Catherine
MAIA
This book is
organised into six parts: International Human Rights Law in General; European
Human Rights Law; Inter-American and African Human Rights Law; International
Human Rights Law, International Criminal Law and International Humanitarian
Law; International Human Rights Law, Extraordinary Rendition and Forced
Disappearances; and the International and National Protection of Human Rights. As the book reflects, Leo Zwaak’s work has touched on
a wide range of fields, spanning the universal, regional and national
levels.
However, the
struggle to ensure the rights and freedoms of individuals is never an easy one.
It requires the commitment of those who believe in the core nature of human
rights. One such person has been Leo Zwaak. The idea behind The
Realization of Human Rights: When Theory Meets Practice is that
throughout Leo Zwaak’s professional life he dedicated himself to the
realisation of human rights. Whether acting as an encylopaedia of knowledge
when teaching human rights at the university or providing judicial trainings on
the five continents, Leo Zwaak has impacted the world of human rights in many
ways.
Foreword/Voorwoord by Johan Vande Lanotte
Introduction by the Editors
PART I. INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW IN
GENERAL
The
International Law of Human Rights Two Decades After the Second World Conference on Human Rights in Vienna in
1993
Antônio Augusto Cançado Trindade
Article 1 UDHR:
From Credo to Realisation
Bas de Gaay Fortman
Some
Reflections on Balancing Conflicting Human Rights
Pieter van Dijk
Initial
Assessment of the United Nations Declaration on Human Rights
Education and Training
Gudmundur
Alfredsson
PART II. EUROPEAN HUMAN RIGHTS LAW
The Role of
Dialogue in the Relationship Between the European Court of Human Rights and
National Courts
Michael O’Boyle
Significantly
Insignificant? The Life in the Margins of the Admissibility Criterion in
Article 35(3)(b) European Convention on Human Rights
Antoine Buyse
The
Stubbornness of the European Court of Human Rights’ Margin of Appreciation
Doctrine
Fried van Hoof
Are Judges
of the European Court of Human Rights so Qualified that they are in No Need of
Initial and In-Service Training?
A
‘Straatsburgse Myj/mering’ (Myjer’s Musings from Strasbourg) for Leo Zwaak
Egbert Myjer
PART III. INTER-AMERICAN AND AFRICAN HUMAN
RIGHTS LAW
A Barren
Effort? The Jurisprudence of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights on
Jus Cogens
Diana Contreras-Garduno and Ignacio Alvarez-Rio
Strengthening
or Straining the Inter-American System on Human Rights
Claudia Martin and Diego Rodríguez-Pinzón
Preventing
Human Rights Violations: Recommendations for Enhancing the Effectiveness of
Interim Measures Before the Inter-American and African Human Rights Commissions
Clara Burbano-Herrera, Frans Viljoen and
Yves Haeck
The Recent
Practice of the Inter-American Defence Attorney Figure During the Proceedings
Before the Inter-American Court of Human Rights
Yuria Saavedra-Alvarez
From the
Non-Discrimination Clause to the Concept of Vulnerability in International
Human Rights Law: Advancing on the Need for Special Protection of Certain
Groups and Individuals
Romina I. Sijniensky
The Debt of
the Peruvian State Towards the Inter-American System of Human Rights
Ernesto de la Jara Basombrío
PART IV. INTERNATIONAL
HUMAN RIGHTS LAW, INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL LAW AND INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW
The Right
to Truth in International Criminal Proceedings: An Indeterminate Concept
from Human Rights Law
Brianne McGonigle Leyh
Disputes
over Exemplary Justice: Kenyans Before the International Criminal Court
Edwin
Bikundo
Some
Thoughts on the Relationship Between International Humanitarian Law and
International Human Rights Law: A Plea for Mutual Respect and a Common Sense
Approach
Terry D.
Gill
A Battle
over Elasticity – Interpreting the Concept of ‘Concrete and Direct Military
Advantage Anticipated’ under International Humanitarian Law
Yutaka
Arai-Takahashi
PART V. INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS LAW,
EXTRAORDINARY RENDITION AND FORCED DISAPPEARANCES
Extraordinary
Rendition and the Security Paradigm
John A.E. Vervaele
Enforced
Disappearance as Continuing Crimes and Continuing Human Rights Violations
Jeremy Sarkin
Why is
Establishing a Systematic Practice in the Adjudication of Enforced Disappearance
Conducive to Providing Protection against this Crime?
Marthe Lot Vermeulen
PART VI. INTERNATIONAL AND
NATIONAL PROTECTION OF HUMAN RIGHTS
Partnership
between National Human Rights Institutions and Human Rights Treaty Bodies in
the Implementation of Concluding Observations
Ineke Boerefijn
Strategic
Litigation by Equality Bodies and National Human Rights Institutes to
Promote Equality
Jenny E. Goldschmidt
The
International Responsibility of the State for the Conduct of Indigenous Legal
Systems: the Case of Ecuador
Oswaldo R. Ruiz-Chiriboga
Unconstitutionality
of the Denunciation of the American Convention on Human Rights
by Venezuela
Carlos Ayala Corao
Independence
of the Judiciary in Turkey: Institutional Reforms after 1999
Birsen Erdogan
Contributing Authors
Yves HAECK, Brianne McGONIGLE LEYH, Clara BURBANO HERRERA, Diana CONTRERAS GARDUNO (eds.), The Realisation of Human Rights: When Theory Meets Practice. Studies in Honour of Leo Zwaak, Cambridge, Intersentia (554 pp.)
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