000 04108cam a2200421 i 4500
001 ocn869261355
003 TZ-ArACH
005 20160704113942.0
008 140620t20142014enk b 000 0 eng c
010 _a 2013417699
016 7 _a016609262
_2Uk
020 _a9781780682006
020 _a178068200X
035 _a(OCoLC)869261355
040 _aBTCTA
_beng
_erda
_cTZ-ArACH
_dDLC
_dYDXCP
_dERASA
_dUKMGB
_dCHVBK
_dCDX
_dBEDGE
_dGUL
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041 _aEng
042 _apcc
049 _aTZAA
050 0 0 _aK3249
_b.H86
082 0 4 _a341.5
_b23
245 0 0 _aHuman security and international law : the challenge of non-state actors
_bthe challenge of non-state actors /
_cCedric Ryngaert, Math Noortmann (eds.).
300 _axii, 203 pages ;
_c25 cm.
490 1 _aInternational law
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references.
505 0 0 _tHuman security and international law : the challenge of non-state actors /
_rCedric Ryngaert and Math Noortmann --
_tHuman securities, international laws and non-state actors : bringing complexity back in /
_rMath Noortmann --
_tEnsuring human security in armed conflicts : the role of non-state actors and its reflection in current international humanitarian law /
_rVeronika Bílková --
_tRole of non-state actors in implementing the responsibility to protect /
_rGentian Zyberi --
_tNational human rights institutions, displacement and human security /
_rRichard Carver --
_tThreats posed to human security by non-state corporate actors : the answer of international criminal law /
_rCedric Ryngaert and Heleen Struyven --
_tArms Trade Treaty and human security : what role for NSAs? /
_rZeray Yihdego --
_tConstructive constraints? : conceptual and practical challenges to regulating private military and security companies /
_rSurabhi Ranganathan --
_tTowards a (new) human security-based agenda for international law and non-state actors? /
_rMath Noortmann and Cedric Ryngaert.
520 _aIn 1994, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) coined the term {u2018}human security{u2019} in the seminal UNDP Human Development Report. This report approached {u2018}security{u2019} for the first time from a holistic perspective: security would no longer be viewed from a purely military perspective, but rather it would encapsulate economic, food, health, environmental, personal, community and political security. Although the concept of human security accords a higher status to individual than to governmental interests, human security discourses have continually emphasised the central role of States as providers of human security. This volume challenges this paradigm, and highlights the part played by non-state actors in both threatening human security and also in rescuing or providing relief to those whose human security is endangered. It does so from a legal perspective, (international) law being one of the instruments used to realise human security as well as being a material source or guiding principle for the formation of human security-enhancing policies. In particular, the volume critically discusses how various non-state actors, such as armed opposition groups, multinational corporations, private military / security companies, non-governmental organisations, and national human rights institutions, participate in the construction of such policies, and how they are held legally accountable for their adverse impact on human security.--Provided by publishers.
650 0 _aHuman security.
_918796
650 0 _aNon-state actors (International relations)
_918797
650 0 _aHumanitarian law.
_918798
650 7 _aHumanitarian law
_2fast
_918799
650 7 _aHuman security.
_2fast
_918800
650 7 _aNon-state actors (International relations)
_2fast
_918801
700 1 _aRyngaert, Cedric,
_eeditor.
_918802
700 1 _aNoortmann, Math,
_eeditor.
_918803
830 0 _aInternational law (Antwerp, Belgium) ;
_v12.
_918804
942 _2lcc
_cBOOK
999 _c3331
_d3331