Teacher
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PALMISANO GIUSEPPE
(syllabus)
The following topics will progressively be covered during the course: 1) Introduction and Historical Overview of the Development of International Human Rights Law. 2) Human Rights as Part of International Law. The Sources of International Human Rights Law: - human rights as customary international law; human rights as general principles of international law; human rights and jus cogens; human rights and international soft law. - human rights as treaty law. Limitations, derogations and reservations to human rights treaty obligations: generalities. The interpretation of human rights treaties. 3) An overview of the substantive content of human rights in international law: what rights are “human rights” in international law? “Generations” of human rights and the distinction between civil/political rights and economic/social rights. Are human rights really indivisible, interdependent, interrelated and mutually reinforcing? 4) Nature and typologies of State obligations under human rights treaties. The tri-partite typology of ‘respect, protect and fulfil’. Immediately prescriptive obligations and obligations of progressive realization. 5) International oversight and protection of human rights: universal and regional systems and bodies. 6) The UN system: the two International Covenants on Civil and Political Rights, and on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights; the UN treaty bodies and individual communications. The UN Human Rights Council, the Universal Periodic Review, and other UN mechanisms. 7) The Inter-American system: the American Convention on Human Rights and the Inter-American Court and Commission on Human Rights. 8) The European system: the Council of Europe; the European Convention of Human Rights and the Strasbourg Court; the European Social Charter and the European Committee of Social Rights. 9) Insights on the European mechanisms for the protection of human rights: Lodging an application with the European Court of Human Rights; The collective complaints procedure provided for by the European Social Charter. 10) Human rights and international criminal responsibility of individuals: the role of international criminal courts and tribunals in prosecuting crimes against human rights. 11) Human rights and State responsibility for internationally wrongful acts: content and implementation of the responsibility of the State for the violation of human rights obligations under general international law. Use of force and protection of human rights. The “responsibility to protect” doctrine. 12) Domestic implementation of, and compliance with, international human rights obligations: the respective role of national legislator and domestic courts, including constitutional courts.
(reference books)
The recommended textbook for this course is
D. Shelton, Advanced Introduction To International Human Rights Law. Cheltenham - UK: E. Elgar, 2014.
Further readings (including selected articles and excerpts from relevant literature) will be suggested during the course.
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