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Parent, Child, and State: Rights and Interests -- Rights of Children, Parents, and the State: The Education and Rearing of Children -- The Rights of Children -- The Rights of Parents -- Rights and Interests in Connection with Education -- The Child's "Right" to Education -- Parental Authority and the Right to Education -- Parental Choice and the Public School Curriculum -- Prayer and Religious Curricula in Public Schools -- Rights of Children, Parents, and the State: Children's Rights as Autonomy Claims -- Children's Rights as Autonomy Claims -- The Speech Rights of Minors -- Rights to Reproductive Decision-Making -- Decisions About Medical Care -- The Constitutional Framework -- State Authority When Parents Decline Medical Treatment -- The Role of Religious Belief -- Are the Rules for Infants Different? -- Adolescents' Views About Their Own Care -- Beyond Treatment--Organ Donation and Medical Experimentation -- Organ Donation -- Research with Children -- Juvenile Courts and Delinquency -- The Theory of the American Juvenile Court -- The Theory of the American Juvenile Court -- The Origins and Method of the Juvenile Court -- Substance and Procedure in the Traditional Juvenile Court -- The Questioning of Juvenile Court Theory and Practice -- Early Interpretations of Gault -- Consolidation or Retrenchment -- Juvenile Court Jurisdiction Over Misconduct by Children -- The Responsibility of Youths for Criminal Misconduct -- The Responsibility of Parents for Delinquent Behavior.
The Consequences of Revolution Essays The Revolution Launched a Bold Republican Experiment / The Revolution Was Radical in Some Ways, Not in Others / Further Reading The British Empire and the War for North America Documents Touts the Importance of Imperial Ties between Britain and America, 1760 / The British Treasury Attempts to Reform the Customs Service, 1763 King George III Seeks to Limit Westward Expansion, 1763 A British Minister Justifies Customs Reform, 1765 Scorns the Proclamation Line, 1767 / Essays Britain's Victory Exposed the Need for Greater Control / The British Empire Tried to Reconcile Freedom and Authority / Further Reading Imperial Reform and Colonial Resistance Documents Resolves against the Stamp Act, 1765 / New York Reacts Violently to the Stamp Act, 1765 The Stamp Act Congress Articulates the Rights of the Colonists, 1765 Parliament Declares Its Authority, 1766 Rallies the Colonists to Opposition, 1767-1768 / Charleston Merchants Propose a Plan of Nonimportation, 1769 North Carolina Regulators Battle Colonial Authorities, 1771 Essays Urban Taverns Shaped Mobilization against British Policies / North Carolina Regulators Used Violence for a Purpose / Further Reading The Imperial Crisis and the Declaration of Independence Documents Lord North Calls for Punishing the Town of Boston, 1774 Gouverneur Morris Remarks on Popular Mobilization, 1774 Thomas Jefferson Asserts American Rights, 1774 The First Continental Congress Enumerates American Rights and Establishes a Continental Association, 1774 Patriots Intimidate a New Jersey Loyalist, 1775 Thomas Paine Calls for Common Sense, 1776 The United States Declare Independence, 1776 Thomas Hutchinson Criticizes Declaration of Independence, 1776 Essays Rejecting Monarchy Required a Shift in the American Worldview / The Declaration of Independence Was a Document of Global Importance / Further Reading Struggles for Independence Documents General George Washington Asks Congress for an Effective Army, 1776 Benjamin Rush Contrasts Loyalists and Patriots, 1777 A Whig Newspaper Attacks the Loyalists, 1779 A Soldier Views Mutiny among American Troops, 1780 General George Washington Explains Army Problems and Calls for Help, 1780 An Army Cook and Washerwoman Recalls the Battle of Yorktown, 1781 Loyalists Plead Their Cause to the King, Parliament, and the British People, 1782 A Loyalist Woman Recounts Her Journey in Exile, 1836 Essays Virginia's Wartime Mobilization Leads to Class Struggles / Loyalists in Exile Highlight the Wider British Empire / Further Reading The American Revolution in the West Documents Logan Laments the Murder of His Fellow Mingos, 1775 Oneida Indians Declare Neutrality, 1775 New York Mourns the Death of an Indian Killer, 1775 The North Carolina Delegation Urges Extirpation of the Cherokee, 1776 George Washington Orders an Expedition against the Iroquois, 1779 An American Officer Observes the Destruction of Iroquois Homes and Crops, 1779 Chickasaw Indians Seek Help, 1783 Essays Both Sides Waged Unlimited