【Routledge版 治外法権の人権義務ハンドブック】
The Routledge Handbook on Extraterritorial Human Rights Obligations(Routledge International Handbooks) H 500 p. 21
目次
Introduction Wouter Vandenhole, Gamze Erdem Türkelli, Mark Gibney and Markus Krajewski PART I: Conceptualization and theoretical foundations 1 The historical development of extraterritorial obligations Mark Gibney 2 Global human rights obligations Sigrun Skogly 3 Extraterritorial human rights obligations and responsibility under international law Gamze Erdem Türkelli 4 Justifying extraterritorial human rights obligations: An ethical perspective Angela Mueller 5 Nowhere countries: When states use extra-territoriality at home to circumvent legal, human and refugee rights Pauline Maillet 6 Digitalization: The new extraterritorial challenge to extraterritorial obligations Nicoletta Dentico, Mohammed El Said and Giacomo Capuzzo PART II: Enforcement 7 Extraterritorial obligations in the United Nations system: UN treaty bodies Elena Pribytkova 8 Extraterritorial obligations in the inter-American human rights system Clara Burbano-Herrera and Yves Haeck 9 Extraterritorial obligations in the European human rights system Yves Haeck, Clara Burbano Herrera and Hannah Ghulam Farag 10 Enforcement of extraterritorial human rights obligations in the African human rights system Anne Oloo and Wouter Vandenhole PART III: Migration and refugee protection 11 Extraterritorial human rights obligations in regard to refugees and migrants Thomas Gammeltoft-Hansen 12 The establishment of ETOs in the context of externalised migration control Kristof Gombeer and Stefaan Smis 13 Climate change displacement and socio-economic rights of the child under the African human rights system: The relevance of ETOs Ademola Oluborode Jegede 14 Diplomatic asylum and extraterritorial non-refoulement: The foundational and enduring contribution of Latin America to extraterritorial human rights obligations Ralph Wilde PART IV: Financial assistance and sanctions 15 Human rights-based approaches to development assistance and policies Lilian Chenwi 16 Financialization of development cooperation: ETO responses Roman Herre and Stephan Backes 17 Extraterritorial human rights obligations and sovereign debt Emma Luce Scali 18 Extraterritorial human rights obligations in the context of economic sanctions Joseph Schechla PART V: Finance, investment and trade 19 Extraterritorial human rights obligations and international financial institutions Stéphanie de Moerloose, Gamze Erdem Türkelli and Joshua Curtis 20 Home-state regulation of corporations Daniel Augenstein 21 International tax transparency and Least Developed Countries Rod Michelmore 22 Corruption, human rights and extraterritorial obligations Khulekani Moyo 23 Obligations of international assistance and cooperation in the context of investment law Tara Van Ho 24 Access to medicines and the TRIPS agreement: Recognising extraterritorial human rights obligations Jennifer Sellin PART VI: Peace and security 25 Extraordinary rendition: A classic example of the USA avoiding ETOs as seen from Europe Elspeth Guild 26 Surveillance and cyber operations Marko Milanovic 27 Arms trade and weapons export control Marina Aksenova 28 Extraterritorial military action Vito Todeschini 29 Cybersecurity and extraterritorial obligations of states Matthias C. Kettemann and Anna Sophia Tiedeke PART VII: Environment 30 Climate justice and the ETOs Sara L. Seck 31 Cross-border pollution Antal Berkes 32 ETOs and biodiversity: A right to food perspective on the intersection of human rights and environmental law Philip Seufert and Sofía Monsalve Suárez PART VIII: Conclusion 33 Conclusions: The future of extraterritorial human rights obligations Gamze Erdem Türkelli, Mark Gibney, Wouter Vandenhole and Markus Krajewski
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