and LL.B. all from Harvard University.
not a standard case book, though there are reports of decisions. includes the text of various HR conventions, with articles, UNGA resolutions, declarations, and whatnot. not sure if this is the best approach, but considering that this area of law is more nebulous than most, might be the only way to do it.
A pretty comprehensive book on international human rights... sort of like the bible on it. a good primer for anyone wanting a good intro to the subject. haven't read it in a few yrs, but i think i recall being slightly disappointed with its handling of certain topics ... i think it glosses over a few topics that i thought deserved much more attention. i forget which ones, haha... what a terrible review.
[edit] as j.kou said, yes, it is a textbook so it's dense and for the most part boring. hm, yeah... read something.
International law is itself incredibly ambiguous. So when you start talking about international human rights, you've got a great forum for discussing old and new ideas. The only things in this book that are constant are the binding conventions and source doctrines...everything else is up for discussion making for very interesting debate. It forces you to understand the ongoing problems with implementing human rights and law in the world.