Property and Human Rights in a Global Context

دانلود کتاب Property and Human Rights in a Global Context

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کتاب مالکیت و حقوق بشر در یک زمینه جهانی نسخه زبان اصلی

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توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Property and Human Rights in a Global Context

نام کتاب : Property and Human Rights in a Global Context
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : مالکیت و حقوق بشر در یک زمینه جهانی
سری : Human Rights Law in Perspective
نویسندگان : ,
ناشر : Hart Publishing
سال نشر : 2015
تعداد صفحات : 353
ISBN (شابک) : 9781849467261 , 9781509901739
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 2 مگابایت



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فهرست مطالب :


Preface\nContents\nList of Contributors\nTable of Cases\nTable of Legislation\nIntroduction: Property and Human Rights in a Global Context\n I. Engaging Property with Human Rights: A Clash \rof Paradigms?\n II. The Concepts of Property\n III. The Reach of Property\n IV. The Reach of Human Rights\n V. Structure of the Book\n1. Property, Human Rights \rand Communities\n I. Introduction\n II. Resources Collectively Used by Communities\n III. Communities Defined by Locality\n IV. Collective Resource Use by Communities\n V. Indeterminate and Determinate Communities\n VI. Scope of Human Rights to Property\n VII. Communal Property Rights And Customary Use\n VIII. Communities as Right-holders\n IX. Human Rights to Property for Communities\n X. Implementing the Community\'s Human \rRights to Property\n2. Cultural Property and Community Rights to Cultural Heritage\n I. Introduction: Cultural Heritage in International Law\n II. The Concept of Cultural Heritage\n III. From Cultural Heritage to Cultural Property\n IV. Cultural Property versus Intellectual Property\n V. Conclusion: Resisting the Privatisation of Everything\n3. Constitutional Law, Social Justice and the Redistribution of Land\n I. Introduction\n II. Liberal, Socialist and Social Democrat \rConstitutional Theories at Independence\n III. Judicial Interpretation of the Property \rClauses after Independence\n IV. The (Temporary) Decline of Liberalism\n V. Revival of the Liberal Right to Property\n VI. Globalism, Comparative Law \rand the Right to Property\n VII. Conclusion\n4. Property in Persons: Prohibiting Contemporary Slavery as a Human Right\n I. Moments in Time\n II. Slavery in International Human Rights Law\n III. Property Law at the Service of a Human Right\n IV. Conclusion\n Appendix\n5. Property in Human Bodies, \rSelf-Preservation \rand Human Rights\n I. Introduction\n II. Human Body, Dignity and Human Rights\n III. The Justification of Property in Human Bodies in Classics\n IV. Property: A Flexible Concept\n V. Re-evaluating the Meanings of Self-ownership\n VI. Conclusion\n6. Reconciling Lockean Copyright with the Human Right to Education\n I. Introduction\n II. Locke and Copyright\n III. Locke and Human Rights\n IV. Conclusion\n7. Filling the Institutional Void Between Fundamental Rights and the Legal Purchase of Goods: What Role for Consumocratic Law?\n I. Introduction\n II. The Institutional Void between Fundamental Rights and the Purchase of Goods\n III. What Role for Non-state Labelling Systems?\n IV. Conclusion\n8. Development, Property \rand International Investment: \rThe Double-edged Sword \rof Human Rights\n I. Development and Trade: Markets and Property\n II. Investment, Ownership and Protection of Property\n III. A Property-Human Rights Conflict? A Case Study\n IV. Conclusion\n9. The Reach of Human Rights\n I. UN Principles\n II. Globalisations and Finance\n III. The Neo-liberal State\n IV. A Case Study: UK Housing\n V. Conclusions\n10. Communal Property Rights in International Human Rights Instruments: Implications for \rDe Facto Expropriation\n I. Introduction: De Facto Expropriation \rand the Limits of Expropriation Law\n II. Human Rights and Property Rights: Transcending \rthe Boundaries\n III. Communal Property Rights in Regional \rHuman Rights Instruments\n IV. Conclusion: Implications for De Facto Expropriation\n11. Property Right to Rural Land in Ethiopia: A Human \rRights Perspective\n I. Introduction\n II. Human Right to Land\n III. Current Certification Processes in Ethiopia\n IV. Implications on Women and Pastoralist Communities\n V. Conclusion\n12. Customary Land Rights, Indigenous Rights and Land Expropriation \rin Cameroon: Ecosystem Services \ras a Possible New Approach in Valuing Compensation\n I. Introduction\n II. \'Value\' of Expropriated Forest Land\n III. Compensation and Indigenous Cultures\n IV. The Concept of Ecosystem Services and the Value of Land\n V. \'Just and Equitable\' Compensation and Human Rights\n VI. Valuing Compensation for Land Expropriation under Cameroonian Law\n VII. Legality of the Customary Interest in Land\n VIII. Conclusion\nBibliography\nIndex




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