Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Human rights advocacy"

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1

Bysaha, Yu. "The essence and social purpose of advocacy: a comparative legal discourse". Analytical and Comparative Jurisprudence, n.º 6 (18 de febrero de 2023): 319–22. http://dx.doi.org/10.24144/2788-6018.2022.06.57.

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Advocacy comes from the latin word advocare, which means a person who is turned to when help is needed. In the Middle Ages, an advocatus usually acted as a representative of a feudal lord or an institution, such as a local abbey. As societydeveloped, the concept of advocacy also changed. Today, advocacy still has the same meaning - a person called to advocate for another, but instead of being the spokesman or legal representative of a powerful ruler or church, modern advocatesusually advocate or defend specific interests and rights.Article 59 of the Basic Law of the country proclaims a dogmatic idea, which consists in guaranteeing every citizen, excluding anymanifestation of discrimination, the right to professional legal assistance. In turn, the concentration of the social orientation of the legal profession can be traced in Article 131 with note 2, which delegates the exclusive right to represent public interests in court, as well as defense against criminal charges, to the bar. In turn, the functional purpose of the advocacy as a single, independent, professional, human rights institution, which consists in the protection of the rights, freedoms and legitimate interests of individuals, is implemented on the principles of the rule of law, legality, independence enshrined in the Law of Ukraine «On Advocacy and Advocacy», confidentiality and avoidance of conflict of interest.The development of the rule of law is impossible without the proper functioning of legal institutions whose activities are aimed at protecting human rights and freedoms. First of all, the scope of the professional rights of lawyers and their duties, the degree of independence, the guarantees of practicing the legal profession, the provision of legal assistance to citizens, the professionalism and availability of legal tools, and the observance of human rights in the process of carrying out activities testify to the democracy of the legal profession. Therefore, at this stage of the development of the science of constitutional law,it is extremely relevant and expedient to study the essence and social role of a lawyer in the life of civil society, which is important, through the prism of the provisions of the national and foreign concepts.
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Pursell, Betsy. "Advocacy Panel—Human Rights Campaign". Journal of Gay & Lesbian Mental Health 13, n.º 3 (16 de julio de 2009): 204–12. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19359700902964230.

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Shakespeare, Tom. "Human rights and disability advocacy". Disability & Society 30, n.º 2 (6 de diciembre de 2014): 316–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09687599.2014.984936.

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Ashifa, Dr K. M. "Information and Communication Technology Integration on Human Rights Advocacy". Turkish Journal of Computer and Mathematics Education (TURCOMAT) 12, n.º 2 (11 de abril de 2021): 2729–32. http://dx.doi.org/10.17762/turcomat.v12i2.2300.

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The inalienable human rights codifications form the basis of human progress. “The goal of this document is to resolve a current and significant problem regarding the convergence of human rights advocacy and the role of ICTs. It will promote efforts to advocate, educate and communicate with others, including media and political stakeholders within and outside the human rights world”[3]. The use of social media can consciously trigger the human rights movement and can also add to their outrage. Any public member or a human rights organisation sends the post, it is reasonably straightforward to explicitly concentrate public attention on social media. The present investigationtried to assess integration of online environment for human rights advocacy.
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Nikolskaya, Tatiana. "Human Rights Advocacy of Baptist Initiators". Changing Societies & Personalities 1, n.º 4 (2017): 333–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.15826/csp.2017.1.4.022.

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Rall, Katharina, Margaret L. Satterthwaite, Anshul Vikram Pandey, John Emerson, Jeremy Boy, Oded Nov y Enrico Bertini. "Data Visualization for Human Rights Advocacy". Journal of Human Rights Practice 8, n.º 2 (julio de 2016): 171–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jhuman/huw011.

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Lines, Rick y Richard Elliott. "Injecting drugs into human rights advocacy". International Journal of Drug Policy 18, n.º 6 (diciembre de 2007): 453–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.drugpo.2007.07.002.

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8

Hilgert, Jeff. "Mapping the Boundaries of Human Rights at Work". Labor Studies Journal 34, n.º 1 (5 de enero de 2009): 21–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0160449x08328944.

