Sustaining human rights in the twenty-first century strategies from Latin America

Cynthia J. Arnson, Prologue 1. - Part I: The Human Rights Idea. - 1. Mark Ungar and Katherine Hite, The Arc of Human Rights 9. - 2. Alexander Wilde, Human Rights in Two Latin American Democracies 35. - 3. José Thompson, Participation, Democracy, and Human Rights: An Approach Based on the Dilemmas...

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Körperschaft: Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars (BerichterstatterIn)
Weitere Verfasser: Hite, Katherine (BerichterstatterIn), Ungar, Mark (BerichterstatterIn), Hanson, Gordon H. (BerichterstatterIn), Wilde, Alexander (BerichterstatterIn), Segarra, Monique (BerichterstatterIn), Carey, Henry F. (BerichterstatterIn), Thompson, José (BerichterstatterIn), Crahan, Margaret E. (BerichterstatterIn), Hayner, Priscilla B. (BerichterstatterIn), Burt, Jo-Marie (BerichterstatterIn), Lira, Elizabeth (BerichterstatterIn), Arnson, Cynthia (BerichterstatterIn), Weiss, Thomas G. (BerichterstatterIn)
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Sprache:eng
Veröffentlicht: Washington, D.C, Baltimore John Hopkins University Press 2013
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Zusammenfassung:Cynthia J. Arnson, Prologue 1. - Part I: The Human Rights Idea. - 1. Mark Ungar and Katherine Hite, The Arc of Human Rights 9. - 2. Alexander Wilde, Human Rights in Two Latin American Democracies 35. - 3. José Thompson, Participation, Democracy, and Human Rights: An Approach Based on the Dilemmas Facing Latin America 73. - Part II: Institutional and Legal Frameworks and the Question of Accountability. - 4. Jo-Marie Burt, The New Accountability Agenda in Latin America: The Promise and Perils of Human Rights Prosecutions 101. - 5. Priscilla B. Hayner, Reconsidering the Peace-and-Justice Debate: International Justice in Africa and Latin America 143. - 6. Thomas G. Weiss, The United Nations and Human Rights: What Is Wrong and How to Fix It 163. - 7. Mark Ungar, Crime, Society, and the Challenge to Human Rights Protection 195. - 8. Elizabeth Lira, Chile: Coming to Terms with a Traumatic Past 219. - Part III: Citizens' Movements and Conceptions of Citizenship. - 9. Gordon H. Hanson, Internation
Cynthia J. Arnson, Prologue 1. - Part I: The Human Rights Idea. - 1. Mark Ungar and Katherine Hite, The Arc of Human Rights 9. - 2. Alexander Wilde, Human Rights in Two Latin American Democracies 35. - 3. José Thompson, Participation, Democracy, and Human Rights: An Approach Based on the Dilemmas Facing Latin America 73. - Part II: Institutional and Legal Frameworks and the Question of Accountability. - 4. Jo-Marie Burt, The New Accountability Agenda in Latin America: The Promise and Perils of Human Rights Prosecutions 101. - 5. Priscilla B. Hayner, Reconsidering the Peace-and-Justice Debate: International Justice in Africa and Latin America 143. - 6. Thomas G. Weiss, The United Nations and Human Rights: What Is Wrong and How to Fix It 163. - 7. Mark Ungar, Crime, Society, and the Challenge to Human Rights Protection 195. - 8. Elizabeth Lira, Chile: Coming to Terms with a Traumatic Past 219. - Part III: Citizens’ Movements and Conceptions of Citizenship. - 9. Gordon H. Hanson, International Migration and Human Rights 245. - 10. Henry F. Carey, The Longue Durée of NGOs Promoting and Monitoring Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights in a Divided Global Civil Society 267 . - 11. Monique Segarra, Challenging Neoliberalism and Development: Human Rights and the Environment in Latin America 303. - 12. Katherine Hite, Voice and Visibility in Latin American Memory Politics 341. - Margaret E. Crahan, Epilogue: A Task for All 383
Beschreibung:Includes index
Beschreibung:X, 409 S.
ISBN:9781421410128
978-1-4214-1012-8