... this acknowledgement, women are promised, inter alia, the right "to have
access to agricultural credit and loans, marketing facilities, appropriate
technology and equal treatment in land and agrarian reform as well as
resettlement schemes".
ditinjau dari segi Pancasila dan UUD 1945 atas dasar keimanan dan ketaqwaan kepada Allah Tuhan Yang Maha Esa (suatu pandangan umum Universitas Islam Djakarta)
With the emergence of modern human rights in the Universal Declaration, what remained of a radical political potential of the discourse withdrew: statism and individualism became its authorised foundations and the possibilities of other human rights traditions were denied. The strife that once lay at the heart of human rights was forgotten in an increasing juridification. This book seeks to recover the radical political pole of human rights. It looks to the debates surrounding constituent power – the ‘power of the people’ – in order to understand different possibilities for the discourse. Using continental political philosophy and critical legal theory, Human Rights and Constituent Power presents a very different conception of human rights, more at home on the riotous streets than in courtrooms and parliaments.
Itsuggests theenormity of either pole and the significanceof how to put them
together. Human rights aredifferential, but there is no pure pole. Rather,in each
instancethey are put together differently. I donot think this can be reduced to
strategy, ...
people appear to believe that there are a growing number of religious conflicts in
the world, particularly since the end of the Cold War. On closer examination,
however, it seems that the number of conflicts of the type which are today often ...
Banyak tanah rakyat digusur dengan paksa dengan berbagai macam-macam
dalih, bahwa kelak sebagian besar masyarakat akan diuntungkan dengan
adanya pembangunan, dan lain-lain. Namun kenyataan menunjukkan rakyat
pemilik ...
The International Labor Organization estimated in 2000 that, of the approximately 246 million children engaged in labor worldwide, 171 million were working in situations harmful to their physical development. Child Labor and Human Rights provides a comprehensive overview of the phenomenon of child labor from a human rights perspective. The authors consider the connections between human rights and abusive child labor, the pros and cons of a rights-based approach to the problem, and specific strategies for effecting change. They make an indispensable contribution to the growing effort to abolish abusive and exploitive child labor practices.
Defining Child Labor as if Human Rights Matter?J. Ennew, W.E. Myers, and D. Plateau. Child Labor and Human Rights: Lessons in History?H. Cunningham and S. Stromquist. The Standards-Based Response of the World Community.