International Human Rights Seminar European Human rights. ICC Int l Crim. Tribunals, Local Sweatshop Watch a coalition of labor, community, civil rights, immigrant rights, women s, http://library.uchastings.edu/library/Legal Research/Class Pages/intl-humanright
Extractions: To find a topic or to get started on your research, you might want to look at Hastings Law Library Human Rights Research Guide , or browse the topics covered in the Encyclopedia of Human Rights, 2nd edition (JC571 E67 1996; Reserve stacks), or scan the topics covered at the University of Minnesota Human Rights Library Finding Books: You can search the Hastings Online Catalog for print titles at the Hastings Law Library. You can s earch other Library Catalogs (including ) for additional print resources at local libraries. Or you can search "WorldCat" on FirstSearch to find out if any books exist on your topic at any library worldwide. (Note: FirstSearch is only available from computers on campus.) If you do find a book on your topic that we don't own at Hastings, you can submit a request to have the book borrowed by Hastings through inter-library loan (ILL). It can take up to three weeks to get books from ILL, so plan ahead.
HICLR - Hastings International And Comparative Law Research Sweatshop Watch a coalition of labor, community, civil rights, immigrant rights, tibet Justice Center committed to solving the situation in tibet http://library.uchastings.edu/library/Library Information/Student Resources/Jour
CorpWatch : Climate Justice Initiative Residents and Community Groups Charge PG E and Cal ISO with civil rights Violations Students for a Free tibet, US tibet Committee, The Milarepa Fund and http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?&list=classt&class=15&type=100&all=1&nointr
Written Statement Submitted By Human Rights Advocates of Human rights and article 9 (1) of the International Covenant on civil 7; LAWASIA and TIN, Defying the Dragon China and Human rights in tibet, http://www.unhchr.ch/Huridocda/Huridoca.nsf/0/0205adb21d46988b8025676e0038cc6f?O
TCHRD - Publications - Impoverishing Tibetans - Notes tibet Centre for Human rights and Democracy Publications - Impoverishing International Covenant on civil and Political rights, Adopted and opened for http://www.tchrd.org/pubs/impoverishing/notes.html
Extractions: Tashi Delek About Tibet About CTA Who's who in CTA HH the Dalai Lama ... Tibetan Freedom NEW DELHI STATEMENT AND ACTION PLAN FIRST ASIAN TIBET SUPPORT GROUP CONFERENCE REWARI, FEBRUARY 2002 Adopted I. Asian TSG Conference Action Plan W e, the 70 representatives of Tibet Support Group organizations from 9 countries, gathered here at Rewari (Haryana), India, from 7th and 8th February 2002 to develop strategies to effectively support the struggle of the Tibetan people for freedom and justice, express our solidarity with the people of Tibet and pledge to intensify our efforts to help them achieve their legitimate objectives. We fully endorse the right of the Tibetan people to determine their own destiny, in accordance with their recognized right to self-determination and recognize His Holiness the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan-Government-in-exile to be the sole legitimate representative of the Tibetan people. We support His Holiness the Dalai Lamas call for a peaceful resolution of the conflict, which is caused by Chinas occupation of Tibet, and for the proposal he has made for substantive negotiation without any preconditions with Chinese leaders. We commend His Holiness consistency of his position in this regard.
TibetNet-News Flash Archive 2001 This is a great honour, especially for the tibet cause, said Rosenkranz, Mohandas Gandhi and United States civil rights leader Martin Luther King. http://www.tibet.net/flash/flash_archive/2001/0601/260601.html
Extractions: says Tuesday, June 26 is Deadline for Expulsions A student from Serthar has sent an appeal for international help, saying that Tuesday, June 26 is the deadline for more than 7,000 monks and students to leave the encampment. The appeal says that all of the Han Chinese students and all of the foreign students must leave by June 26. Students from Taiwan, Singapore and elsewhere had been studying at Serthar. After June 26, the huts will be pushed over, the account says. The appeal identifies "Minister Wang" as the official who has ordered the expulsions, and says there are now 4,000 soldiers stationed near Serthar. It also says that the academy at Serthar was forced to stop classes on June 6.
