John Morison / Kieran McEvoy / Gordon Anthony (eds.)
Judges, Transition, and Human Rights
Herausgeber: Morison, John; Anthony, Gordon; Mcevoy, Kieran
John Morison / Kieran McEvoy / Gordon Anthony (eds.)
Judges, Transition, and Human Rights
Herausgeber: Morison, John; Anthony, Gordon; Mcevoy, Kieran
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This book brings together many of the most prominent contemporary national and international human rights and transitional justice scholars in one collection. The book focuses on the intersection between judges, transitional processes and human rights discourses. It unites doctrinal, socio-legal and criminological perspectives on a range of topics including the judicial construction of national and supra-national constitutions, the role of human rights discourses in transition from conflict, and in a range of sites in more 'settled' societies. The book draws upon comparative experiences in…mehr
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This book brings together many of the most prominent contemporary national and international human rights and transitional justice scholars in one collection. The book focuses on the intersection between judges, transitional processes and human rights discourses. It unites doctrinal, socio-legal and criminological perspectives on a range of topics including the judicial construction of national and supra-national constitutions, the role of human rights discourses in transition from conflict, and in a range of sites in more 'settled' societies. The book draws upon comparative experiences in South Africa, Canada, the USA, Britain, Ireland, the Balkans, the Weimar Republic, Northern Ireland, the Republic of Ireland and elsewhere. It also situates that analysis within supra-national and sub national frameworks.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: OUP Oxford
- Seitenzahl: 600
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. März 2007
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 1057g
- ISBN-13: 9780199204939
- ISBN-10: 0199204934
- Artikelnr.: 23186995
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: OUP Oxford
- Seitenzahl: 600
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. März 2007
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 36mm
- Gewicht: 1057g
- ISBN-13: 9780199204939
- ISBN-10: 0199204934
- Artikelnr.: 23186995
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
John Morison is Professor of Jurisprudence and Head of the School of Law at Queens University Belfast. He has written widely in the fields of public law and legal theory. Kieran McEvoy is Professor of Law and Transitional Justice and Director of the Institute of Criminology and Criminal Justice, School of Law Queens University Belfast. He has written widely in the fields of criminology, conflict transformation and transitional justice. Dr Gordon Anthony is a Senior Lecturer in Law, School of Law Queens University Belfast. He has published widely in the fields of public law and human rights.
* 1: John Morison, Kieran McEvoy, Gordon Anthony: Judges, Transition
and Human Rights Cultures
* I Judges
* 2: Martin Flaherty: Judicial Globalisation in the Service of
Self-Government
* 3: Robert Harmsen: The European Court of Human Rights as a
"Constitutional Court": Definitional Debates and the Dynamics of
Reform
* 4: David Harris: The Right to a Fair Trial in Civil Cases under the
European Convention on Human Rights
* 5: Tom Zwart: The Ebb and Flow of Judicial Scrutiny
* 6: Hugh Corder: Judicial Policy in a Transforming Constitution
* 7: John Morison, Marie Lynch: Litigating the Agreement: Towards a New
Judicial Constitutionalism for the UK from Northern Ireland
* 8: Brice Dickson: The House of Lords and the Northern Ireland
Conflict: A Sequel
* II Transition
* 9: Christine Bell, Colm Campbell, Fionnuala Nà Aoláin: Transitional
Justice, Rule of Law and International Discourses: Convergence or
Divergence
* 10: Tom Hadden: Human Rights and Conflict Resolution
* 11: Paul Hainsworth: East Timor: Transition, Human Rights and Justice
In The United Nation's Newest State
* 12: Gerard Quinn: Two Uses of the "Tactic of Legality": The Collapse
and Replacement of the Weimar and Irish Free State
* 13: William Schabas: Ireland's Role in the Drafting of the European
Convention on Human Rights
* 14: Kieran McEvoy, Rachel Rebouche: Lawyers and Political
Transformation ; Towards a Sociology of the Legal Profession in
Transition
* 15: Rachel Murray: The Added Value of a Human Rights Commission
