
Child Rights: The Movement, International Law, and Opposition. University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011.īutler, Clark, ed. From Human Trafficking to Human Rights: Reframing Contemporary Slavery. Oxford University Press, USA, 2009.īrysk, Alison, and Austin Choi-Fitzpatrick, eds.

Global Good Samaritans: Human Rights as Foreign Policy. Edited by Erica Bornstein and Peter Redfield. Forces of Compassion: Humanitarianism Between Ethics and Politics. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2003.īornstein, Erica, and Peter Redfield.
#Bibliography for battman how to#
How to Complain to the UN Human Rights Treaty System. Kluwer Law International, 2000.īayefsky, Anne Fruma. The UN Human Rights Treaty System in the 21st Century. New Challenges for the UN Human Rights Machinery: What Future for the UN Treaty Body System and the Human Rights Council Procedures? Intersentia, 2011.īayefsky, Anne F. The Feminist Press at CUNY, 2007.īassiouni, M. Edited by Hanna Schopp-Schilling and Cees Flinterman. The Circle of Empowerment: Twenty-five Years of the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women. Oxford University Press, 2014.Īnnan, Kofi. The United Nations and Human Rights: A Critical Appraisal. Cambridge University Press, 2000.Īlston, Philip, and Frederic Megret, eds. The Future of UN Human Rights Treaty Monitoring. Oxford University Press, USA, 2005.Īlston, Philip, and James Crawford, eds. Please find below a bibliography connected to the project introduced via fieldnotes over the past weeks, focussing on (yet making no claims for comprehensiveness): Human Rights (Law), Human Rights Monitoring, the UN Human Rights Framework & UN Treaty Bodies (published after 2000)Īlston, Philip, ed. This time we offer you the last alternative. And also, throwing in the occasional bibliography from on ongoing project. For this is a tricky nut to crack: just how do we navigate the avalanche of new things that keep on appearing all the time, all the time?! Trying to cover everything is impossible, and even a sensible overview would require almost full-time preoccupation.Īnd of course there is also the question: just what do we focus on? Existing publishing venues or the various experiments that are budding around us discussed among others by Tim Ingold? Admittedly, a fixed answer is unlikely, and instead we foresee ourselves progressing in the road of experiment – of highlighting the occasional new publication, of introducing a classic text, of discussing fresh takes on reviews – such as the great experiment ‘ ‘.


This is not due to laziness or lack of consideration, rather the opposite. (1884-1958), surrendered his approximately 75,000 troops at Bataan.We feel that it has by now become evident what we hope to do with Allegra: to both highlight ongoing debates and create new ones, to experiment with different forms of scholarly representation – and just show the FUN of legal anthropology (and stuff)! Whereas all of our other categories ‘rock’ already, we admit to being a bit slow with ‘Publications’. Finally, on April 9, with his forces crippled by starvation and disease, U.S. For the next three months, the combined U.S.-Filipino army held out despite a lack of naval and air support. Within a month, the Japanese had captured Manila, the capital of the Philippines, and the American and Filipino defenders of Luzon (the island on which Manila is located) were forced to retreat to the Bataan Peninsula. naval base at Pearl Harbor, on December 7, 1941, the Japanese invasion of the Philippines began. Thousands perished in what became known as the Bataan Death March. The marchers made the trek in intense heat and were subjected to harsh treatment by Japanese guards. surrender of the Bataan Peninsula on the main Philippine island of Luzon to the Japanese during World War II (1939-45), the approximately 75,000 Filipino and American troops on Bataan were forced to make an arduous 65-mile march to prison camps.
