Globalization challenges fundamental principles governing international law, especially with respect to state sovereignty and international relations. This transformation has had a significant impact on the practice of trade law, financial regulation, and environmental law but relatively little effect on one area of law and regulation: human rights.Universal Human Rights and Extraterritorial Obligations examines both the international and domestic foundations of human rights law. What other contemporary human rights debates have almost totally ignored is that in an increasingly interdependent world-where public and private international actors have great influence on the lives of individuals everywhere-it is insufficient to assess only the record of domestic governments in human rights. It is equally important to assess the effect of actions taken by intergovernmental organizations, international private entities, and foreign states.From this standpoint, contributors to this book address how states' actions or omissions may affect the prospects of individuals in foreign states and asks important questions: To what extent do agricultural policies of rich countries influence the right to food in poorer countries? How do decisions to screen asylum seekers outside state borders affect refugee rights? How does cooperation among different states in the "war on terror" influence individuals' rights to be free from torture? This volume presents a brief for a more complex and updated approach to the protection of human rights worldwide.
Globalization challenges fundamental principles governing international law, especially with respect to state sovereignty and international relations. This transformation has had a significant impact on the practice of trade law, financial regulation, and environmental law but relatively little effect on one area of law and regulation: human rights.Universal Human Rights and Extraterritorial Obligations examines both the international and domestic foundations of human rights law. What other contemporary human rights debates have almost totally ignored is that in an increasingly interdependent worldwhere public and private international actors have great influence on the lives of individuals everywhereit is insufficient to assess only the record of domestic governments in human rights. It is equally important to assess the effect of actions taken by intergovernmental organizations, international private entities, and foreign states.From this standpoint, contributors to this book address how states' actions or omissions may affect the prospects of individuals in foreign states and asks important questions: To what extent do agricultural policies of rich countries influence the right to food in poorer countries? How do decisions to screen asylum seekers outside state borders affect refugee rights? How does cooperation among different states in the "e;war on terror"e; influence individuals' rights to be free from torture? This volume presents a brief for a more complex and updated approach to the protection of human rights worldwide.
IntroductionSigrun Skogly and Mark GibneyChapter 1. Obligations of States to Prevent and Prohibit Torture in an Extraterritorial PerspectiveManfred NowakChapter 2. Obligations to Protect the Right to Life: Constructing a Rule of Transfer Regarding Small Arms and Light WeaponsBarbara FreyChapter 3. Growing Barriers: International Refugee LawThomas Gammeltoft-HansenChapter 4. Diagonal Environmental RightsJohn H. KnoxChapter 5. The Human Rights Responsibility of International Assistance and Cooperation in HealthJudith Bueno de Mesquita, Paul Hunt, and Rajat KhoslaChapter 6. The World Food Crisis and the Right to Adequate FoodMichael WindfuhrChapter 7. Labor Standards and Extraterritoriality: Cambodian Textile Exports and the International Labour OrganizationVirginia A. LearyChapter 8. A Sort of Homecoming: The Right to HousingMalcolm LangfordChapter 9. Protecting Rights in the Face of Scarcity: The Right to WaterAmanda CahillNotesBibliographyList of ContributorsIndex