This book examines the place of human rights in peace agreements against the backdrop of international legal provision. The introductory analysis draws on a review of many peace agreements, while the body of the book focuses on the peace agreements in four cases: South Africa, Israel/Palestine, Northern Ireland, and Bosnia. It addresses the phenomenon of the post-cold war peace process, the types of agreements that are typically produced, and the typical role of human rights in those agreements.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- 1: Introduction
- 2: Peace processes, Peace Agreements, and Human Rights: What are They?
- 3: From Conflict to Peace? South Africa and Northern Ireland
- 4: From Conflict to Peace: Israel/Palestine and Bosnia-Herzegovina
- 5: Getting to Yes? negotiating Self-Determination
- 6: But What was the Question? Evaluating the Deal
- 7: Building for the Future: Human Rights Institutions
- 8: Undoing the Past: Refugees, Land, and Possession
- 9: Dealing with the Past: Prisoners, Accountability, and `Truth'
- 10: `Back to the Future': Human Rights and Peace Agreements
- Appendix: A Decade of Peace Agreements
- References
- Index