Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 174
Trim: 6⅜ x 9¼
978-1-4422-4909-7 • Hardback • August 2015 • $116.00 • (£89.00)
978-1-4422-4910-3 • Paperback • August 2015 • $40.00 • (£30.00)
978-1-4422-4911-0 • eBook • August 2015 • $38.00 • (£30.00)
Mark Gibney is Belk Distinguished Professor in the Department of Political Science at the
University of North Carolina at Asheville and Raoul Wallenberg Visiting Professor of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law at Lund University.
Preface: The Nightmare
Introduction
Step One: Responsibility
Step Two: Territory
Step Three: Accountability
Step Four: Remedy
Conclusion: The End of Human Rights—or Just the Start?
About the Author
Mark Gibney continues to be a passionate and compassionate advocate of the universality of human rights law. This second edition of International Human Rights Law presents updated material and arguments for taking seriously extraterritorial human rights obligations. Gibney grounds himself in interesting legal cases to argue that states, transnational corporations, and international organizations are responsible to remedy human rights violations, wherever they occur. His clear, accessible language will make this book, like the first edition, popular among students and others who are frustrated with the inattention of domestic and international law to extraterritorial abuses of human rights.
— Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University
It is very good to have a second edition of Mark Gibney’s fine book about universal human rights in legal form. Readers will be able to take an informed position on whether serious attention to the international law of human rights as he presents it is a utopian dream or a pressing necessity in today’s world.
— David P. Forsythe, emeritus, University of Nebraska–Lincoln
Ideal for courses in Human Rights, International Relations, International Law, and International Human Rights Law
Revives the original intent behind international human rights law
Upends our current understanding of the human rights enterprise
Challenges our perceptions of the world and our place in it
Presents a much different and much more challenging—and more accurate—conceptualization of Human Rights
The only accessible book that focuses on the extraterritorial approach, which has now become an integral dimension of the human rights field
Concise and readable, challenging students to grapple with global issues
New features
Thoroughly updated to include: the Arms Trade Treaty
U.N. Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (Ruggie Principles) and the Maastricht Principles on Extraterritorial Obligations of States in the Area of Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights
the extension of the Gitmo litigation to include Boumedienne but also what has followed since this litigation
analysis of the Disabilities Convention
updates on Bankovic litigation (European Court of Human Rights) including discussion of Al-Skeini case
Optional Protocol to the Covenant on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights (ESCR)
analysis of human rights consequences of EU sugar subsidies
recent work of the International Criminal Court
The extraordinary rendition cases of Maher Arar and Khalid El-Masri