Beschreibung:
This book aims to prospectively conjecture about what the coming decades may hold for human rights. The authors in this volume discern where current trends are likely to lead and try to make sense of the future they herald. The chapters in this book were originally published as a special issue of Nordic Journal of Human Rights.
Introduction: The Future of Human Rights 1. Are Human Rights Enough? Exploring Ways to Reimagining Human Rights Law 2. The Future of Human Rights and the African Human Rights System 3. Pushing Boundaries: Building a Community of Practice at the Intersection of Human Rights and Economics 4. Reparations for Chattel Slavery: A Call From the 'Periphery' to Decolonise International (Human Rights) Law 5. It's Time to Expand the Right to Education 6. Preventing Disasters and Displacement: How Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights Can Advance Local Resilience 7. Gender, Climate Breakdown and Resistance: The Future of Human Rights in the Shadow of Authoritarianism 8. The Future is Now: Climate Cases Before the ECtHR 9. Rural Local Communities as Holders of Human Rights: From Aboriginal Subsistence Whaling to Small-Scale Local Community Whaling? 10. International Human Rights, Artificial Intelligence, and the Challenge for the Pondering State: Time to Regulate? 11. How Artificial Intelligence Systems Challenge the Conceptual Foundations of the Human Rights Legal Framework 12. From the Vantage Point of Vulnerability Theory: Algorithmic Decision-Making and Access to the European Court of Human Rights 13. Two Paths in the Future Relationship of the European Court of Human Rights and the African Court of Human and Peoples' Rights