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Globalization and Its Impact on the Future of Human Rights and International Criminal Justice

Globalization and Its Impact on the Future of Human Rights and International Criminal Justice( )
Editor: Bassiouni, M. Cherif
Contribution by: Capaldo, Giuliana Ziccardi
Chitkara, Aman
Clapham, Andrew
Corell, Hans
Cryer, Robert
Dana, Shahram
Dieng, Adama
Ellis, Mark S.
Evenson, Elizabeth
Hale, Christopher
El Hassan, Mahlis
Hopgood, Stephen
Ishay, Micheline
Jalloh, Charles C.
Jallow, Hassan B.
Kemp, Walter
Körtgen, Yannic
Lees, Martin
Matheny, Clay
Mathias, Stephen
May, Larry
Mendes, Errol P.
Myerson, Roger B.
Nanda, Ved P.
Pellet, Alain
Pierson, Carli
Saul, Ben
Schabas, William
Scheffer, David
Shaw, Mark
Sikkink, Kathryn
Silva, Mario
Sorour, Ahmed Fathi
Wilkerson, Lawrence.
Wuebbles, Donald J.
ISBN:978-1-78068-330-0
Publication Date:Jun 2015
Publisher:Intersentia Uitgevers N.V.
Book Format:Paperback
List Price:USD $172.00
Book Description:

Globalization is not a new phenomenon. New realities have emerged over the past two decades which have given it greater influence in the affairs of states. This coincided with the increasing inability of states and international organizations to carry out their institutional functions for the common good. This is testing a number of assumptions about the future of human rights and international criminal justice.

Book Details
Pages:730
Detailed Subjects: Political Science / Globalization
Law / International
Physical Dimensions (W X L X H):6.3 x 9.45 x 1.8 Inches
Book Weight:2.6 Pounds
Author Biography
(Editor)
Mahmoud Cherif Bassiouni was born in Cairo, Egypt on December 9, 1937. In 1956, he fought in the Suez conflict. He was wounded and decorated, but then put under house arrest for denouncing what he called the extreme torture and disappearances taking place under President Gamal Abdel Nasser. He was released after seven months, but was not allowed to leave the country. After being threatened again for speaking out, he escaped from Egypt by stowing away on a ship leaving for Italy in 1961.

He emigrated to the United States in 1962 and became a naturalized citizen. He studied law in Egypt, France, Switzerland, and the United States. He was a founder of the International Human Rights Law Institute at DePaul University in Chicago, where he taught for 45 years. He was co-chairman of the committee that drafted the United Nations Convention Against Torture and was sent as a United Nations expert to report on war crimes in Afghanistan, Bahrain, Libya, and Iraq.

He wrote 35 books and more than 270 essays and law review articles. In 2007, he received the Hague Prize for International Law. He died from complications of multiple myeloma on September 25, 2017 at the age of 79.

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