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Over the past twenty years, International Labour Standards have been cited increasingly as the authoritative, worldwide body of jurisprudence on workers' rights as human rights. Continuing the debate on what constitutes labor rights, the author contrasts the definition of workers' rights under international human rights standards with U.S. labor history's notion of “pure and simple unionism,” examining the boundaries of rights defined by international standards in a comparative historical context. The standards examined include workers' right to organize; coercive employer speech; access to employer premises; nonmajority representation; the right to strike, picket, and boycott; union security clauses; the scope of bargaining; government enforcement; and the legal doctrine of employer association rights. Aligning U.S. labor relations law with international human rights standards would in part be a social advancement, but significant aspects of the standards advocate pure and simple unionism more than the original National Labor Relations Act, raising questions about how labor movements should use international standards as advocacy tools and public policy goals.
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Lepofsky, M. David. "Swimming Up Niagara Falls! The Battle to Get Disability Rights Added to the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms". Windsor Yearbook of Access to Justice 39 (12 de abril de 2024): 169–455. http://dx.doi.org/10.22329/wyaj.v39.8579.

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This is the personal memoir of blind lawyer and volunteer disability rights advocate David Lepofsky. It describes his involvement in and perspectives on the successful fight from 1980 to 1982 to get Canada’s proposed Charter of Rights amended to guarantee equal rights for people with disabilities. It includes a foreword by the Hon. Rosalie Abella, former Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada. This memoir recounts the little-known saga of the disability amendment to the Charter. Few know that equality for people with disabilities was the only constitutional right added to the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms during the widely publicized eighteen-month battle over the patriation of Canada’s Constitution, from October 1980 to April 1982. It is aimed at anyone interested in disability rights, human rights, Canadian political or legal history, social justice advocacy, and Canadian constitutional law. It provides a mix of legal and legislative history, personal autobiography, grassroots advocacy strategy and reflective commentary on lessons learned. It compares social justice advocacy techniques in 1980 to those practiced in the disability rights arena four decades later.
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Utami, Eka Safitri y Dwi Retnani Srinarwati. "PENGARUH ADVOKASI HAK ASASI MANUSIA TERHADAP SIKAP PEDULI SOSIAL DAN KERJA SAMA ANAK DI DESA JEMUNDO". Academy of Education Journal 14, n.º 2 (4 de septiembre de 2023): 1124–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.47200/aoej.v14i2.1989.

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Human rights of children need special attention, because various acts of violence against children are still found. When the child’s rigts have been fulfilled, then a child is obliged to become a citizen who has a good personality. This study aims to find out the effect of human rights advocacy on social care attitudes and child cooperation in Jemundo Village. Research using descriptive quantitative method. The research design uses quasi-experimental, experimental class (children participating in advocacy) and control class (children who did not participate in advocacy). The variables of this study are the independent variable advocacy for child human rights (X), the dependent variable social care attitude ( ) and cooperative attitude ( ). The research population is 300 children in Jemundo Village. Sampling using purposive sampling. The sample in this study were 30 experimental class and 30 control class of children 12-18 years old. The data collection technique uses a questionnaire instrument to determine differences in attitudes. Interviews and observations to gather data about advocacy processes, social care and cooperation. The subjects: children, parents, activists, and children's forums. Data analysis used descriptive analysis and the MANOVA test. The results showed: The significance value of the dependent variable is 0.00 < 0.05. Then the hypothesis Ho is rejected and Ha is accepted. This means that there is an influence of human right advocacy on social care attitudes and child cooperation in Jemundo Village.
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Prince, Adamaagashi Izuchukwu. "Social Movements and Human Rights Advocacy in Nigeria". JOURNAL OF LAW AND GLOBAL POLICY 8, n.º 1 (14 de octubre de 2023): 42–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.56201/jlgp.v8.no1.2023.pg42.74.

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By adopting a systematic approach and analyzing various facets of social movements and human rights advocacy in Nigeria, this study contributes to the existing literature and expands our understanding of the complex interplay between societal dynamics and the pursuit of justice and human rights. The findings shed light on the diverse range of social movements in Nigeria and the challenges they face, while also emphasizing the significant role played by social media, technology, and media advocacy in raising awareness and promoting human rights causes. The theoretical framework provided offers a comprehensive understanding of the relationship between social movements and human rights advocacy, highlighting the importance of solidarity, networks, and the influence of policy and legal reforms. With the aim of promoting further support and strengthening of social movements and human rights advocacy in Nigeria, this study provides recommendations for various stakeholders, including the government, to address challenges such as lack of public awareness, weak implementation, poverty, corruption, political interference, and cultural and religious factors. In conclusion, this study highlights the crucial role of social movements and human rights advocacy in Nigeria and provides valuable insights into the challenges, milestones, and theoretical underpinnings of this field, contributing to the ongoing discourse on social change and human rights advocacy globally.
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Black, Robert. "Heterogeneous rights". Flux: International Relations Review 14, n.º 2 (29 de marzo de 2024): 9–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.26443/firr.v14i2.162.

