Содержание
- 2. Challenges to international order Part II Session 13
- 3. Chemical and biological weapons Preventing genocide and other violations of human rights The North/South divide
- 4. 1945 - Hiroshima and Nagasaki the Cold War, both the United States and the Soviet Union
- 5. Weapons of Mass Destruction Hiroshima— could not be restricted to the target only, but might rapidly
- 6. Weapons of Mass Destruction Chemical and biological weapons, together with nuclear weapons, make up the more
- 7. Prior to 1945, relations between a state and the individuals within the state were largely that
- 8. Human Rights—Protecting Human Dignity XIXcentury - individuals became entitled to medical treatment by belligerent states during
- 9. XX century - with mass communication and the spread of information about how countries were treating
- 10. The Holocaust the German Nazi genocide against Jews Gypsies Homosexuals the disabled and countless other minorities
- 11. The UN’s activities and the activities of other international organizations concerned with human rights have been
- 12. 3. The United Nations has taken measures to promote human rights by assuring fair elections with
- 13. 4. States and the international community are the primary enforcers of international human rights. States have
- 14. Women’s Rights as Human Rights: The Globalization of Women’s Rights An examination of how women’s rights
- 15. Although British and U.S. women won that right in 1918 and 1920, respectively, women in many
- 16. In the immediate aftermath of the declaration, the priority of the United Nations and its Commission
- 17. EVOLVING POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC RIGHTS During the 1960s and 1970s, more attention was paid to second-generation
- 18. Women in development (WID) movement, a transnational movement concerned with the failure of development to make
- 19. One of the most intractable problems in international relations is the polarization between the Advanced Industrial
- 20. A third group, the Newly Industrializing Countries (NICs) of which key examples are South Korea, Taiwan,
- 21. The success of the ‘Tiger’ economies - 2006 which show, for example, Hong Kong with a
- 22. No less than 16 of the 20 countries with the lowest GDP per head are in
- 23. The process of globalization which enables financial and investment markets to operate internationally, mainly as a
- 24. Those LDCs which produce commodities which are in high demand in the AICs, such as oil
- 25. Karen A. Mingst, Ivan M. Arreguin-Toft. Essentials of International Relations. 5th Ed. 2010: New York: W.W.
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