For several decades after the UN Charter insisted that the promotion of development and human rights were central to post-World War II conceptions of world order, the two fields remained in virtual isolation from one another. Only in the past 15 years or so, with the fall of the Berlin Wall and the realization that freedom and economic well-being are empirically linked, have the professional communities dealing with development and human rights issues really begun to communicate effectively. But too much of the dialogue has been confined to an abstract or theoretical level.
This volume addresses highly specific but crucial aspects of the human rights and development interface, including the economics of social rights; land rights and women's empowerment; child labour and access to education; reform of legal and judicial systems; the human rights role of the private sector; and building human rights into development planning, especially the Poverty Reduction Strategy process.
Contributors include lawyers, economists, and both scholarly and practitioner perspectives are presented. Several chapters are written by Senior World Bank officials, including the Bank's President and the head of the International Finance Corporation.
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Addresses crucial aspects of the human rights and development interface, including the economics of social rights; land rights and women's empowerment; child labour and access to education; reform of legal and judicial systems; the human rights role of the private sector; and building human rights into development planning.
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Preface ; Notes on Contributors ; List of Tables ; List of Figures ; Abbreviations ; 1. The Challenges of Ensuring the Mutuality of Human Rights and Development Endeavours ; 2. Some Reflections on Human Rights and Development ; 3. What Rights Can Add to Good Development Practice ; A. THE ECONOMICS OF SOCIAL RIGHTS ; 4. Democracy and the Right to Food ; 5. Social Rights and Economics: Claims to Health Care and Education in Developing Countries ; B. LAND RIGHTS AND WOMEN'S EMPOWERMENT ; 6. The Properties of Gender Equality ; 7. The Development Impact of Gender Equality in Land Rights ; 8. Women's Property Rights Violations in Kenya ; C. CHILD LABOUR AND ACCESS TO EDUCATION ; 9. Child Labour, Education, and Children's Rights ; 10. Child Labour, Education, and the Principle of Non-Discrimination ; 11. Human Rights and Public Goods: Education as a Fundamental Right in India ; D. REFORM OF LEGAL AND JUDICIAL SYSTEMS ; 12. The Impact of Human Rights Principles on Justice Reform in the Inter-American Development Bank ; 13. Less Law and Reform, More Politics and Enforcement: A Civil Society Approach to Integrating Rights and Development ; E. THE ROLE OF THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN PROMOTING HUMAN RIGHTS ; 14. Putting Human Rights Principles into Development Practice through Finance: The Experience of the International Finance Corporation ; 15. Human Rights and Governance: The Empirical Challenge ; 16. Transnational Corporations as Instruments of Human Development ; F. BUILDING HUMAN RIGHTS INTO DEVELOPMENT PLANNING PROCESSES: THE PRSP EXERCISE ; 17. Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers within the Human Rights Perspective ; 18. Human Rights and Poverty Reduction Strategies: Moving Towards Convergence? ; 19. Human Rights, Poverty Reduction Strategies, and the Role of the International Monetary Fund ; 20. The Legal Aspects of the World Bank's Work on Human Rights: Some Preliminary Thoughts
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Expores how goals shared by the international human rights and the development communities can be achieved
Addresses topical issues including the economics of social rights; land rights and women's empowerment; and the role of the private sector in protecting human rights
Cross- disciplinary appeal to those concerned with human rights, development and international relations, and with the policies of international organizations
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Philip Alston is Professor of Law at New York University Law School and Faculty Director of its Center for Human Rights and Global Justice. Since 2002 he has been Special Adviser to the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights on the Millennium Development Goals. Professor Mary Robinson founded Realizing Rights: The Ethical Globalization Initiative in 2002. Previously she was President of the Republic of Ireland (1990-97), and UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
(1997-2002).
Les mer
Expores how goals shared by the international human rights and the development communities can be achieved
Addresses topical issues including the economics of social rights; land rights and women's empowerment; and the role of the private sector in protecting human rights
Cross- disciplinary appeal to those concerned with human rights, development and international relations, and with the policies of international organizations
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780199284610
Publisert
2005
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
1003 gr
Høyde
242 mm
Bredde
165 mm
Dybde
37 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
576