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Developing
Human Rights Jurisprudence:
The Eighth Judicial Colloquium on the Domestic Application of International
Human Rights Norms
INTERIGHTS
and the Commonwealth Secretariat,
2001
Price �25, available from INTERIGHTS and the Commonwealth Secretariat
This publication
contains papers presented at the Eighth Judicial Colloquium on the Domestic
Application of International Human Rights Norms, held in Bangalore, India in
December 1998. The Colloquium was organised by INTERIGHTS and the Commonwealth
Secretariat and hosted by the National Law School of India University. The
authors are distinguished senior judges and jurists of the higher courts of
several South Asian countries (Bangladesh, India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka), from
other parts of the Commonwealth (Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Africa
and the United Kingdom) and from the United States.
This Colloquium marked the culmination of a series of judicial colloquia started
a decade earlier in 1988, also in Bangalore, followed by other meetings in
Zimbabwe, the Gambia, Nigeria, England, South Africa and Guyana. The Bangalore
Principles relating to the domestic application of human rights norms,
propounded in the first Colloquium, were subsequently developed and have been
cited in a number of courts across the globe.
The Bangalore Principles are now widely accepted in many jurisdictions,
in no small measure due to the Colloquium discussions over the years. As a
consequence, national courts have developed liberal interpretations of
constitutional standards, thus enabling more effective protection of human
rights. The papers in this volume, written by eminent judges many of whom have
been involved in ground-breaking decisions, provide an invaluable insight for
practitioners and activists alike who are committed to harnessing the law to
bring change in their societies.
The volume contains papers on the broad theme of the domestic application of
international human rights norms in national courts. They address the nexus
between issues of human rights, law enforcement and state security, as well as
the role of national courts in protecting economic, social and cultural rights,
addressing issues of equality and poverty, and securing women�s human rights.
It also discusses their role in giving effect to the Bangalore Principles,
directly or indirectly, in applying international norms. It includes an
authoritative re-statement and development of the original Bangalore
Principles,
'The Challenge of Bangalore: Making Human Rights a
Practical Reality'.
The Colloquium and publication were made possible through the support of the
Commonwealth Secretariat, the Canadian International Development Agency, the
Ford Foundation and the Human Rights Policy Fund of the UK Foreign and
Commonwealth Office.
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