
Human Rights and other International Law
Priorities, Conflict and Possible Convergence
Tom Hadden(Author)
Edward Elgar Publishing
Published on 17. October 2025
Book
Hardback
188 pages
978-1-0353-5483-2 (ISBN)
Description
Tom Hadden presents a much-needed critique of the current state of human rights law and explains how its standards and procedures can be developed to meet major economic, social and environmental change.
The book highlights the inconsistencies between established human rights conventions and other international law regimes, such as humanitarian and armed conflict law, refugee law, and the UN Charter. The book assesses the impact of human rights law on key issues of increasing global inequality, climate change, internal and international conflicts and population movement with accessible visual explanations of their very different standards on self-determination, legitimate armed conflict and refugee movement.
Human Rights and Other International Law is a vital read for scholars and students of human rights and legal and political theory. Lawyers, policymakers and those interested in constitutional and administrative law will also benefit from this invaluable resource.
The author has been based at Queen's University Belfast since 1969. With his colleague Kevin Boyle, he helped to set the agenda for the Northern Ireland peace process and has been an influential member of successive Northern Ireland Human Rights Commissions..
The book highlights the inconsistencies between established human rights conventions and other international law regimes, such as humanitarian and armed conflict law, refugee law, and the UN Charter. The book assesses the impact of human rights law on key issues of increasing global inequality, climate change, internal and international conflicts and population movement with accessible visual explanations of their very different standards on self-determination, legitimate armed conflict and refugee movement.
Human Rights and Other International Law is a vital read for scholars and students of human rights and legal and political theory. Lawyers, policymakers and those interested in constitutional and administrative law will also benefit from this invaluable resource.
The author has been based at Queen's University Belfast since 1969. With his colleague Kevin Boyle, he helped to set the agenda for the Northern Ireland peace process and has been an influential member of successive Northern Ireland Human Rights Commissions..
Reviews / Votes
'Tom Hadden's rich experience in Northern Ireland and decades of teaching human rights inform this rich and thoughtful discussion of some big themes: minority rights, self-determination, refugees and more. It blends informative description with progressive proposals and, on occasion, a healthy and constructive dose of irreverence.' -- William Schabas, Middlesex University London, UK 'A provocative and deeply informed rethinking of human rights in an age of global uncertainty - Tom Hadden challenges orthodoxy without abandoning principle, offering a bold and compelling vision for the future of international law.' -- Tom Pegram, University College London, UK 'Tom Hadden has written a provocative and compelling book that forces the reader to reckon with multiple global challenges and asks fundamental questions about how well equipped human rights is to deal with them. From pandemics to conflict, and water rights to self-determination, Hadden pulls apart the core of the human rights field and offers genuinely new thinking. This is a fresh and compelling vision on how to advance human rights in an age of challenge.' -- Fionnuala Ni Aolain KC (Hons), University of Minnesota Law School, USAMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Cheltenham
United Kingdom
Target group
Professional and scholarly
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-0353-5483-2 (9781035354832)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Tom Hadden, Emeritus Professor, School of Law, Queen's University Belfast, UK
Content
Contents
Introduction
1 A realistic theory of human rights
2 Social and economic rights and inequality
3 Nation-states, minority rights and self-determination
4 Human rights in times of conflict
5 Resolving conflict and repression: prevention, intervention, prosecution, amnesty and reform
6 Human rights, refugees and migration
7 Human rights and global concerns
Introduction
1 A realistic theory of human rights
2 Social and economic rights and inequality
3 Nation-states, minority rights and self-determination
4 Human rights in times of conflict
5 Resolving conflict and repression: prevention, intervention, prosecution, amnesty and reform
6 Human rights, refugees and migration
7 Human rights and global concerns