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This paper explores the complex landscape of sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) politics in Brazil, and the country’s promotion of these human rights norms internationally. Despite Brazil’s image as a trailblazer in LGBTQ+ rights and inclusion, activists are challenged domestically by legislative hurdles and conservative movements. Brazil’s challenging domestic situation stands in stark contrast with the country’s role as a prominent advocate for SOGI norms internationally. This paper unpacks these contradictions and compares Brazil’s trajectory with those of Argentina and South Africa. A closer look at SOGI human rights norms in the Brazilian context reveals diverse pathways to human rights norm promotion. Despite setbacks, Brazil’s experience offers insights into the resilience of human rights advocacy and the potential for transformative change, advocating for a nuanced understanding of SOGI politics amidst diverse actors and contexts.
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Park, Baekkwan, Amanda Murdie y David R. Davis. "The (co)evolution of human rights advocacy: Understanding human rights issue emergence over time". Cooperation and Conflict 54, n.º 3 (9 de noviembre de 2018): 313–34. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0010836718808315.

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How does the discussion of human rights issues change over time? Without advocates adopting a human rights issue in the first place, international ‘shaming’ cannot occur. In this article, we examine how human rights discussions converge and diverge around new frames and new issues over time. Human rights norms do not evolve alone; their prevalence, framing, and focus are all dependent on how they relate to other norms in the advocacy community. Drawing on over 30,000 documents from dozens of human rights organizations from 1990 to 2011, we provide a temporal overview and visualization of the ebb and flow of human rights issues. Using our new dataset and state-of-the-art methods from computer science, our approach allows us to quantitatively examine (a) how new issues emerge in the advocacy network, (b) the relationship of these new issues to extant human rights advocacy and information, and (c) how the framing and specificity of these issues change over time. By focusing on the process by which a new issue gets incorporated into the work of advocates, we provide an empirical assessment of the first step in the causal process connecting shaming to improvement in human rights practices.
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Chung, Myung Sill, Kyung Choon Lim y Jain Ko. "Human Rights Sensitivity, Advocacy Attitudes, and Advocacy Interventions for Mentally Disabled People in Psychiatric Nurses and Nursing Students". Journal of Korean Academic Society of Nursing Education 23, n.º 3 (31 de agosto de 2017): 309–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.5977/jkasne.2017.23.3.309.

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Purpose: This study aimed to verify the relationship between human rights sensitivity, advocacy attitudes, and advocacy interventions for mentally disabled people in psychiatric nurses and nursing students. Methods: This is a descriptive study. Using questionnaires, data were collected from 206 participants who were recruited from one mental health institute, one general hospital, and one university in S city. Data were analyzed by t-test, ANOVA, Pearson's correlation coefficient using SPSS/WIN 22. Results: The mean age was $33.8{pm}12.89$. The mean scores of human rights sensitivity, advocacy attitudes, and advocacy intervention was $37.7{pm}18.09$, $53.7{pm}5.67$, and $47.4{pm}7.08$, respectively. Human rights sensitivity correlated significantly with advocacy attitudes (r=.25, p=.020) and advocacy intervention (r=.17, p=.015). Also, there was a significant positive correlation between advocacy attitudes and advocacy intervention (r=.44, p<.001). Conclusion: These findings highlight that advocacy attitudes and advocacy interventions for mentally disabled people could be improved by increasing human rights sensitivity. Tailored education programs will be effective in the field of mental health care services to increase human rights sensitivity.
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15

Hawes, Derek. "European civil society and human rights advocacy". Journal of Contemporary European Studies 26, n.º 2 (3 de abril de 2018): 244–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14782804.2018.1460265.

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Sharp, Dustin N. "Pragmatism and Multidimensionality in Human Rights Advocacy". Human Rights Quarterly 40, n.º 3 (2018): 499–520. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/hrq.2018.0029.

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Gayatri, BJD. "Plurality of Lesbian Movements under Hatred-Epidemic: Initiation of SOGIE Advocacy in Nusantara". Jurnal Perempuan 20, n.º 4 (7 de abril de 2016): 269–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.34309/jp.v20i4.15.

