Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Series editors' preface
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: reconsidering human rights from below
- 2 Sites of rights resistance
- 3 Freedom from want revisited from a local perspective: evolution and challenges ahead
- 4 Relevance of human rights in the glocal space of politics: how to enlarge democratic practice beyond state boundaries and build up a peaceful world order
- 5 The local relevance of human rights: a methodological approach
- 6 Ensuring compliance with decisions by international and regional human rights bodies: the case of the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture
- 7 Building rights-based health movements: lessons from the Peruvian experience
- 8 Defining human rights when economic interests are high: the case of the western Shoshone
- 9 Struggling to localise human rights: the experience of indigenous peoples in Chile
- 10 Enforcing environmental rights under Nigeria's 1999 Constitution: the localisation of human rights in the Niger Delta region
- 11 Conflict resolution through cultural rights and cultural wrongs: the Kosovo example
- 12 Epilogue: widening the perspective on the local relevance of human rights
- Index
Series editors' preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Series editors' preface
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: reconsidering human rights from below
- 2 Sites of rights resistance
- 3 Freedom from want revisited from a local perspective: evolution and challenges ahead
- 4 Relevance of human rights in the glocal space of politics: how to enlarge democratic practice beyond state boundaries and build up a peaceful world order
- 5 The local relevance of human rights: a methodological approach
- 6 Ensuring compliance with decisions by international and regional human rights bodies: the case of the European Committee for the Prevention of Torture
- 7 Building rights-based health movements: lessons from the Peruvian experience
- 8 Defining human rights when economic interests are high: the case of the western Shoshone
- 9 Struggling to localise human rights: the experience of indigenous peoples in Chile
- 10 Enforcing environmental rights under Nigeria's 1999 Constitution: the localisation of human rights in the Niger Delta region
- 11 Conflict resolution through cultural rights and cultural wrongs: the Kosovo example
- 12 Epilogue: widening the perspective on the local relevance of human rights
- Index
Summary
Series editors' preface
This book is the third in the series of EIUC Studies in Human Rights and Democratisation. The European Inter-University Centre for Human Rights and Democratisation (EIUC) in Venice, Italy is the principal European human rights and democratisation centre supported by forty-one renowned European universities, the European Union, the Region of Veneto, the City of Venice and other strategic partners such as Columbia University in New York, GTZ in Eschborn and regional master's programmes in all continents. Professors, researchers, teachers and experts from all over Europe and from different organisations are active in the EIUC's programmes and teaching activities. One of the main objectives of the EIUC is to create a fertile environment for research and research cooperation and the transformation of the results of that cooperation into realistic policies. The EIUC studies aim to publish the best scholarly work on human rights and democratisation resulting from that process of academic cooperation in the Venice Centre and its member universities. This includes joint projects with external institutions, groups, researchers and practitioners. The present volume is an excellent example of EIUC's attempt to act beyond the limits of the Centre's member universities and institutions and to engage in innovative discourses on human rights and democratisation issues.
The series is not limited to lawyers' discourse alone. It encompasses the scientific disciplinary and interdisciplinary dialogue on human rights and democratisation as practised in research and teaching in the Centre's activities. The present volume reflects in approach and outcome the overall aim of the EIUC series to enrich the academic discourse on human rights and democratisation with innovative contributions, which also facilitate the transfer of academic and institutional expertise into the public sphere. The contributions to the volume originate from a two-day international interdisciplinary conference, which took place in Antwerp in October 2008 organised by the University Centre Saint-Ignatius Antwerp (UCSIA) in collaboration with the Law Faculty of the University of Antwerp and EIUC on the local relevance of human rights. The conference gave inspiration and laid the foundation for the volume; however, the present book in approach and objective goes beyond the discussions at the conference.
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- Information
- The Local Relevance of Human Rights , pp. xiii - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011