Publication | Closed Access
State Compliance with the Recommendations of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, 1994-2004
89
Citations
10
References
2007
Year
Regional Human Rights SystemsAfrican CityAfrican LawAfrican Public PolicyConstitutional LawLawAdministrative LawInternational CrimesInternational Constitutional LawInternational CourtSocial SciencesPrivate International LawLegal EmpowermentAfrican American StudiesState ComplianceSocial ResponsibilityInternational RulePublic PolicyInternational RelationsHuman RightsInternational Human RightsInternational LawHuman Rights LawWorld PoliticsInternational Humanitarian LawPublic International LawPeoples ’ RightsInternational Legal StudiesAfrican Human RightsAfrican CommissionHuman Rights TreatiesSocial JusticeGlobal Justice
Current discourse on international human rights leaves little room for self-satisfaction about near-universal acceptance of wide-ranging normative frameworks with a global and regional scope. Recent times have witnessed growing academic concern with the “impact” or “effect” of international human rights treaties on the de jure and de facto legal position in state parties. These concerns are embedded in bigger and more enduring questions about the nature of state obligations under international law (including those derived from “nonbinding norms”) and compliance with them. However, general questions about obedience to international law have been replaced by attempts to answer the question whether human rights treaties in fact “make a difference.”
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