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This paper is an overview toward SOGIE (Sexual Orientation, Gender Identity and Expression). This charted the history of lesbianism in Indonesia. Approach being used is feminist personal history. There are two approaches in advocy of human-right based SOGIE. First, the advocacy toward KUHP (product of law) that is based on positive and gender-normative that will endangered the existence of LGBT in Indonesia. Second, SOGIE-activists shall understand fully the plurality of gender and sexuality that is homegrown in Indonesia. This is the best way to advocate the rights as an integral part of Nusantara culture.
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Kholifah, Dwi Ruby. "Women Disassembling Silent Diplomacy of Beijing+20 & New York CSW59: a Study of Woman-Friendly International Diplomacy". Jurnal Perempuan 20, n.º 2 (1 de mayo de 2015): 107–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.34309/jp.v20i2.33.

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This paper examines a comprehensive picture of women’s advocacy in Beijing+20 and Commission on the Status of Women 59 New York that spoke against silencediplomacy led by Indonesian government. Indonesia was seen as most democratic Muslim country in the World by the UN. Yet Indonesia was not promoting works in human rights maximally, especially the advancement of women’s rights and children’s rights. Women’s Movement to advocate the previous two international meetings had successfully opened-up a more women-friendly advocacy to advance status of women and children under international gender instruments.
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Pearson, Kim. "Children Are Human". Texas A&M Law Review 8, n.º 3 (mayo de 2021): 495–536. http://dx.doi.org/10.37419/lr.v8.i3.2.

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There are great benefits to be had should the United States, one of the global leaders in economic strength and political power, ratify the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (“CRC”). The mystery of the United States’s ultimate reluctance to ratify the CRC, despite the nation’s central role in the drafting process, has been interrogated for years. Scholars and policy- makers have developed compelling narratives regarding obstacles to the United States’s ratification and implementation of the CRC. However well- reasoned the arguments for ratification are, there has been little progress in persuading the United States to ratify the CRC. While the work toward ratification should continue on every level, informal implementation before ratification would be advantageous and in line with historical methods of reform in the United States. One area that has been over- looked to the advantage of minority and vulnerable populations is domestic relations courts in the United States. In the United States, children’s rights advocacy work should be conducted like cause advocacy for historically disfavored groups to achieve legal recognition and protection of their rights. For example, parenting equality efforts were primarily focused on creating change in individual courts over time, allowing advocates to teach judicial officers and other legal decision-makers about positive outcomes for children of lesbian and gay parents while dispelling myths, misperceptions, and negative stereotypes about sexual minorities. Similarly, other disfavored parents, like working mothers, religious, and racial minorities, have used individual court cases to advocate and educate until new, progressive norms are adopted as national standards. Advocates for children’s rights should adopt institutional change theory and tailor cause advocacy efforts to implement the CRC principles in local domestic relations courts. Focusing on change from within institutions may shift legal norms more quickly, so children are recognized as fully human and thus rights holders in the United States, rather than relying on external legislative changes.
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Dixon, Jeremy, Judy Laing y Christine Valentine. "A human rights approach to advocacy for people with dementia: A review of current provision in England and Wales". Dementia 19, n.º 2 (17 de abril de 2018): 221–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1471301218770478.

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In this article, we review current advocacy services for people with dementia in England and Wales (provided, respectively, under the Mental Capacity Act 2005 , the Mental Health Act 1983 /2007 and the Care Act 2014) through the lens of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD). We examine what a human rights’ approach to advocacy support would entail, and whether current frameworks in England and Wales are adequate for this approach and provide a sufficient safeguard. First, we consider how the human rights of persons with dementia have become increasingly important and the extent to which the CRPD provides an opportunity to bolster safeguards and protection. Second, we discuss cause and case advocacy, and how these advocacy models could be shaped by the CRPD to promote the rights of persons with dementia at each stage of the disease. Third, we highlight current dilemmas and challenges in the provision of advocacy support in England and Wales by focusing on case law, commissioning of services and current practice. In particular, we analyse how the different legislative schemes have given rise to some confusion about the various advocacy provisions, as well as potential for overlap and discrepancies between different regimes. We also highlight the need for further research to address important gaps in knowledge, including the scale of need, patterns of referral and attitudes to advocacy services. The article concludes by highlighting how advocacy support could be recalibrated as a universal right to promote the aims and aspirations of the CRPD, and how education is needed to address the stigma of dementia and promote the benefits of advocacy in protecting the rights of those with dementia.
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Markhgeym, Marina V., Evgeniy V. Aristov, Anna A. Bezuglya, Alevtina E. Novikova y Andrey B. Novikov. "Risks to the Human Rights Advocacy in African Constitutions". International Journal of Criminology and Sociology 9 (5 de abril de 2022): 2347–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.6000/1929-4409.2020.09.283.

