The evolution of Human Rights enforcement
Summary :
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- The development of Human Rights enforcement: From Dumbarton Oaks to Human rights Council
- Evolution of the most controversial rights: 1944 to 2006
- Responsibility for Human Rights breaches
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
Abstract
The end of the second world conflict has set the beginning of the institutionalization of human rights at a world scale: the previous events have indeed made most of the country think about a way to reach a world consensus about basic rights that each single human being could expect to be given at its birth. Thus, even before the end of the war, the Allies' proposals of Dumbarton Oaks in 1944 mentioned human rights once as being a common goal to be reached. The creation of the United Nations and the texts following it have been the beginning of what can be called the development of human rights law: year after year the world context and its ideologies have evolved, bringing new ideas to be added or changed, making this international law more and more efficient and recognized.
This dissertation aims at explaining these developments, showing how diverse they have been.
This dissertation aims at explaining these developments, showing how diverse they have been.
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