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The goal is to have universally promoted and protected human rights supported by law and institutions.
Date | Law | Strengths | Weaknesses |
---|---|---|---|
1948 | The Universal Declaration of Human Rights | The first universal statement of global human rights standards. Influenced binding international covenants, regional conventions, and the human rights laws of nation states. | Non-binding in international law. Critics argue it imposes a Western or Judo-Christian viewpoint of human rights. |
1953 | Europe Creates ECHR | The first regional agreement on HR.A binding legal text with 47 member states. The ECHR acts as a final court of appeal of last resort. | Decisions in the ECHR are binding but lack enforcement mechanisms, allowing states to ignore rulings. Sovereignty may be challenged if ECHR judges disagree with national governments. |
1966 | International Covenants on Social and Economic Rights (ICSR) and on Civil and Political Rights | First inclusion of human rights in international law, though some states failed to ratify. | Economic and social rights are challenging for less developed nations to deliver. No international enforcement body. |
1980s | International Conventions | Address specific human rights abuses for vulnerable groups.Offers definitions of torture and prohibits reliance on torture-derived evidence. | Cannot be enforced on non-ratifying states.Examples include US torture practices revealed in 2015. |
Date | Court | Details |
---|---|---|
1959 | European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) | Operates with 47 member states. Some decisions ignored, but most are upheld. |
1990s | International Criminal Tribunals | Successful conviction rate but lacks long-term deterrence or guaranteed trials. |
2002 | International Criminal Court (ICC) | Established in 2002 with 9 convictions by 2019.Some states, including 3 of the P5, have not ratified. |
Case Study | Details |
---|---|
Cambodia | Convicted Khmer Rouge leaders for genocide and crimes against humanity. |
Former Yugoslavia | Convicted high-ranking officials for genocide and other crimes. |
Sierra Leone | Convicted Charles Taylor for war crimes. |
Case Study | Details |
---|---|
Omar Al Bashir | Wanted for war crimes; evaded capture and remains in pre-trial stage. |
President Kenyatta and President Ruto | Charges dropped due to insufficient evidence in the 2007 Kenya violence case. |
Bosco Ntaganda | Sentenced to 30 years for war crimes and crimes against humanity. |
Effective | Not Effective |
---|---|
Evidence of key successes, such as convictions and the ability to prosecute high-ranking officials. | Lacks authority to prosecute non-signatory states; majority of convictions are related to African states. |
Permanent court structure. | P5 members not ratifying the Rome Statute affects legitimacy and global cooperation. |
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