Extractions: Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy World Geography PREVIOUS ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition. Tibet Region in southwestern China , bordered by Burma to the southeast;
The Courage Of Conscience Award And from awareness springs movements the civil rights movement, to an exiled monk from tibet and the destruction of his homeland, http://www.peaceabbey.org/awards/peace_award.htm
Brock University Undergraduate Calendar - 2004-2005 Courses African Americans in the World Wars, the civil rights Movement, *HIST 3P62 Global Economic History, 17001880 (also offered as intl 3P62) Cotton, http://www.brocku.ca/webcal/2004/undergrad/courses/HIST.html
Extractions: COURSES Aboriginal Studies (ABST) Accounting (ACTG) Adult Education (ADED) Administration (ADMI) ... Greek (GREE) History (HIST) International Studies (INTL) Italian (ITAL) Information Technology Information Systems (ITIS) Japanese (JAPA) ... Writing (WRIT) History Courses HIST 1F95 World History since 1914 Major political, social, economic and cultural trends of the 20th century, with prime focus on developments in Europe and the way they have affected the rest of the world; the decline of Europe in global political and economic terms. Topics include the world wars, the Russian Revolution, fascism, the Holocaust, the Cold War, decolonization and conflict and its resolution in the international, political and social spheres. Lectures, seminar, 3 hours per week. HIST 1F96 The Americas Comparative themes in the history of the Americas from pre-Columbian times to the present, emphasizing class, colonialism, economics, gender, labour, political systems, race, religion, revolution and war. Lectures, seminar, 3 hours per week. HIST 1P92 Early Medieval Europe Western Europe from the late Roman Empire to the year 1000 emphasizing political, social, religious and economic change as the Roman Empire fragmented and was replaced with regional power blocs and identities. Division of the Roman Empire, development of Germanic successor states, rise of Christianity, conversion processes, rise of Europe, and nature of society. Lectures, seminar, 3 hours per week.
Untitled Document intl. Center for Human rights Democratic Development International Labor Organization Human rights in China International Campaign for tibet http://www.dictatorwatch.org/ae/gov.html
Extractions: The nations listed below include those rated the most oppressive (Not Free, and 7 out of 7 in both political rights and civil liberties) by the organization Freedom House , for 2000-2001. We also intend to collect links for democracy groups active with the other nations rated as Not Free, and also the countries rated Partly Free, since many of them are effectively dictatorships as well; Malaysia, for example.
Recent Books Recent publications include reports on China, India, Pakistan and tibet. (2181) Bahrain Routine Abuse, Routine Denial civil rights and the Political http://www.hrw.org/pubweb/pubscat/spring00pcwd-07.htm
Extractions: Human Rights Watch offers a variety of convenient subscriptions ensuring the timely delivery of unique, first-hand human rights reporting. The length and format of the documents varies. The short reports selling for $1.00 to $7.00 each and coded with a capital letter followed by three digits run between three and sixty pages with an 8 1/2 x 11 inch trim size and stapled; all other reports are either fastback bound with an 8 1/2 x 11 inch trim size or 6 x 9 inch perfect-bound paperbacks. Subscriptions are not discounted and include shipping and handling. THE HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH WORLD REPORT A detailed analysis of human rights developments, U.S. policy, and a review of the work done by Human Rights Watch over the previous year in sixty-five countries worldwide. "The work of the human rights monitors chronicled here constitutes a valuable international public service; many of the abuses, particularly in lesser-known countries, would go completely undocumented but for the work of [Human Rights Watch]." Foreign Affairs, praising World Report 1995 The Human Rights Watch Update is a bulletin briefly covering some of our work on behalf of human rights around the world. Only institutions and organizations may subscribe to the Update via the publications catalog; individuals may become members and receive the Update on a quarterly basis by contacting the Membership Department at (212) 216-1804.
