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Hardback

Theory and Reality in the International Protection of Human Rights

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Presents a defence of the traditional theory of international law – based on a decentralised nation-state system of international relations – as being more appropriate for the analysis of its subject than more recent variants that allow for supranational redress at an increasingly personal level. In particular, Professor Watson shows how the proponents of the international human rights regime persistently use a legislative mode of reasoning, and how international law cannot sustain this technique. He holds that violation of the right to life is best adjudicated within a customary system, and concludes that the validity of the norms of international human rights has yet to be demonstrated.

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MORE INFO
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Brill
Date
1 March 1999
Pages
340
ISBN
9781571050977

Presents a defence of the traditional theory of international law – based on a decentralised nation-state system of international relations – as being more appropriate for the analysis of its subject than more recent variants that allow for supranational redress at an increasingly personal level. In particular, Professor Watson shows how the proponents of the international human rights regime persistently use a legislative mode of reasoning, and how international law cannot sustain this technique. He holds that violation of the right to life is best adjudicated within a customary system, and concludes that the validity of the norms of international human rights has yet to be demonstrated.

Read More
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Brill
Date
1 March 1999
Pages
340
ISBN
9781571050977