01031 2200217 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036020001700056041000800073082001100081084001500092100003800107245006700145260004900212300002900261500002300290520041600313650001800729008004100747990002500788INLIS00000000000094520221031102303 a0010-0520000945 a0 75462158 8 aeng a341.48 a341.48 INT0 aInternational Law of Human Rights1 aInternational Law of Human Rights /cEdited by Michael K. Addo aAldershot :bHarvard University Press,c2006 alvi,548p.;25 cm ;c25 cm aIndeks : P.545-548 aThe inherently political nature of modern international law as a system largely hinged on the interests of state actors with a focus on territorial separation would seem an unlikely host for the idea of human rights, with its emphasis on the individual. Yet the idea and practise of rights has always been a part of, and in fact today flourishes in, this rugged environment of interstate politics this hegemony. 4aIHuman Rights221031 | | eng  a09261/MKRI-P/XI-2008