
The latest issue of the
International Journal of Human Rights (Vol. 22, no. 10, 2018) is out. Contents include:
- Special Issue: Peremptory International Legal Norms and the Democratic Rule of Law
- Sonja Grover, Introduction
- Alise Coen, International order, the rule of law, and US departures from refugee protection
- Ryan Alford, The harbinger theory of terrorism and the rule of law: the danger of ‘balancing’ non-derogable rights against security when relying on threat assessments produced by self-interested intelligence agencies
- Mariette Brennan & Miriam Cohen, Citizenship by descent: how Canada’s one-generation rule fails to comply with international legal norms
- Oscar Gakuo Mwangi, Securitisation, non-refoulement and the rule of law in Kenya: the case of Somali refugees
- Denise González-Núñez, The widespread use of torture in Mexico and its impacts on the rule of law
- Ridvan Peshkopia, Drin Konjufca, Erblin Salihu & Jonida Lika, EU membership conditionality in promoting acceptance of peremptory human rights norms: a case study in Albania considering public opinion
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