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Oxford Law Citator
Contents
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Preliminary Material
Dedication
Preface to the Third Edition
Contents
Table of Authorities
Courts, Commissions and Tribunals
Administrative Tribunals
African Commission on Human Rights
African Court of Human and Peoples’ Rights
European Commission on Human Rights
European Court of Human Rights
European Court of Justice
Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia
Human Rights Chamber for Bosnia and Herzegovina
Human Rights Committee
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights
Inter-American Court of Human Rights
International Arbitration Awards
International Criminal Court
International Court of Justice
International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea
Iran-United States Claims Tribunal
United Nations Committees
United States – Mexican General Claims Commission
Domestic Courts
Australia
Bahamas
Botswana
Canada
Colombia
Germany
India
Peru
Uganda
United Kingdom
United States
Netherlands
New Zealand
South Africa
Zimbabwe
Conventions, Declarations, Treaties and Legislative Materials
Main Text
1 Introduction
1.1 Evolution of the Law of Remedies
1.2 The Innovations of Human Rights Law
Part I The Conceptual Framework
2 Meanings and Purposes of Remedies
2.1 Preconditions to a Claim
2.1.1 Breach of an obligation
2.1.2 Resulting harm
2.1.3 Identified or identifiable injured parties
2.2 The Dual Meaning of Remedies
2.2.1 Access to justice
2.2.2 Substantive redress
2.3 The Purposes of Remedies
2.3.1 Compensatory or remedial justice
2.3.2 Condemnation or retribution
2.3.3 General and individual deterrence
2.3.4 Restorative or transitional justice
2.4 Economic Analysis of Remedies
2.5 Conclusions
3 Sources and General Content of the Law of Remedies
3.1 General International Law
3.1.1 State responsibility
3.1.2 The responsibility of international organizations
3.1.3 Remedies and business enterprises
3.2 Remedies in International Human Rights Instruments
3.2.1 The specificity of human rights law
3.2.2 Global treaties
3.2.3 Regional treaties
3.2.3.1 The European Convention on Human Rights
3.2.3.2 The European Social Charter
3.2.3.3 The European Union Charter of Fundamental Rights
3.2.3.4 The Inter-American system
3.2.3.5 The African system
3.2.4 Declarations and other non-treaty texts
3.3 International Humanitarian Law
3.4 International Criminal Law
3.5 Conclusions
Part II The Institutional Framework
4 Domestic Remedies
4.1 The Requirement to Exhaust Local Remedies
4.2 International Standards
4.2.1 Access to justice
4.2.2 An independent, impartial, and competent tribunal
4.2.3 Timely and expeditious proceedings
4.2.4 Fair proceedings
4.2.5 Redress
4.2.6 Sanctions, investigation, prosecution, and punishment
4.2.7 The right to the truth
4.2.8 Enforcement of judgments
4.3 Gross and Systematic Violations
4.3.1 Administrative reparations programs
4.3.2 Judicial remedies
4.3.2.1 Special tribunals
4.3.2.2 Mass claims procedures
4.4 Conclusions
5 International Tribunals
5.1 Arbitral Claims for Injury to Aliens
5.1.1 Wrongful Death
5.1.2 Deprivation of liberty
5.1.3 Injury to property
5.1.4 Interest
5.1.5 Satisfaction
5.2 The International Court of Justice
5.3 International Criminal Courts
5.3.1 The Rome Statute
5.3.2 The Trust Fund
5.3.3 Developing ICC reparations principles
5.4 International Administrative Tribunals
5.5 Reparations Following Armed Conflicts
5.5.1 Lump sum settlements
5.5.2 United Nations Compensation Commission (UNCC)
5.5.3 The Ethiopia/Eritrea arbitration
5.6 Conclusions
6 The Functions and Competence of Human Rights Tribunals
6.1 Introduction
6.2 The United Nations System
6.2.1 United Nations organs and subsidiary bodies
6.2.2 United Nations treaty bodies
6.2.3 UNESCO
6.2.4 The International Labour Organization
6.3 Regional Human Rights Systems
6.3.1 The European Human Rights System
6.3.2 The European Social Charter
6.3.3 The European Court of Justice
6.3.4 The Inter-American System
6.3.5 The African System
6.4 Conclusions
Part III Procedural Issues
7 Who May Claim Redress?
7.1 Individual Victims
7.2 Communities and Peoples
7.3 Survivability of Claims
7.4 Conclusions
8 Presentation of Claims
8.1 Temporal Jurisdiction
8.1.1 Continuing violations
8.1.2 Historical injustices
8.2 Redressable Injury
8.3 Causality and Evidence
Part IV The Substance of Redress
9 Declaratory Judgments
10 Restitution
10.1 Cultural Property
10.2 Land
10.3 Liberty
10.4 International Jurisprudence
11 Compensation
11.1 State Practice
11.2 International Human Rights Practice
11.2.1 The European Court of Human Rights
11.2.2 The Inter-American Court of Human Rights
11.3 Pecuniary Damages
11.3.1 Valuation
11.3.1.1 Jurisprudence on loss of life
11.3.1.2 Property
11.3.1.3 Valuing liberty
11.4 Non-Pecuniary Damages
11.4.1 Nature of the injury
11.4.2 Equitable nature of awards
11.5 Evidence and Presumed Harm
11.6 Compensation for Procedural Violations
11.7 Distribution of Awards
11.8 Inflation, Interest, and Taxation of Damages
11.8.1 Discounting and inflation
11.8.2 Interest
11.8.3 Taxation
11.9 Conclusions
12 Non-Monetary Remedies
12.1 State Practice
12.2 International Human Rights Tribunals
12.2.1 Rehabilitation
12.2.2 Satisfaction
12.2.3 Guarantees of non-repetition
12.3 Assessing the Need for Non-Monetary Remedies
12.4 Conclusions
13 Punitive or Exemplary Damages
13.1 Enterprise Liability
13.2 Awards of Punitive Damages in Human Rights Cases
13.3 Conclusions
14 Costs and Fees
15 Conclusions
Further Material
Bibliography
Index
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Bibliography
From:
Remedies in International Human Rights Law (3rd Edition)
Dinah Shelton
Content type:
Book content
Product:
Oxford Scholarly Authorities on International Law [OSAIL]
Published in print:
01 October 2015
ISBN:
9780199588824
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