Warfare / Indians Faced a Limited Set of Choices / Further Reading Equality and the African-American Challenge Documents Massachusetts Slaves Argue for Freedom, 1773 Lord Dunmore Promises Freedom to Slaves Who Fight for Britain, 1775 Lemuel Haynes Attacks Slavery, 1776 New Hampshire African-Americans Petition for Freedom, 1779 Three Virginia Counties Defend Slavery, 1785 Boston King Describes His Deliverance from Slavery, 1798 Jehu Grant, Former Slave, Seeks Compensation for His Wartime Service, 1832, 1836 Essays The American Revolution Prompted New Debates About Slavery / Black Abolitionists Developed Their Own Radical Tradition / Further Reading Gender and Citizenship in a Revolutionary Republic Documents "A Female" Enlists Women for Nonimportation, 1768 Thomas Paine Admits Women Have Some Rights, 1775 Abigail and John Adams Debate Women's Rights, 1776 An American Woman Asserts Women's Rights, 1780 A "Lady" and "Gentleman" Debate the Condition of Women, 1789 Judith Sargent Murray Argues for Women's Equality, 1790 Essays The Revolution Gave Women New Political Opportunities / The Revolution Was Hardly Radical for Women / Further Reading Religion and the American Revolution Documents A Worcester Writer Defends Religious Establishment, 1776 Virginia Baptists Assert Their Eights, 1776 William Tennent Argues against Religious Establishment, 1777 Ezra Stiles Projects the Future of Christianity in America, 1783 Philadelphia Jews Seek Equality before the Law, 1783 James Madison Protests Religious Taxes, 1785 Thomas Jefferson, Virginia Statute of Religious Liberty, 1786 Essays The Revolution Was a Secular Event / Republicanism Fused with Evangelicalism during the Revolutionary Era / Further Reading Government under the Articles of Confederation Documents Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union, 1777-1781 Congress Passes an Ordinance on Western Lands, 1785 Northwest Ordinance, 1787 Kentucky Farmers Reconsider Their Allegiance, 1786 Delegates Report from Demoralized Congress, 1787 The Regulation (or Shays's Rebellion) Rocks Massachusetts Essays The Formation of Western States Helped Redefine the Union / Upheaval in Massachusetts Reflected a Nationwide Conflict /
xiv, 325 p. ;
ISBN/ISSN:
9780812243604 (hardcover : alk. paper)
9780812243604 (hardcover : alk. paper)
Human rights in the United States -- Sweatshirts and sweatshops : labor rights, student activism, and the challenges of collegiate apparel manufacturing / Labor rights after the flexible turn : the rise of contingent employment and the implications for worker rights in the United States / Preying on the American dream : predatory lending, institutionalized racism, and resistance to economic injustice / Food not bombs : the right to eat / The long road to economic and social justice / Hurricane Katrina and the right to food and shelter / Education, human rights, and the state : toward new visions / Heath and human rights / We are a people in the world: Native Americans and human rights / Reflections on cultural human rights / Erosion of political and civil rights : looking back to changes since 9/11/01 : the Patriot Act / U.S. asylum and refugee policy : the "culture of no" / The Border Action Network and human rights : community-based resistance against militarization of the U.S.-Mexico border / Sexual citizenship : marriage, adoption, and immigration in the United States / Do human rights endure across nation-state boundaries? : Analyzing the experiences of guest workers / From international platforms to local yards : standing up for the elimination of racial discrimination in the United States / Caging kids of color : juvenile justice and human rights in the United States / "What lies beneath" : foundations of the U.S. human rights perspective and the significance for women / Sex trafficking : in our backyard? / The U.S. culture of violence / Building U.S. human rights culture from the ground up : international human rights implementation at the local level / Critical resistance and the prison abolitionist movement / Human rights in the United States : the "gold standard" and the human rights enterprise /
