Global Human Rights Institutions

Front Cover
Polity, 2007 M12 3 - 225 pages
The range of global human rights institutions which have been created over the past half century is a remarkable achievement. Yet, their establishment and proliferation raises important questions. Why do states create such institutions and what do they want them to achieve? Does this differ from what the institutions themselves seek to accomplish? Are global human rights institutions effective remedies for violations of human dignity or temples for the performance of stale bureaucratic rituals? What happens to human rights when they are being framed in global institutions?

This book is an introduction to global human rights institutions and to the challenges and paradoxes of institutionalizing human rights. Drawing on international legal scholarship and international relations literature, it examines UN institutions with a human rights mandate, the process of mainstreaming human rights, international courts which adjudicate human rights, and non-governmental human rights organizations.

In mapping the ever more complex network of global human rights institutions it asks what these institutions are and what they are for. It critically assesses and appraises the ways in which global institutions bureaucratize human rights, and reflects on how this process is changing our perception of human rights.

 

Contents

INTRODUCTION
1
INSTITUTIONALIZING HUMAN RIGHTS EXPECTATIONS PARADOXES AND CONSEQUENCES
6
THE RISE OF GLOBAL HUMAN RIGHTS INSTITUTIONS
23
UNITED NATIONS HUMAN RIGHTS INSTITUTIONS
41
MAINSTREAMING HUMAN RIGHTS
103
WORLD COURTS AND HUMAN RIGHTS
152
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
164
CONCLUSION
177
REFERENCES
192
INDEX
212
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About the author (2007)

Gerd Oberleitner is Director of the European Training and Research Centre for Human Rights and Democracy at the University of Graz.

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