* 16: Chris McCrudden: The Council of Europe Framework Convention on
National Minorities and Northern Ireland: How not to Internationalize
Human Rights Discourse
* 17: Maggie Beirne, Martin O'Brien: A View From Below : Northern
Ireland, Human Rights Campaigning and the War on Terror
* III Human Rights Cultures
* 18: Kevin Boyle: Linking Human rights to Other Things
* 19: Sally Wheeler: Human Rights and the Multi-national Corporate
Enterprise
* 20: Gordon Anthony, Paul Mageean: Opportunities and Obfuscations:
Article 2 ECHR in Post-conflict Northern Ireland
* 21: David Feldman: Constitutionalism, Deliberative Democracy and
Human Rights
* 22: Murray Hunt: Reshaping Constitutionalism: the Role of the Joint
Committee on Human Rights
* 23: Elizabeth Meehan: Human Rights and Women's Rights; The Appeal to
an International Agenda in the Promotion of Women's Equal Citizenship
* 24: Lesley McEvoy, Laura Lundy: Securing a Human Rights Culture
through the Protection, Promotion and Fulfilment of Children's Rights
in Schools
* 25: Colin Harvey: Protecting the Marginalised? The Role of Human
Rights Law
* 26: ThÃ(c)rÿse Murphy, Noel Whitty: Risk and Human Rights
and Human Rights Cultures
* I Judges
* 2: Martin Flaherty: Judicial Globalisation in the Service of
Self-Government
* 3: Robert Harmsen: The European Court of Human Rights as a
"Constitutional Court": Definitional Debates and the Dynamics of
Reform
* 4: David Harris: The Right to a Fair Trial in Civil Cases under the
European Convention on Human Rights
* 5: Tom Zwart: The Ebb and Flow of Judicial Scrutiny
* 6: Hugh Corder: Judicial Policy in a Transforming Constitution
* 7: John Morison, Marie Lynch: Litigating the Agreement: Towards a New
Judicial Constitutionalism for the UK from Northern Ireland
* 8: Brice Dickson: The House of Lords and the Northern Ireland
Conflict: A Sequel
* II Transition
* 9: Christine Bell, Colm Campbell, Fionnuala Nà Aoláin: Transitional
Justice, Rule of Law and International Discourses: Convergence or
Divergence
* 10: Tom Hadden: Human Rights and Conflict Resolution
* 11: Paul Hainsworth: East Timor: Transition, Human Rights and Justice
In The United Nation's Newest State
* 12: Gerard Quinn: Two Uses of the "Tactic of Legality": The Collapse
and Replacement of the Weimar and Irish Free State
* 13: William Schabas: Ireland's Role in the Drafting of the European
Convention on Human Rights
* 14: Kieran McEvoy, Rachel Rebouche: Lawyers and Political
Transformation ; Towards a Sociology of the Legal Profession in
Transition
* 15: Rachel Murray: The Added Value of a Human Rights Commission
* 16: Chris McCrudden: The Council of Europe Framework Convention on
National Minorities and Northern Ireland: How not to Internationalize
Human Rights Discourse
* 17: Maggie Beirne, Martin O'Brien: A View From Below : Northern
Ireland, Human Rights Campaigning and the War on Terror
* III Human Rights Cultures
* 18: Kevin Boyle: Linking Human rights to Other Things
* 19: Sally Wheeler: Human Rights and the Multi-national Corporate
Enterprise
* 20: Gordon Anthony, Paul Mageean: Opportunities and Obfuscations:
Article 2 ECHR in Post-conflict Northern Ireland
* 21: David Feldman: Constitutionalism, Deliberative Democracy and
Human Rights
* 22: Murray Hunt: Reshaping Constitutionalism: the Role of the Joint
Committee on Human Rights
* 23: Elizabeth Meehan: Human Rights and Women's Rights; The Appeal to
an International Agenda in the Promotion of Women's Equal Citizenship
* 24: Lesley McEvoy, Laura Lundy: Securing a Human Rights Culture
through the Protection, Promotion and Fulfilment of Children's Rights
in Schools
* 25: Colin Harvey: Protecting the Marginalised? The Role of Human
Rights Law
* 26: ThÃ(c)rÿse Murphy, Noel Whitty: Risk and Human Rights
* 1: John Morison, Kieran McEvoy, Gordon Anthony: Judges, Transition
and Human Rights Cultures
* I Judges
* 2: Martin Flaherty: Judicial Globalisation in the Service of
Self-Government
* 3: Robert Harmsen: The European Court of Human Rights as a
"Constitutional Court": Definitional Debates and the Dynamics of
Reform
* 4: David Harris: The Right to a Fair Trial in Civil Cases under the
European Convention on Human Rights
* 5: Tom Zwart: The Ebb and Flow of Judicial Scrutiny
* 6: Hugh Corder: Judicial Policy in a Transforming Constitution
* 7: John Morison, Marie Lynch: Litigating the Agreement: Towards a New
Judicial Constitutionalism for the UK from Northern Ireland
* 8: Brice Dickson: The House of Lords and the Northern Ireland