Issue #10: January, 1996 the International Covenant on civil and Political rights, was provided in an earlier In their concluding London Statement on tibet, the conference http://www.lawschool.cornell.edu/library/asil/10reader.htm
Extractions: Topical Headings Business Int'l Courts Comparative/Private Int'l Law Int'l Law Theory Democracy(Africa) International Orgization Diplomacy Int'l Relations Environment Self-Determination Extraterritorial Jurisdiction Treaties Use of Force Human Rights G. Ferraro, THE CULTURAL DIMENSION OF INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS (2nd ed. Prentice Hall, 1994) [paper: 177]. This publication analyzes the intersection between cultural anthropology and international business. Writers of international literature are increasingly acknowledging the impact of culture on business, but only in a cursory and somewhat anecdotal fashion. This handy guide focuses on the effect of understanding culture as a vehicle for promoting international business. The book is divided into four essential segments. The first addresses the underlying connection between anthropological theory and international business. The second analyzes verbal and non-verbal communications patterns. The third portion of the book then addresses cultural self-awareness including an appreciation of one's own culture so that the perceptions of one another are recognized as key features of the overall relationship. Finally, the author provides insights on how to find and recognize relevant cultural information. The author provides "icing on the cake" mini-studies at the end of various chapters, designed to expose and avoid cultural conflict and related misunderstandings.
PHILOSOPHY 19A: HUMAN RIGHTS Driscoll, The Development of Human rights in intl. Law, (ERES) by Maurice Cranston; (36) On Salmon Rushdie and civil Liberties by Leon Wieseltier http://www.unet.brandeis.edu/~teuber/hr.html
Human Rights General (POLHUMAN) TXT 11/12/93 21438 bytes (downloads 5) LIST OF tibet/CHINA rights TXT 11/12/93 22645 bytes (downloads 4) COVENANT civil POLITICAL rights human rights http://www.alternatives.com/libs/polhuman.htm
Extractions: APAKABAR.TXT 01/07/96 52643 bytes (downloads 1) INDONESIA-L listserver. news, views and resources on contemporary Indonesia. ASMARA.TXT 07/13/95 3030 bytes (downloads 1) A short file about Asmara, capital of Eritrea. Eritrea is a former Italian colony and the newest country in Africa. ASMARAUN.TXT 07/13/95 6903 bytes (downloads 2) A file about Asmara University, Eritrea. Eritrea is the newest country in Africa. BURMAA13.TXT 03/06/95 8549 bytes (downloads 2) Human Rights Meet Bangkok, Sham? [93] politics thailand conferences fareast CANADA.TXT CH-OBJ.TXT 09/22/94 871 bytes (downloads 5) Chernobyl son objects in Israel ukraine nuclear military conscientious objectors israel middle east CHILD.TXT 11/12/93 53781 bytes (downloads 8) CONVENTION RIGHTS OF CHILD (UN) un legislation conventions children human CHINA.TXT
Grassvoices_en After the movie, volunteers introduced their work in tibet, who are working in sustainable development and civil society some professional from intl NGO http://www.gvbchina.org/EnglishWeb/newsletter/0410Grassvoices.htm
Extractions: Tel: 010-8485966924 Introduction to Voices of Grassroots Voices of Grassroots is a monthly newsletter, which voices the opinions and activities of Chinese environmental NGOs. It is designed as an information platform to promote the participation of Chinese grassroots organizations in China's sustainable development. (detail) Notice: The content of this newsletter is the summary of the more detailed articles in our monthly-published Chinese version. If you are interested to read the full articles in Chinese, please contact us. Comments From Chief Editor Voices of Grassroots , a monthly newsletter published to voice views and activities of Chinese grassroots, finally comes into existence. I, together with my colleagues at Global Village of Beijing (GVB), feel deeply honored to be the chief editor of this publication. We feel warmth and affability because of the newsletter's particular concern about local and national environmental grassroots, who live in the same circumstance, encountering same difficulties with same perseverance as we do. We choose a frog as the symbol of our newsletter, not only for making it lively and interesting, but to remind ourselves and other grassroots of the extension of its meaning-Never jump out of the grassland and pond - the public, in which we are established; Keep voicing our opinions since it is our function and mission; Look upon our behaviors from diversified points of views and realize self-promotion with tolerance and interdependence; and Strive to make our frog jump to keep up with the pace of international NGOs through capacity building.