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This article presents the results of a comparative legal study of the texts of the constitutions of African states with a view to identifying the rules that minimize human rights risks. The research is based on a dialectical approach to the disclosure of legal phenomena and processes using general scientific (systematic and logical methods, analysis and synthesis) and specific scientific methods. African constitutions, in comparison with the constitutions of other states, and in particular European ones, contain a disproportionately large number of rules formalizing special human rights institutions. Typically, these are special councils, human rights commissions (Egypt, Morocco, and Tunisia) or certain categories of the population (three in Egypt, three in Morocco, one in the Central African Republic). In Morocco and Equatorial Guinea, both the Mediator and the Public Defender are established, respectively. The relevance of the study is due to the strategic objectives of creating a secure human rights status of the state, as well as the need to find and update theoretical, methodological, and practical approaches to protecting the rights and freedoms of a human and a citizen. Considering the rules of the African constitutional model of minimizing risks to human right advocacy, objectively in terms of quantity and quality, are considered hyperbolic.
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Kristina Sianturi, Yanti y Irza Khurun'in. "Amnesty International dan Penghapusan Hukuman Mati di Malaysia". Transformasi Global 7, n.º 2 (25 de diciembre de 2020): 235–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.21776/ub.jtg.2020.007.02.4.

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Malaysia is a country where the death penalty is still present and frequently practiced. It is due to different understandings of the death penalty itself. The absence of the Malaysian government in various international human rights treaties also increases unfair trials on death row inmates. The high number of death row inmates in Malaysia represents a severe human rights violation. The abolition of the death penalty is one of the current global human rights agendas. It goes against the right to live regulated by various international human rights instruments, such as the ICCPR (International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights) and the Declaration of Human Rights. One of the INGOs actively advocating the abolition of the death penalty in Malaysia is Amnesty International. This study looks at Amnesty International’s transnational advocacy tactics in encouraging the death penalty abolition in Malaysia from 2015 to 2018. The method used is descriptive research by collecting primary and secondary data and using transnational advocacy networks by Keck and Sikkink. The results of this research show that the efforts used by Amnesty International in this advocacy include information politics, symbolic politics, leverage politics, and accountability politics.
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Chaplain Kenyi Wani. "The Overview and Analysis of the Practice of Human Rights Education and Advocacy in Central Equatoria State and Further: Post 2005 to Present". PanAfrican Journal of Governance and Development (PJGD) 4, n.º 2 (31 de agosto de 2023): 175–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.46404/panjogov.v4i2.4853.

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The practice of human rights education and advocacy is to improve knowledge of human rights activities for communities in post-conflict. Central Equatoria State is where the human rights organizations have the base for their offices for operation in South Sudan. Coordinating the recovery and development process after civil war requires human rights principles, but it was neglected in Central Equatoria State. This research paper aims to assess the impact of the practice of human rights education and advocacy in Central Equatoria State and further in post-conflict in South Sudan. The practice of human rights education and advocacy is one of the pillars of the process of peacebuilding. Understanding the practice and advocacy on human rights education helps in assessing its impact on post-conflict communities. It contributes to knowledge of how effective the peacebuilding process was in preventing the resumption of conflict. The outbreak of intra-conflict in December 2013 in Juba shows that the peacebuilding process was ineffective. A qualitative method was applied for data collection. The stratified purposive interview was conducted in Juba and Kajo Keji Counties. Secondary literature was obtained from various academic and policy sources. The information was analyzed using ethnography, discourse, interpretation, observation, and interaction. The lack of interpreters for people who use sign language caused limitations in data collection, but disability is not an inability. Two focus group discussions were held: one in Juba and the other in Kajo Keji. Secondary data from various academic and policy institutions were supplemented with primary data. Coordinating the recovery and development processes requires principles for the practice of human rights education and advocacy. Development partners have underestimated the challenges they would face in the practice of human rights education and advocacy. The process for practice of human rights education and advocacy contributed less effective effort to the peacebuilding process to prevent the reoccurrence of conflict in Central Equatoria and the other states of South Sudan. The process would require the practice of good governance.
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Sharaf, Jailan. "Title: Citizen Journalism & Human Rights Videos Advocacy". مجلة البحوث الإعلامیة 39, n.º 39 (1 de enero de 2013): 271–342. http://dx.doi.org/10.21608/jsb.2013.60937.

