1. |
- Lindkvist, Linde, Lektor, 1985-
(författare)
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Rights for the World's Children : Radda Barnen and the Making of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
- 2018
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Ingår i: Nordic Journal of Human Rights. - : ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD. - 1891-8131 .- 1891-814X. ; 36:3, s. 287-303
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Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
- The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) from 1989 remains the most widely ratified treaty on human rights and functions as a normative frame for myriads of actors working to promote the rights of children. The scholarship on the convention recognises that non-governmental organisations were crucial to the drafting of the treaty. Some of these accounts also single out the Swedish Save the Children Federation (Radda Barnen) as significant for facilitating non-governmental cooperation and shaping the drafting group discussions. Drawing on archival and published first-hand sources, the paper adds to the available accounts, first by outlining some of the developments that led Radda Barnen to embrace the concept of children's rights in the 1970s and become involved in drafting of UNCRC in the 1980s. The paper then reveals how the organisation engaged creatively with the concept of children's rights in the drafting process and succeeded in framing children in armed conflict and female genital mutilation as rights issues, effectively challenging some of the conventional boundaries of international human rights law. But the paper also points to the limits of Radda Barnen's influence and suggests that its creative engagement took place within a relatively conventional framework of child protection.
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2. |
- Vik, Hanne Hagtvedt, et al.
(författare)
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Histories of Human Rights in the Nordic Countries
- 2018
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Ingår i: Nordic Journal of Human Rights. - : ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD. - 1891-8131 .- 1891-814X. ; 36:3, s. 189-201
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Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
- Do the Nordics warrant the label 'global good Samaritans' in human rights promotion? Is the Nordic welfare state a close to perfect realisation of human rights norms? Alternatively, do Nordic international and domestic human rights policies constitute a peculiar 'Nordic human rights paradox' where norms are supported internationally while not being implemented at home? In what is the first collection of articles on Nordic human rights history, we take issue with previous scholarship, finding it often to be unsubstantiated and lacking a basis in historical contexts and relevant source materials. This also includes the stream of historical studies in the past decade, where, until recently, the Nordic countries have represented something of a blind spot. However, the lack of prior interest in the region means there are several promising avenues for historical investigations of both the Nordic countries in human rights history and the role of human rights in the history of the region.
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