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dc.contributor.authorDE BURCA, Grainne
dc.contributor.otherFASONE, Cristina
dc.contributor.otherMARZAL YETANO, Toni
dc.date.accessioned2020-12-01T14:48:09Z
dc.date.available2020-12-01T14:48:09Z
dc.date.created2015-04-22
dc.date.issued2015
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/69068
dc.descriptionLecture delivered at the European University Institute in Florence on 22 April 2015
dc.descriptionA video interview with the presenter was recorded on 22 April 2015
dc.description.abstractInternational human rights regimes – the array of UN human rights treaties and their monitoring mechanisms - have come under attack in recent years from all sides. Eric Posner says bluntly that “[h]uman rights law has failed … andit ought to be abandoned.” Samuel Moyn has advanced a range of critiques, mostly premised on the argument that the regimes have been singularly ineffective, and are doomed to extinction before long. Even their defenders acknowledge that UN human rights regimes are poorly equipped to handle many of the challenges that confront them. They are inadequately resourced, lack expertise, and governments ignore their recommendations. One consistent theme of the many criticisms is that the treaty body regimes have failed because they operate in a determinedly top-down manner. In Posner’s words: “the human rights movement shares in common with the hubris of development economics the attempt of western institutions to impose top-down solutions on developing countries”. This lecture suggests a very different reading. Applying an experimentalist perspective, and drawing on evidence from the actual practice of the UN treaty regimes, I argue that the system is much more dynamic and multi-faceted than its detractors (and often also its defenders) suggest and that, in particular, one of the great strengths of the human rights treaty regimes is precisely that they operate in ways that are not at all top-down. By mobilizing multiple actors and bodies at different levels – local, national, regional and transnational, governmental and non-governmental – to give meaning and content to their norms, these multi-level interactive regimes quite often succeed in placing neglected issues on the agenda, and in proposing and devising ways of addressing serious social wrongs.
dc.format.extent00:51:38
dc.publisherEuropean University Instituteen
dc.relation.ispartofseriesMWPen
dc.relation.ispartofseriesVideo Lectureen
dc.relation.ispartofseries2015/05en
dc.relation.hasversionhttps://hdl.handle.net/1814/38110
dc.relation.urihttps://youtu.be/5f4pgfBQ_SE
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessen
dc.titleReframing international human rights regimes
dc.title.alternativeHuman rights experimentalismen
dc.typeVideoen
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