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© 2026 Ann Mathenge · Built with love, coffee, and cat hair.
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© 2026 Ann Mathenge · Built with love, coffee, and cat hair.
By Peter G. Brown
Recent human rights provisions in U.S. law governing foreign policy.
Part I. Background : the new initiative:
Rights, by Mark L. Schneider.
Part II. Principles : the nature and justification of human
Human rights and foreign assistance programs, by Hugo Adams Bedau.
Human rights and social justice, by Charles R. Beitz.
Rights in the light of duties, by Henry Shue.
Human rights as a neutral concern, by Thomas M. Scanlon.
Constraints, goals, and moralism in foreign policy, by Douglas MacLean.
Part III. Principles : international issues:
International law perspective, by Thomas Buergenthal.
The ethics of intervention : two normative traditions, by J. Bryan
Human rights and intevention, by Mark R. Wicclair.
Part IV. Applications : information and interpretation:
11." ... in the national interest", by Peter G. Brown.
Monitoring human rights violations : how good is the information? by
Human rights violations and U.S. foreign assistance : the
Latin American connection, by William L. Wipfler.
Part V. Applications : problems of implementing a human rights
Can a human rights policy be consistent? by Abraham M. Sirkin.
Security assistance in perspective, by Howard M. Fish.
Human rights in the Philippines and U.S. responsibility, by
Arms sales and human rights : the case of South Korea, by
Arms sales and human rights : the case of Iran, by Richard W. Cottam.
Published
1986
Format
-
Pages
310
Language
English
ISBN
9780669043266