
The latest issue of the
Human Rights Law Review (Vol. 23, no. 3, September 2023) is out. Contents include:
- Vladislava Stoyanova, Framing Positive Obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights Law: Mediating between the Abstract and the Concrete
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Antonio Di Marco, Minimum Wages Directive and Beyond: Workers’ Dignity Taken (Almost) Seriously
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Jan Essink, Alberto Quintavalla, & Jeroen Temperman, The Indivisibility of Human Rights: An Empirical Analysis
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Jeremy Letwin, Proportionality, Stringency and Utility in the Jurisprudence of the European Court of Human Rights
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Marko Bošnjak & Kacper Zajac, Judicial Activism and Judge-Made Law at the ECtHR
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Jayson S Lamchek, Ensuring Data Science and Its Applications Benefit Humanity: Data Monetization and the Right to Science
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Julie Ada Tchoukou, The Silences of International Human Rights Law: The Need for a UN Treaty on Violence Against Women
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Ulrike Davy, Decolonizing Equality—The Legacies of Anti-Colonial Struggles at International Labour Conferences, 1920–1940
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Tetyana (Tanya) Krupiy & Martin Scheinin,
Disability Discrimination in the Digital Realm: How the ICRPD Applies to Artificial Intelligence Decision-Making Processes and Helps in Determining the State of International Human Rights Law
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Lisa Mardikian & Sofia Galani, Protecting the Arctic Indigenous Peoples’ Livelihoods in the Face of Climate Change: The Potential of Regional Human Rights Law and the Law of the Sea
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Winona Kang, Whose Voice?: Female Genital Cutting and the Obscuring Effects of Top-Down Criminalisation