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Buerger, Catherine. "Human rights hackers: crafting advocacy in Accra, Ghana". Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law 53, n.º 2 (19 de enero de 2021): 206–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07329113.2021.1871707.

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Jennings, Todd E. "The Developmental Dialectic of International Human-Rights Advocacy". Political Psychology 17, n.º 1 (marzo de 1996): 77. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3791944.

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Waldern, Barbara. "Anthropology and Human Rights Advocacy in the Philippines". Anthropology News 47, n.º 1 (enero de 2006): 35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/an.2006.47.1.35.

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GREGORY, SAM. "Transnational Storytelling: Human Rights, WITNESS, and Video Advocacy". American Anthropologist 108, n.º 1 (marzo de 2006): 195–204. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/aa.2006.108.1.195.

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Barmaki, Reza. "Campaigning for Justice: Human Rights Advocacy in Practice". International Journal of Human Rights 18, n.º 1 (2 de enero de 2014): 115–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13642987.2013.868803.

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Kingston, L. N. y K. R. Stam. "Online Advocacy: Analysis of Human Rights NGO Websites". Journal of Human Rights Practice 5, n.º 1 (23 de enero de 2013): 75–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jhuman/hus036.

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Basombrío, Carlos. "Looking Ahead New Challenges For Human Rights Advocacy". NACLA Report on the Americas 34, n.º 1 (julio de 2000): 7–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10714839.2000.11722637.

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Pavlish, Carol, Anita Ho y Ann-Marie Rounkle. "Health and human rights advocacy: Perspectives from a Rwandan refugee camp". Nursing Ethics 19, n.º 4 (11 de abril de 2012): 538–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0969733011421627.

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Working at the bedside and within communities as patient advocates, nurses frequently intervene to advance individuals’ health and well-being. However, the International Council of Nurses’ Code of Ethics asserts that nurses should expand beyond the individual model and also promote a rights-enabling environment where respect for human dignity is paramount. This article applies the results of an ethnographic human rights study with displaced populations in Rwanda to argue for a rights-based social advocacy role for nurses. Human rights advocacy strategies include sensitization, participation, protection, good governance, and accountability. By adopting a rights-based approach to advocacy, nurses contribute to health agendas that include more just social relationships, equitable access to opportunities, and health-positive living situations for all persons.
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Jeon, Ji Young y Hyunkyung Choi. "Factors influencing clinical nurses’ advocacy for people with disability". Journal of Korean Academic Society of Nursing Education 26, n.º 3 (31 de agosto de 2020): 269–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.5977/jkasne.2020.26.3.269.

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Purpose: Clinical nurses are the ideal health care providers to advocate for vulnerable and underserved populations such as people with disability. This study aimed to understand factors influencing nursing advocacy for people with disability among clinical nurses.Methods: The subjects of this study were 186 clinical nurses who were working in three hospitals in B and D cities. Self-report questionnaires were used to collect the data. Data were analyzed using IBM SPSS Statistics 25 with descriptive statistics, t-test, one-way ANOVA, Pearson’s correlation coefficients, and multiple regression analysis.Results: Clinical experience and esthetical nursing competency have positive correlations with nursing advocacy, and optimism-human rights has a negative correlation with nursing advocacy. Factors influencing nursing advocacy for people with disability were identified as patient directivity (<i>β</i>=0.36, <i>p</i>=.001), optimism-human rights (<i>β</i>=-0.18, <i>p</i>=.008) and clinical experience (≥10) (<i>β</i>=0.14, <i>p</i>=.036). The final model consisting of these factors explained 19% of the variance of nursing advocacy (F=14.99, <i>p</i>=.001).Conclusion: The findings of this study indicate the importance of developing and implementing nursing interventions that can improve patient directivity and optimism-human rights toward people with disability among clinical nurses. These nursing advocacy interventions can be provided as part of continuing education as well as the nursing curriculum.
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Burack, Cynthia. "Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity (SOGI) Human Rights Assistance in the Time of Trump". Politics & Gender 14, n.º 4 (28 de noviembre de 2018): 561–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1743923x1800065x.

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The US government was a late adopter of support and advocacy for international sexual orientation and gender identity (SOGI) human rights. Although US support for SOGI human rights did not begin in the Obama administration, after 2011 such support was expanded, publicized, and institutionalized. Since the 2016 presidential election, many international and grassroots LGBTQI human rights activists have expressed concern about the prospects for US SOGI advocacy in the Trump administration. No definitive policy changes have been made public, but clues to the future of US advocacy for SOGI can be found in a variety of sites. These include the discourse and policy articulations of the secretary and human rights officials in the State Department as well as those of legislators who fund human rights programs and exercise oversight over it.
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35

Egi,, Anggi, Nurul Afifah Salsabila y Teti Marlina. "Integritas Advokat Dalam Peradilan (Perspektif Hak Asasi Manusia)". Reslaj : Religion Education Social Laa Roiba Journal 5, n.º 6 (22 de enero de 2023): 2860–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.47467/reslaj.v5i6.2640.

