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Chapter 10: International Human Rights Law

Chapter 10: International Human Rights Law

pp. 187-207
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Extract

This chapter sketches the development of international human rights law. The legal position of individuals was perceived by states as a domestic affair of the sovereign state, which could effectively treat its citizens as it pleased. It was not until after the Second World War that this fundamentally changed and international law began to grant individuals rights to protect them from the state. The chapter further presents the main categories or generations of human rights and discusses their key characteristics. Human rights are generally organized in three categories or generations: (a) civil and political rights; (b) economic, social, and cultural rights; and (c) collective rights. This chapter will subsequently turn to several matters concerning the scope of human rights norms, including their addressees, their territorial scope of application, and the circumstances under which human rights may be restricted by the state. Finally, this chapter will explain how human rights are monitored and enforced under international law.

Keywords

  • human rights
  • civil rights
  • political rights
  • economic rights
  • social rights
  • cultural rights
  • extra-territorial rights
  • collective rights
  • enforcement
  • monitoring

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