
The latest issue of the
International Journal of Human Rights (Vol. 20, no. 8, 2016) is out. Contents include:
- Special Section: The margin of appreciation in Europe and beyond
- Andreas Follesdal & Nino Tsereteli, The margin of appreciation in Europe and beyond
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Amrei Müller, Domestic authorities’ obligations to co-develop the rights of the European Convention on Human Rights
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Matthew Saul, Structuring evaluations of parliamentary processes by the European Court of Human Rights
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Nino Tsereteli, Emerging doctrine of deference of the Inter-American Court of Human Rights?
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Andreas von Staden, Subsidiarity, exhaustion of domestic remedies, and the margin of appreciation in the human rights jurisprudence of African sub-regional courts
- Regular Articles
- Jackie Dugard,
Testing the transformative premise of the South African Constitutional Court: A comparison of High Courts, Supreme Court of Appeal and Constitutional Court socio-economic rights decisions, 1994–2015
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Alexandre Andrade Sampaio & Luís Renato Vedovato,
Out for the money: a legal analysis of economic claims for secession in Brazil
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Lauren Marie Balasco,
The double transition of transitional justice in Peru: confronting the appeal of iron-fist policies
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Janine Natalya Clark,
Are there ‘greener’ ways of doing transitional justice? Some reflections on Srebrenica, nature and memorialisation
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Meghan Campbell,
The challenges of girls’ right to education: let’s talk about human rights-based sex education
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Isobel Renzulli,
A critical reflection on the conceptual and legal foundations of the duty to prevent torture
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Andrew Molas,
Defending the CRPD: Dignity, flourishing, and the universal right to mental health
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Vera Lúcia Raposo,
The convention of human rights and biomedicine revisited: Critical assessment
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Kate Nash,
Politicising human rights in Europe: Challenges to legal constitutionalism from the Left and the Right