Publications

Working Papers

The working paper series of the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice showcases cutting-edge scholarship on human rights. Emphasizing both traditionally legal and interdisciplinary analyses, the working paper series focuses on economic and social rights, globalization and human rights, transitional justice, and processes of discrimination and marginalization.

For more information and guidelines for submission, click here. Find more working papers series at the Institute for International Law and Justice, Hauser Global Law Program, and the Jean Monnet Program.

2007

Catherine Sweetser, Ensuring Accountability of Peacekeeping Personnel for Human Rights Violations (No. 16, 2007)

Aoife Nolan, Bruce Porter, Malcolm Langford, The Justiciability of Social and Economic Rights: An Updated Appraisal (No. 15, 2007)

Frank Haldemann, Another Kind Of Justice: Transitional Justice as Recognition (No. 14, 2007)

2006

Julie Ringelheim, Processing Data on Racial or Ethnic Origin for Antidiscrimination Policies: How to Reconcile the Promotion of Equality with the Right to Privacy (No. 13, 2006)

Frederic van den Berghe, Good Coffee, Bad Governance? The Legitimacy of FLO (No. 12, 2006)

Margaret L. Satterthwaite, Rendered Meaningless: Extraordinary Rendition and the Rule of Law (No.11, 2006)

Louise Arbour, Economic and Social Justice for Societies in Transition (No.10, 2006)

Roger Hood, The Enigma of the 'Most Serious' Offences (No.09, 2006)

Margaret Satterthwaite, Beyond Nannygate: Using Human Rights Law to Empower Migrant Domestic Workers in the Inter-American System (No.08, 2006)

Smita Narula, The Right to Food: Holding Global Actors Accountable Under International Law (No.07, 2006)

Mini-Symposium: Out of Bounds? Extraterritorial Application of Human Rights Law

Earlier versions of the following two papers were presented at the AALS Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C. on January 5, 2006.

Christina Cerna, Out of Bounds? The Approach of the Inter-American System for the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights to the Extraterritorial Application of Human Rights Law (No.06, 2006)

John Cerone, Out of Bounds? Considering the Reach of International Human Rights Law (No.05, 2006)

Philip Alston, Reconceiving the UN Human Rights Regime: Challenges Confronting the New UN Human Rights Council (No.04, 2006)

Rosalind Dixon, Creating Dialogue About Socio-Economic Rights: Strong v. Weak-Form Judicial Review Revisited (No.03, 2006)

Tara J. Melish, Rethinking the "Less As More" Thesis: Supranational Litigation Of Economic, Social And Cultural Rights in the Americas (No.02, 2006)

Philip Alston, Richard Lillich Memorial Lecture - Promoting Accountability of Members of the New UN Human Rights Council (No.01, 2006)

2005

Olivier De Schutter, Globalization and Jurisdiction: Lessons From the European Convention on Human Rights (No.09, 2005)

Sandra Liebenberg, Needs, Rights and Transformation: Adjudicating Social Rights (No.08, 2005)

Philip Alston, Assessing the Strengths and Weaknesses of the European Social Charter's Supervisory System (No.07, 2005)

Philip Alston & Nehal Bhuta, Human Rights and Public Goods - Education as a Fundamental Right in India (No.06, 2005)

Philip Alston, Facing Up to the Complexities of the ILO's Core Labour Standards Agenda (No.05, 2005)

William Abresch, The Human Rights Law of Internal Armed Conflict - The European Court of Human Rights in Chechnya (No.04, 2005)

Roger Hood, Capital Punishment - The USA in World Perspective (No.03, 2005)

Mark Toufayan, Human Rights Treaty Interpretation: A Postmodern Account of its Claim to "Speciality" (No.02, 2005)

The Honorable Thomas Buergenthal, Remembering the Early Years of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (No.01, 2005)

2004

Patrick Macklem, RYBNÁ 9, PRAHA 1: Restitution and Memory in International Human Rights Law (No. 11, 2004)

Philip Alston and James Heenan, Shrinking the International Labor Code: An Unintended Consequence of the 1998 ILO Declaration of Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work? (No. 10, 2004)

Jayne Huckerby, Transitional Justice and Treatment of Refugee Returnees Suspected of Criminal Offenses: East Timor and Beyond (No.09, 2004)

Pooja Ahluwalia, The Implementation of the Right to Food at the National Level: A Critical Examination of the Indian Campaign on the Right to Food as an Effective Operationalization of Article 11 of the ICESCR (No.08, 2004)

Aarthi Belani, The South African Constitutional Court's Decision in TAC: A "Reasonable" Choice? (No.07, 2004)

Margaret Satterthwaite, Intersecting Protections, Migrating Women: Using Human Rights Law to Empower Women Migrant Workers (No.06, 2004)

Elisabeth Wickeri, Grootboom's Legacy: Securing the Right to Access to Adequate Housing in South Africa (No.05, 2004)

Angelina Fisher, The Content of the Right to Education - Theoretical Foundations (No.04, 2004)

James Cockayne, Operation Helpem Fren: Solomon Islands, Transitional Justice and the Silence of Contemporary Legal Pathologies on Questions of Distributive Justice (No.03, 2004)

Steve Charnovitz, The Labor Dimension of the Emerging Free Trade Area of the Americas (No.02, 2004)

Olivier De Schutter, The Accountability of Multinationals for Human Rights Violations in European Law (No.01, 2004)

Other Publications

See also Jean Monnet Center's Global Law Books www.globallawbooks.org and European Law Books www.europeanlawbooks.org for review of books published in the fields of European and regional integration, international law and economics, and the broader field of global economic, regulatory and cultural integration.