Gross Violations of Human Rights Articles
1: The Outsourcing Catch
Contribution of foreign countries to india in outsourcing is better managed and is running hand in hand.The question” Is outsourcing harmful for US Economy” remain unanswered.
2: Legal Offshoring: India’s Pie
As we know that outsourcing for foreign countries are operated in India.India is not only shining for its BPO or KPO services but also finds a great future in the legal process outsourcing.
3: Cultural Discourses: The postcapitalist paradigm of discourse and surrealism
"Society is intrinsically used in the service of hierarchy," says Foucault. Therefore, Hamburger implies that we have to choose between the postcapitalist paradigm of discourse and conceptual socialism
4: The Absurdity of Truth: The neocultural paradigm of reality, Foucaultist power relations and Marxism
In the works of Rushdie, a predominant concept is the distinction between feminine and masculine. However, Marx's essay on constructivist precultural theory states that sexuality is capable of significance
5: Socialist realism and precapitalist narrative
"Consciousness is part of the dialectic of language," says Sartre. If socialist realism holds, the works of Smith are not postmodern.
Thus, Derrida promotes the use of textual situationism to modify and analyse society
6: Dialectic rationalism in the works of Stone
In the works of Stone, a predominant concept is the distinction between within and without. It could be said that the characteristic theme of the works of Stone is not desituationism, as Lyotard would have it, but predesituationism
7: Despots Masquerading as Democrats
It is a sign of hope that even dictators have come to believe that the route to legitimacy runs by way of democratic credentials. Broadly shared and deeply felt values underwrite the principle that sovereignty lies with the people of a nation and that the authority to govern is ultimately theirs. But that progress is fragile, its meaning dependent in large part on the commitment of the world’s established democracies. If they accept any dictator who puts on the charade of an election, if they allow their commitment to democracy to be watered down by their pursuit of resources, commercial opportunities, and short-sighted visions of security, they will devalue the currency of democracy. And if dictators can get away with calling themselves “democrats,” they will have acquired a powerful tool for deflecting pressure to uphold human rights. It is time to stop selling democracy on the cheap and to start substituting a broader and more meaningful vision of the concept that incorporates all human rights.
8: Human Rights Watch 2008 Report : Democracy charade undermines rights
Human Rights Watch 2008 – The established democracies are accepting flawed and unfair elections for political expediency, Human Rights Watch said today in releasing its World Report 2008. By allowing autocrats to pose as democrats, without demanding they uphold the civil and political rights that make democracy meaningful, the United States, the European Union and other influential democracies risk undermining human rights worldwide.
9: Gross violations of human rights
Gross violations of human rights
By Hanna Newcombe
10: Impunity And Gross Human Rights Violations in South Africa
Impunity And Gross Human Rights Violations in South Africa
Author: Michael Donen
Barrister, South Africa
This is the text of a paper delivered by the author at a seminar held in South Africa to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the International Court of Justice. At a later date we hope to publish the documentary appendices included by the author in the original presentation.
Issue: Volume 7, Number 2 (June 2000)
11: International Human Rights Law and Organizations
International law now contains many functioning human rights treaties. A number of them have been ratified by more than three-quarters of the world's countries. This section sketches the development of international measures to promote and protect human rights. The efforts to protect human rights through international treaties began in 1919 in the League of Nations and expanded after World War II in international organizations such as the United Nations, the Council of Europe, the Organization of American States, and the African Union. The international promotion and protection of human rights complements the legal protection of human rights at the national level.
12: Are Social Rights Genuine Human Rights
Are Social Rights Genuine Human Rights?
13: Which Rights are Human Rights
Which Rights are Human Rights?
14: The Existence of Human Rights
The Existence of Human Rights
15: The General Idea of Human Rights
Human rights are international norms that help to protect all people everywhere from severe political, legal, and social abuses. Examples of human rights are the right to freedom of religion, the right to a fair trial when charged with a crime, the right not to be tortured, and the right to engage in political activity. These rights exist in morality and in law at the national and international levels. They are addressed primarily to governments, requiring compliance and enforcement. The main sources of the contemporary conception of human rights are the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (United Nations, 1948b) and the many human rights documents and treaties that followed in international organizations such as the United Nations, the Council of Europe, the Organization of American States, and the African Union.
The philosophy of human rights addresses questions about the existence, content, nature, universality, justification, and legal status of human rights. The strong claims made on behalf of human rights (for example, that they are universal, or that they exist independently of legal enactment as justified moral norms) frequently provoke skeptical doubts and countering philosophical defences. Reflection on these doubts and the responses that can be made to them has become a sub-field of political and legal philosophy with a substantial literature.
This entry includes a lengthy final section, International Human Rights Law and Organizations, that offers a comprehensive survey of the international system for the promotion and protection of human rights.
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