Human rights in the 21st century / The United Nations' human rights machinery : developments and challenges / State reports / Follow-up activities by UN human rights treaty bodies and special procedures mechanisms of the Human Rights Council : recent developments / Petitions before the United Nations treaty bodies : focus on the Human Rights Committee's Optional Protocol Procedure / The Human Rights Committee's jurisprudence under Article 26 of the ICCPR : the hidden revolution / The petition system under ICERD : an unfilled promise / CEDAW and the Optional Protocol : first experiences / CAT and Articles 20 and 22 / Monitoring the CRC / A brief look at the International Convention on the Protection of Rights of All Migrant Workers and Members of Their Families / Negotiating the monitoring mechanism for the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities : two steps forward, one step back / Five years of working in the UN Commission on Human Rights : some reflections for the future work of the UN Human Rights Council / The establishment of the UN Human Rights Council / What effect if any will the UN Human Rights Council have on special procedures? / Institutional re-engineering for effective human rights monitoring : proposals for the unfinished business under the "new" Human Rights Council / Urgent action / The Office of UN High Commissioner for Human Rights / Human rights fields operations / The United Nations programme of technical cooperation in the field of human rights / Mainstreaming human rights in the United States / The Security Council and human rights / The International Court of Justice : monitoring human rights / International criminal adjudication bodies : to what extent can they promote human rights effectively in post-conflict situations? / The international criminal tribunals / The normative impact of human rights on programming in the UNDP / The International Labour Organization and human rights : access to the ILO / Role of UNESCO in human rights implementation / The World Bank Inspection Panel / Monitoring the human right to adequate food at country level / The role of UNHCR in the monitoring and implementation of human rights standards for refugees and other persons of concern / Human rights education / United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues : a multifaceted approach to human right monitoring / Minorities at the United Nations / Monitoring the rights of the internally displaced / Voluntary reporting : the global compact / Terrorism and human rights monitoring / Monitoring human rights obligations and the fight against terrorism : whose obligations? And monitored how? / Indicators for monitoring human rights / Sexual orientation discrimination : a necessary and emerging area of United Nations concern / Inter-state complaints under treaty provisions : the experience under the European Convention on Human Rights / Control of execution of decisions under the European Convention on Human Rights : a perspective on democratic security, inter-governmental cooperation, unification and individual justice in Europe /
The Mystery of State Contribution -- National Interests and State Sovereignty: Objectives of the Confederation -- Collective Action and the Provision of Public Goods -- The History of State Compliance -- State Contributions and Private Interests -- Reacting to Rebellion -- A New Constitution -- Conclusion -- Olson's Collective Action Game
Reconsidering rights in Japanese law and society -- Rights in Japanese history -- The roots of "rights" -- Rights before kenri: early antecedents -- Rights, protest, and rebellion in Tokugawa Japan -- The Movement for Freedom and Popular Rights -- State power and the control of rights -- Patients, rights, and protest in contemporary Japan -- "New rights" movements and traditional social protest -- Studying the "new rights" -- Patients' rights as "new rights": conceptualization, litigation, legislation -- Law, rights, and policy in contemporary Japan: two narratives -- AIDS policy and the politics of rights -- AIDS, public health, and individual rights -- An epidemiological view -- Hemophiliacs and gay men: rights, risks, and repression -- Proposal, debate, and enactment of the AIDS prevention law -- AIDS, activism, and accommodation -- Asserting rights, legislating death -- Rights, brain death, and organ transplantation -- Death, culture, and body parts -- Scientific, legal, medical, and political attempts to define death -- Power politics and body politics: the Ad-Hoc Committee for the Study of Brain Death and Organ Transplantation -- A tentative truce in the fight over death -- Litigation and the courts: talking about rights -- Rights and the legal process -- AIDS: crisis, compensation, and the courts -- Brain death and organ transplantation: accusation and discretion -- A sociolegal perspective on rights in Japan -- Rights, modernization, and the "uniqueness" of the Japanese legal system -- Rights and the metaphor of legal transplants