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According to Teaching Human Rights published by the United Nations that human rights are the inherent rights of every human being without which it is impossible for humans to live as human beings. To create a sense of justice in protecting human rights, it is necessary to provide legal assistance (advocacy) for victims. An advocate is a yurist, a jurist from a legal scholar. So, although an expert on law but not a law scholar, then he can not be said as an advocate, but can only be said as a lawyer, it is because that the lawyer can not be from a law scholar, but he is an expert in law. The research specification used in this dissertation is descriptive research specification. There are several things that have not been carried out by advocates in fact, namely in counseling services and legal information to deceive the public about the knowledge and understanding of applicable laws or legislation. Keywords : Advocate, Human Rights, Law
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36

Davis, Martha F. "Institutionalizing human rights in the United States: Advocacy for a national human rights institution". Journal of Human Rights 23, n.º 2 (14 de marzo de 2024): 134–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14754835.2024.2329154.

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37

Kim, Mi Young y Yun Ah Kim. "Human Rights Sensitivity and Proactivity of Psychiatric Nurses on Advocacy Attitudes, and Advocacy Interventions in Mentally Disabled People". Crisis and Emergency Management: Theory and Praxis 19, n.º 2 (28 de febrero de 2023): 141–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.14251/crisisonomy.2023.19.2.141.

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The subjects of this study were 199 nurses attending the hospital and community mental health center or psychiatric rehabilitation center in B and K city. Data collected were analyzed using the SPSS/WIN 26.0 program. Correlations were calculated for the perception of proactivity, and human rights sensitivity and regression analysis were performed to examine the effect on advocacy attitudes and advocacy interventions. Factors having the greatest influence on nurses’ advocacy attitudes are “proactivity” (β =.532), and “human rights sensitivity” (β=.291), and the explanatory power was 60.5%. Factors having the greatest influence on nurses’ advocacy intervention are “proactivity” (β=.532), “human rights sensitivity” (β=.291), “turnover” (β=.121), “religion” (β=.092), “position” (β=.083) and the explanatory power was 72.6%. In addition, a continuous program should be developed and offered to psychiatric nurses who may have a positive approach toward advocacy.
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38

Harrell-Bond, Barbara. "Building the Infrastructure for the Observance of Refugee Rights in the Global South". Refuge: Canada's Journal on Refugees 25, n.º 2 (1 de septiembre de 2008): 12–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.25071/1920-7336.26028.

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Refugees in the Global South face many serious violations of their rights. Several major host states have failed to ratify both the Refugee Convention and the 1967 Protocol. However, even among those states that have ratifi ed one or both, few have enacted the domestic legislation to implement the provisions, and no state in the South has made a serious effort to bring domestic law in other subjects—immigration, health, labour, education—into harmony with the rights of refugees and their international commitments. This article presents a multi-faceted proposal, a guide to building a new global infrastructure for the protection of refugees. An important precursor is the rapid expansion in the teaching and studying of refugee law. Today’s studentsof refugee issues are tomorrow’s researchers, lawyers, and scholars, all of which are desperately needed to help refugees navigate the process of status determination and resettlement, to advocate more generally for the rights of refugees, and to monitor states’ compliance with international obligations. Also, human rights NGOs need to embrace the fact that refugees are human beings, and refugee rights are human rights. Furthermore, advocacy groups, legal aid organizations, and other NGOs need to understand that advocacy, legal assistance, and research must go hand in hand: the provision of legal assistance to individual refugees not only makes the use of their life stories for research and advocacy more ethical, it improves the quality of the research and advocacy as well. Perhaps most importantly, all the groups working with refugees throughout the South must communicate with and assist each other. In an eff ort to facilitate this crucial networking and communication, sixteen refugee advocacy and legal aid NGOs from the South attended a fi ve-day workshop in Nairobi in January 2007. Th e group decided to form the Southern Refugee Legal Aid Network, and to produce a charter for membership. I have been acting as the group’s moderator informally since that time. In the coming months, SRLAN will attach itself to Fahamu, an advocacy NGO that publishes Africa’s largest circulation magazine and has a proven track record of facilitating emerging advocacy networks. Fahamu will do fearless advocacy, oft en too dangerous for individual NGOs, and the SRLAN will facilitate the communication and co-operation necessary to begin the construction of the new global infrastructure for the protection of refugees. Working together, as a network of organizations throughout the South, we truly can transform this broken and unjust system.
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39

Aranguren, Martin. "Power Politics, Professionalism, and Patron–Client Relationships in Human Rights Advocacy: How Dalit Rights became Human Rights". Globalizations 8, n.º 1 (febrero de 2011): 31–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14747731.2011.544198.

