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Collective punishment and human rights law : addressing gaps in international law / Cornelia Klocker

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Routledge Research in Human Right LawPublisher: Oxon : Routledge, 2021Copyright date: ©2020Description: 198 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • unmediated
ISBN:
  • 9781032236087 (paperback)
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • KC7177  K56
Contents:
Introduction -- Collective punishment and the law of armed conflict -- Case study : Collective punishment in the Occupied Palestinian Territories -- Collective punishment and human rights law -- Case study : Collective punishment in Chechnya -- Conceptual differences and human rights held by groups -- Can the European Convention on Human Rights encompass a prohibition of collective punishment? -- Conclusion.
Summary: This book analyses collective punishment in the context of human rights law from a New Legal Realist perspective. Collective punishment is a concept deriving from the law of armed conflict. It describes the punishment of a group for an act allegedly committed by one of its members and is prohibited in times of armed conflict. Although the imposition of collective punishment has been witnessed in situations outside armed conflict as well, human rights instruments do not explicitly address collective punishment. Consequently, there is a genuine gap in the protection of affected groups in situations outside of or short of armed conflict. Supported by two case studies on collective punishment in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and in Chechnya, the book examines potential options to close this gap in human rights law in a way contributing to the empowerment of affected groups. This analysis centres on the European Convention on Human Rights due to its relevance to the situation in Chechnya. By questioning whether human rights instruments can encompass a prohibition of collective punishment, the book contributes to the broader academic debate on rights held by collectivities in general and on collective human rights in particular
List(s) this item appears in: Recommended Books by Faculty of Law
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Mahmud Saedon Law Collection (Civil Law) Universiti Islam Sultan Sharif Ali Basement (Gadong Campus) KC7177 K56 2020 c.1 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 1050067644
Mahmud Saedon Law Collection (Civil Law) Universiti Islam Sultan Sharif Ali Basement (Gadong Campus) LAW KC7177 K56 2021 c.2 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 2 Available 1050069701
Mahmud Saedon Law Collection (Civil Law) Universiti Islam Sultan Sharif Ali Basement (Gadong Campus) LAW KC7177 K56 2021 c.3 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 3 Available 1050069700

Based on author's thesis (doctoral - Birkbeck College School of Law, 2018) issued under title: Collective punishment and human rights : from Israel to Russia.

Includes bibliographical references and index

Introduction -- Collective punishment and the law of armed conflict -- Case study : Collective punishment in the Occupied Palestinian Territories -- Collective punishment and human rights law -- Case study : Collective punishment in Chechnya -- Conceptual differences and human rights held by groups -- Can the European Convention on Human Rights encompass a prohibition of collective punishment? -- Conclusion.

This book analyses collective punishment in the context of human rights law from a New Legal Realist perspective. Collective punishment is a concept deriving from the law of armed conflict. It describes the punishment of a group for an act allegedly committed by one of its members and is prohibited in times of armed conflict. Although the imposition of collective punishment has been witnessed in situations outside armed conflict as well, human rights instruments do not explicitly address collective punishment. Consequently, there is a genuine gap in the protection of affected groups in situations outside of or short of armed conflict. Supported by two case studies on collective punishment in the Occupied Palestinian Territories and in Chechnya, the book examines potential options to close this gap in human rights law in a way contributing to the empowerment of affected groups. This analysis centres on the European Convention on Human Rights due to its relevance to the situation in Chechnya. By questioning whether human rights instruments can encompass a prohibition of collective punishment, the book contributes to the broader academic debate on rights held by collectivities in general and on collective human rights in particular

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