Saturday, February 8, 2025

New Issue: Journal of Human Rights Practice

The latest issue of the Journal of Human Rights Practice (Vol. 17, no. 1, February 2025) is out. Contents include:
  • Articles
    • Juliana Jaramillo, Legal Mobilization Networks and the LGBT Rights Revolution in Colombia (1992–2022): Using Litigation and Amicus Curiae Briefs in Rights Struggles
    • Julie Ada Tchoukou, Regulating Gender Violence in Postcolonial Societies: Is Legal Pluralism a Problem for Human Rights?
    • Sapna Mesthrie, Interpreting the Child’s Right to Protection from Violence in the South African Context in Line with International Law Obligations
    • Saumya Tripathi, Sameena Azhar, & Imtyaz Ahmad, ‘We Don’t Have Any Honor Because We Are khwaja sira’: Police Violence and Discrimination Against the Khwaja Sira Community in Swat, Pakistan
    • Kristi Heather Kenyon, Saad Ahmad Khan, Fiona Vowell, & Madison Zienkiewicz, Unsettling the Familiar: Experiential Human Rights Learning through Civic Monuments at the University of Winnipeg
    • Kirsten Francescone & Lisa Rankin, Knocking on a Locked Door: Assessing Canada’s Response to Attacks Against Human Rights Defenders
    • Timo Istace, Establishing Neurorights: New Rights versus Derived Rights
    • Marie Claire Van Hout, Ruth Kaima, Apatsa Mangwana Mhango, Vivian Kasunda, Victor Mhango, David M . Ong, & Stephanie Kewley, ‘We Fear For Our Lives’: Understanding, Responding and Mitigating the Impact of Climate Change on the Malawian Prison System
    • Rosalind Turkie, Katrina Perehudoff, Jennifer Sellin, & Aldo Sainz, Ensuring Pharmaceutical Accountability for Human Rights and Access to Medicines: The Dutch Duty of Care Standard Applied to Pharmaceutical Companies
    • Nathan Andrews & Raynold W Alorse, Can Voluntary Business and Human Rights Norms be Effective? Exploring a Multidimensional Perspective of Norm Effectiveness in Africa
  • Policy and Practice Note
    • Tamara Horbachevska, Iurii Barabash, & Olena Uvarova, The Expropriation of Sanctioned Assets: Does Ukrainian Jurisprudence Respond to Human Rights Concerns?