70 research outputs found

    A New Societies Without Borders

    Get PDF

    A New Societies Without Borders

    Get PDF

    Human Rights and the Media

    Get PDF

    Struggles over Universal Human Rights

    Get PDF

    The Human Right to Science

    Get PDF

    Human Rights Attitudes

    Get PDF

    Qualitative Methods in Human Rights Research

    Get PDF

    Is What\u27s Best for Dads Best for Families? Paternity Leave Policies and Equity Across Forty-Four Nations

    Get PDF
    In a global economy, paternity leave policies represent one of the most significant expansions of the welfare state that seek to help fathers respond to socio-economic pressures on their work and families. Policy makers who strongly promote socio-economic equity may respond to these global changes with new policy formulae meant to encourage involvement of fathers in their families. Nevertheless, scholars have limited understanding of who benefits from paternity leave policies and what these benefits mean to families. The present study is a comparative analysis of paternity leave policies across forty-four countries. This paper first presents a typology of paternity leave policies. This typology consists of seven criteria that range from duration of benefits to amount of benefits to employment security. This typology is then applied to forty-four countries. The present study demonstrates that a surprisingly small number of countries are devoted to family equity

    A Word From the New Editors

    Get PDF

    Does Human Rights Derogation Limit COVID-19 Infections?

    Get PDF
    The purpose of this project is to model and understand socio-legal responses to the spread of COVID-19—in particular, emergency measures that derogate from states’ human rights commitments. Derogation of human rights in response to COVID-19 is unprecedented, according to some experts (Scheinin 2020). This project investigates whether combinations of conditions, such as moderate human rights derogation in combination with strong health infrastructures, reduce degrees of virus transmission and promote prevention. Its preliminary findings indicate that suspension of some rights appears crucial to limiting COVID-19 infections, but suspension of many rights has limited impacts, raising questions for practices of human rights derogation, including whether COVID-19 human rights suspensions violate the proportionality and non-discrimination aspects of derogation. Suspension of rights necessitates generation of more sophisticated data modeling to inform policy and public health practices surrounding COVID-19 transmission. This study contributes not only to research and scholarship, but to policy and public health practices surrounding COVID-19 transmission
    • …
    corecore