Treaties And International Law European Parliament Resolution on the Situation in tibet United States under the International Covenant on civil and Political rights (July 1994) http://www.lawguru.com/ilawlib/89.htm
Extractions: Treaties and international law Internet Law Library Home Page The Internet Law Library was originally provided to the public courtesy of the United States House of Representatives Law Revision Counsel Office. Part of the Counsel's mission is to make the law (particularly the U.S. Code) available to the public. When the U.S. House of Representatives discontinued hosting the Library, our site and several others were allowed to carry it.
State Department Releases 2003 Human Rights Country Reports The Chinese Government s record in tibet remains poor and ongoing abuses include of judges as well as human rights and civil society activists. http://japan.usembassy.gov/e/p/tp-20040226-15.html
Extractions: Home American Citizen Services Visas to the U.S. American Centers Topic Index U.S. Politics Press Releases Ambassador Baker By Region Japan dummytitle Iraq dummytitle Korea dummytitle China dummytitle Afghanistan dummytitle Middle East dummytitle Security Issues Terror dummytitle Arms Control dummytitle Depleted Uranium dummytitle United Nations dummytitle Summits dummytitle Economic Issues Intl. Trade dummytitle Investment dummytitle Anti-corruption dummytitle IP dummytitle Global Affairs Human Rights dummytitle Health dummytitle Women dummytitle Children dummytitle Monthly Archive Consulates Osaka dummytitle Nagoya dummytitle Fukuoka dummytitle Sapporo dummytitle Naha dummytitle American Centers Tokyo dummytitle Kansai dummytitle Nagoya dummytitle Fukuoka dummytitle Sapporo dummytitle State Department Releases 2003 Human Rights Country Reports The U.S. Department of State released its annual Country Reports on Human Rights Practices on February 25. The reports include individual assessments of 196 countries and, according to the introduction, "are designed to assess the state of democracy and human rights around the world, call attention to violations, and...prompt needed changes in [U.S.] policies toward particular countries." The introduction to the reports cites intensified efforts by the United States to address human rights issues throughout the world, and notes new programs designed to assist in the promotion of human rights.
China Legal Reforms Accompanied By "Backsliding" On Human Rights The human rights situation in the tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) and in some the impact of such legislation on civil liberties and fundamental freedoms. http://japan.usembassy.gov/e/p/tp-20040226-18.html
Extractions: Home American Citizen Services Visas to the U.S. American Centers Topic Index U.S. Politics Press Releases Ambassador Baker By Region Japan dummytitle Iraq dummytitle Korea dummytitle China dummytitle Afghanistan dummytitle Middle East dummytitle Security Issues Terror dummytitle Arms Control dummytitle Depleted Uranium dummytitle United Nations dummytitle Summits dummytitle Economic Issues Intl. Trade dummytitle Investment dummytitle Anti-corruption dummytitle IP dummytitle Global Affairs Human Rights dummytitle Health dummytitle Women dummytitle Children dummytitle Monthly Archive Consulates Osaka dummytitle Nagoya dummytitle Fukuoka dummytitle Sapporo dummytitle Naha dummytitle American Centers Tokyo dummytitle Kansai dummytitle Nagoya dummytitle Fukuoka dummytitle Sapporo dummytitle China Legal Reforms Accompanied by "Backsliding" on Human Rights Although the Chinese government undertook some legal reforms in 2003, there was "backsliding" on key human rights issues during the year, according to the Country Report on Human Rights Practices in China released by the Department of State February 25. During 2003, the report says, Chinese authorities carried out "arrests of individuals discussing sensitive subjects on the Internet, health activists, labor protesters, defense lawyers, journalists, house church members, and others seeking to take advantage of the space created by reforms."