16 février 2019

REVUE : Human Rights Quarterly (vol. 41, n°1, February 2019)

Catherine MAIA

The latest issue of the Human Rights Quarterly (vol. 41, n°1, February 2019) is out.


Mathias Risse
, Human Rights and Artificial Intelligence: An Urgently Needed Agenda
Barbara Ann Rieffer-Flanagan, Promoting the Right of Freedom of Religion: Diverse Pathways to Religious Tolerance and Freedom of Religion and the Implications for American Foreign Policy
Yon Soo Park, Benjamin Valentino, Animals Are People Too: Explaining Variation in Respect for Animal Rights
Jodok Troy, The Papal Human Rights Discourse: The Difference Pope Francis Makes
Elizabeth Barnert, Nathalie Lopez, Philippe Bourgois, Gery Ryan, Paul J. Chung, Eric Stover, My Child’s Journey Home: Perspectives of Adult Family Members on the Separation and Reunification of the “Disappeared” Children of El Salvador
Emilie M. Hafner-Burton, Heidi M. McNamara, United States Human Rights Policy: The Corporate Lobby
Christina M. Cerna, The Abolition of the Imposition of the Death Penalty on Persons who Were Juveniles When They Committed Their Crimes
Afua Twum-Danso Imoh, Terminating Childhood: Dissonance and Synergy between Global Children’s Rights Norms and Local Discourses About the Transition from Childhood to Adulthood in Ghana
Encomium
Anthony Tirado Chase, Recognizing Reza Afshari: Historical Challenges/Contemporary Challenges
Anthony Tirado Chase, Challenges Toward a Human Rights of Structural Transformation: Connecting Theory and Lived Realities
Courtney Hillebrecht, Normative Consensus and Contentious Practice: Challenges to Universalism in International Human Rights Courts
Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, In Praise of Secularism: An Appreciation of Reza Afshari
Steven L. B. Jensen, Decolonization: The Black Box of Human Rights?
Mahmood Monshipouri, Reza Afshari and Cultural Relativism
Daniel J. Whelan, On Reza Afshari’s “On Historiography of Human Rights”



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