Hurst Hannum (Ed.), Guide to International Human Rights Practice, 4th edition, Transnational Publishers, Ardsley, 2004 (hard cover), ISBN 1-57105-320-4, 350 pp., USD 95.00

2006 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. 447-448
Author(s):  
Christina Binder
1985 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 447
Author(s):  
Burns H. Weston ◽  
Hurst Hannum

Author(s):  
Andre Santos Campos

Abstract The political conception makes sense of human rights strictly in light of their role in international human rights practice, more specifically by describing how they justify interventions against states that engage in or fail to prevent human rights violations. This conception is, therefore, normative and fact-dependent. Beyond this, it does not seem to have much to say about the actual nature of international human rights practice. The argument sustained here reinterprets the political conception by resorting to a heuristic device that explains how normativity can be fact-dependent: the Hartian model. The characteristics of H.L.A. Hart’s rule of recognition are useful to determine the characteristics of human rights practice from the viewpoint of the political conception. Also, they help to overcome some of the problems typically faced by the political conception, such as whether there is only one practice or many, whether the notion of human rights becomes too contingent on the way the world is currently organised, how agents can violate content-changing practices, or how reliance on current states of affairs leaves room for criticism of those states of affairs.


2020 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 135-139
Author(s):  
Anna Bulman

This Brief introduces Picture Human Rights, an initiative which seeks to explain international human rights law concepts through illustration. The inaugural series for this initiative was tax and human rights, based on the author’s interpretations of editors Philip Alston and Nikki Reisch’s 2019 book, Tax, Human Rights, and Inequality. The Brief selects some highlights from this series and explains the relevance of Picture Human Rights to modern human rights practice and advocacy.


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