
Tracing the Roles of Soft Law in Human Rights
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Content
- Introduction: Tracing the roles of soft law in human rights
- 1: John Cerone: A taxonomy of soft law
- PART 1: Established human rights regimes
- 2: Kasey McCall-Smith: Interpreting international human rights standards - treaty body general comments as a chisel or hammer?
- 3: Ekaterina Yahyaoui Krivenko: The role and impact of soft law on the emergence of the prohibition of violence against women within the context of the CEDAW
- 4: Mátyás Bódig: Soft law, doctrinal development and the General Comments of the UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights
- 5: Rachel Murray and Debra Long: The role and use of soft law instruments in the African human rights system
- 6: Bruce Oswald: The Copenhagen Process: some reflections concerning soft law
- 7: Peter Vedel Kessing: The use of soft law in regulating armed conflict: from jus in bello to 'soft law in bello'?
- 8: Megan Bradley and Angela Sherwood: Addressing and resolving internal displacement: reflections on a soft law "success story "
- PART 2: Emerging human rights regimes
- 9: Felipe Gómez Isa: The role of soft law in the progressive development of indigenous peoples' rights
- 10: Léticia Villeneuve: Could the progressive 'hardening' of human rights soft law impair its further expansion? Insights from the UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
- 11: Stéphanie Lagoutte: The UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights - a confusing smart mix of soft and hard international human rights law
- 12: Christoph Good: Mission creeps: the (unintended) re-enforcement of the actor's discussion in international law through the expansion of soft law instruments in the business and human rights nexus
- 13: Anette Faye Jacobsen: Soft law within participation rights: tools in development
- 14: Sally Holt, Zdenka Machnyikova and John Packer: The role of soft law in minority rights protection and diversity management: reflections from practice
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