Conflict: A Sequel
* II Transition
* 9: Christine Bell, Colm Campbell, Fionnuala Nà Aoláin: Transitional
Justice, Rule of Law and International Discourses: Convergence or
Divergence
* 10: Tom Hadden: Human Rights and Conflict Resolution
* 11: Paul Hainsworth: East Timor: Transition, Human Rights and Justice
In The United Nation's Newest State
* 12: Gerard Quinn: Two Uses of the "Tactic of Legality": The Collapse
and Replacement of the Weimar and Irish Free State
* 13: William Schabas: Ireland's Role in the Drafting of the European
Convention on Human Rights
* 14: Kieran McEvoy, Rachel Rebouche: Lawyers and Political
Transformation ; Towards a Sociology of the Legal Profession in
Transition
* 15: Rachel Murray: The Added Value of a Human Rights Commission
* 16: Chris McCrudden: The Council of Europe Framework Convention on
National Minorities and Northern Ireland: How not to Internationalize
Human Rights Discourse
* 17: Maggie Beirne, Martin O'Brien: A View From Below : Northern
Ireland, Human Rights Campaigning and the War on Terror
* III Human Rights Cultures
* 18: Kevin Boyle: Linking Human rights to Other Things
* 19: Sally Wheeler: Human Rights and the Multi-national Corporate
Enterprise
* 20: Gordon Anthony, Paul Mageean: Opportunities and Obfuscations:
Article 2 ECHR in Post-conflict Northern Ireland
* 21: David Feldman: Constitutionalism, Deliberative Democracy and
Human Rights
* 22: Murray Hunt: Reshaping Constitutionalism: the Role of the Joint
Committee on Human Rights
* 23: Elizabeth Meehan: Human Rights and Women's Rights; The Appeal to
an International Agenda in the Promotion of Women's Equal Citizenship
* 24: Lesley McEvoy, Laura Lundy: Securing a Human Rights Culture
through the Protection, Promotion and Fulfilment of Children's Rights
in Schools
* 25: Colin Harvey: Protecting the Marginalised? The Role of Human
Rights Law
* 26: ThÃ(c)rÿse Murphy, Noel Whitty: Risk and Human Rights
and Human Rights Cultures
* I Judges
* 2: Martin Flaherty: Judicial Globalisation in the Service of
Self-Government
* 3: Robert Harmsen: The European Court of Human Rights as a
"Constitutional Court": Definitional Debates and the Dynamics of
Reform
* 4: David Harris: The Right to a Fair Trial in Civil Cases under the
European Convention on Human Rights
* 5: Tom Zwart: The Ebb and Flow of Judicial Scrutiny
* 6: Hugh Corder: Judicial Policy in a Transforming Constitution
* 7: John Morison, Marie Lynch: Litigating the Agreement: Towards a New
Judicial Constitutionalism for the UK from Northern Ireland
* 8: Brice Dickson: The House of Lords and the Northern Ireland
Conflict: A Sequel
* II Transition
* 9: Christine Bell, Colm Campbell, Fionnuala Nà Aoláin: Transitional
Justice, Rule of Law and International Discourses: Convergence or
Divergence
* 10: Tom Hadden: Human Rights and Conflict Resolution
* 11: Paul Hainsworth: East Timor: Transition, Human Rights and Justice
In The United Nation's Newest State
* 12: Gerard Quinn: Two Uses of the "Tactic of Legality": The Collapse
and Replacement of the Weimar and Irish Free State
* 13: William Schabas: Ireland's Role in the Drafting of the European
Convention on Human Rights
* 14: Kieran McEvoy, Rachel Rebouche: Lawyers and Political
Transformation ; Towards a Sociology of the Legal Profession in
Transition
* 15: Rachel Murray: The Added Value of a Human Rights Commission
* 16: Chris McCrudden: The Council of Europe Framework Convention on
National Minorities and Northern Ireland: How not to Internationalize
Human Rights Discourse
* 17: Maggie Beirne, Martin O'Brien: A View From Below : Northern
Ireland, Human Rights Campaigning and the War on Terror
* III Human Rights Cultures
* 18: Kevin Boyle: Linking Human rights to Other Things
* 19: Sally Wheeler: Human Rights and the Multi-national Corporate
Enterprise
* 20: Gordon Anthony, Paul Mageean: Opportunities and Obfuscations:
Article 2 ECHR in Post-conflict Northern Ireland
* 21: David Feldman: Constitutionalism, Deliberative Democracy and
Human Rights
* 22: Murray Hunt: Reshaping Constitutionalism: the Role of the Joint
Committee on Human Rights
* 23: Elizabeth Meehan: Human Rights and Women's Rights; The Appeal to
an International Agenda in the Promotion of Women's Equal Citizenship
* 24: Lesley McEvoy, Laura Lundy: Securing a Human Rights Culture
through the Protection, Promotion and Fulfilment of Children's Rights
in Schools
* 25: Colin Harvey: Protecting the Marginalised? The Role of Human
Rights Law
* 26: ThÃ(c)rÿse Murphy, Noel Whitty: Risk and Human Rights







