BIBLIOTECAS del MAEC

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Human rights and the dark side of globalisation : transnational law enforcement and migration control / edited by Thomas Gammeltoft-Hansen and Jens Vedsted-Hansen.

Contributor(s): Gammeltoft-Hansen, Thomas [editor.] | Vedsted-Hansen, Jens [editor.]Series: (Routledge studies in human rights)Publication details: Abingdon ; New York, N.Y. : Routledge , 2017. Description: XII, 365 p. : il. ; 25 cmISBN: 978-1-138-22224-3Subject(s): Derechos humanos | Derecho internacional | Cooperación internacional | Globalización | Inmigración
Contents:
Shared responsibility for human rights violations : a relational account / André Nollkaemper -- Extraterritoriality and human rights : prospects and challenges / Marko Milanovic -- Transnational operations carried out from a state's own territory : armed drones and the extraterritorial effect of international human rights conventions / Peter Vedel Kessing -- NSA surveillance and its meaning for international human rights law / Mark Gibney -- Jurisdiction at sea : migrant interdiction and the transnational security state / Douglas Guilfoyle -- Counter-piracy : navigating the cloudy waters of international law, domestic law and human rights? / Birgit Feldtmann -- Rescuing migrants at sea and the law of international responsibility / Efthymios Papastavridis -- Relinking power and responsibility in extraterritorial immigration control : the case of immigration liaison officers / Fabiane Baxewanos -- State responsibility and migration control : Australia's international deterrence model / Nikolas Feith Tan -- Multi-stakeholder operations of border control coordinated at the EU level and the allocation of international responsibilities / Maïté Fernandez -- A "blind spot" in the framework of international responsibility? Third-party responsibility for human rights violations : the case of Frontex / Melanie Fink -- The legality of frontex operation hera-type migration control practices in light of the Hirsi judgment / Niels W. Frenzen -- The dark side of globalization : do EU border controls contribute to death in the Mediterranean? / Elspeth Guild -- Outsourcing protection and the transnational relevance of protection elsewhere : the case of UNHCR / Julian M. Lehmann.
Abstract: This edited volume examines the continued viability of international human rights law in the context of growing transnational law enforcement. With states increasingly making use of global governance modes, core exercises of public authority such as migration control, surveillance, detention and policing, are increasingly conducted extraterritorially, outsourced to foreign governments or delegated to non-state actors.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Monografías Monografías Biblioteca Central del MAEC
Depósito
58348 Available 1069121

Shared responsibility for human rights violations : a relational account / André Nollkaemper -- Extraterritoriality and human rights : prospects and challenges / Marko Milanovic -- Transnational operations carried out from a state's own territory : armed drones and the extraterritorial effect of international human rights conventions / Peter Vedel Kessing -- NSA surveillance and its meaning for international human rights law / Mark Gibney -- Jurisdiction at sea : migrant interdiction and the transnational security state / Douglas Guilfoyle -- Counter-piracy : navigating the cloudy waters of international law, domestic law and human rights? / Birgit Feldtmann -- Rescuing migrants at sea and the law of international responsibility / Efthymios Papastavridis -- Relinking power and responsibility in extraterritorial immigration control : the case of immigration liaison officers / Fabiane Baxewanos -- State responsibility and migration control : Australia's international deterrence model / Nikolas Feith Tan -- Multi-stakeholder operations of border control coordinated at the EU level and the allocation of international responsibilities / Maïté Fernandez -- A "blind spot" in the framework of international responsibility? Third-party responsibility for human rights violations : the case of Frontex / Melanie Fink -- The legality of frontex operation hera-type migration control practices in light of the Hirsi judgment / Niels W. Frenzen -- The dark side of globalization : do EU border controls contribute to death in the Mediterranean? / Elspeth Guild -- Outsourcing protection and the transnational relevance of protection elsewhere : the case of UNHCR / Julian M. Lehmann.

This edited volume examines the continued viability of international human rights law in the context of growing transnational law enforcement. With states increasingly making use of global governance modes, core exercises of public authority such as migration control, surveillance, detention and policing, are increasingly conducted extraterritorially, outsourced to foreign governments or delegated to non-state actors.

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