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Woods, Andrew K. "The Limits of Moral Intuitions for Human Rights Advocacy". Law & Ethics of Human Rights 9, n.º 1 (1 de mayo de 2015): 91–111. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/lehr-2015-0002.

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Abstract The central ambition of human rights advocacy is to get people to care, who might otherwise not, about the suffering of others. To accomplish this, human rights advocates often appeal to moral intuitions by telling stories that evoke moral outrage, indignation, or guilt. Are these sorts of appeals a good way to promote human rights? The conventional wisdom suggests that they are. But perhaps the conventional wisdom is incomplete – perhaps human rights advocates should treat moral intuitions with skepticism rather than uncritical embrace. In this brief essay, I argue that appeals to moral intuitions are problematic because moral intuitions can lead people to make decisions that are suboptimal from the standpoint of the human rights regime’s goals. I attempt to show, in other words, that one of the great assets of the human rights regime – its ability to harness our strong intuitive reaction to the suffering of others – is also one of its great limitations. To make this argument, I draw from the mind sciences literature on moral decision-making. The latest research in this domain suggests that our moral intuitions are fallible. A number of studies have shown, for example, that moral outrage and indignation can cause people to make decisions that they would not defend under cooler conditions. I focus on three particular sorts of moral judgment biases and explore their implications for human rights advocacy. I then evaluate two different normative claims one might make about these moral judgment biases and offer several concluding thoughts.
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41

Kim, Hun Joon. "Structural determinants of human rights prosecutions after democratic transition". Journal of Peace Research 49, n.º 2 (marzo de 2012): 305–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0022343311431600.

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Over the last three decades, a growing number of countries have experienced a transition from authoritarianism to democracy, and the new governments have been increasingly expected to address past human rights violations. While the academic literature on the impact of human rights prosecution is relatively well developed, the literature on the causes of such prosecution is still sparse. Why do states pursue criminal prosecutions against former state officials on the charge of human rights violations? This article answers this question by testing three key theories: the balance of power between old and new elites, transnational advocacy networks, and the diffusion theory. I conduct a cross-national study of 71 countries that were in a state of democratic transitions between 1980 and 2006, using a new dataset on domestic human rights prosecutions. I find strong evidence to support the transnational advocacy networks and diffusion explanations. First, active domestic and international human rights advocacy for individual criminal accountability is a key factor guaranteeing persistent and frequent human rights prosecutions. My study further shows that domestic advocacy plays a crucial role in criminal prosecutions of high-profile state officials while international pressure is more effective in promoting prosecutions of low-profile officials. Second, the diffusion theory is also supported since the occurrence of human rights prosecution in neighboring countries is a relevant factor. Interestingly, transitional countries are most sensitive to trials occurring in culturally or linguistically similar countries and this supports the constructivist norm diffusion theory, which focuses on the role of identity and communication in the diffusion process. However, I find that the power balance explanation, which has been the prevailing explanation, is valid only for the immediate use of human rights prosecutions.
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42

Grover, Sonja. "Rights education and children’s collective self-advocacy through public interest litigation". Human Rights Education Review 1, n.º 1 (23 de junio de 2018): 65–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.7577/hrer.2691.

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If human rights education of schoolchildren addresses advocacy at all, it is mostly or exclusively in terms of civic participation, which perhaps includes civil protest. This approach implicitly discourages young people from considering engaging with the courts as an additional or alternative vehicle in seeking a remedy for violations of their fundamental human rights. Human rights education is incomplete when it fails to address the child’s right to legal standing in the effort to seek justice; for instance, as part of a child collective that is significantly adversely and directly impacted by particular government actions. Exemplars of children acquiring legal standing and pursuing their rights through the courts can serve as a useful educational tool in raising awareness of the potential for child public interest advocacy through the courts. One such exemplar, the youth-led class action environmental protection case Juliana et al. v the United States et al., is discussed.
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43

Bandurka, S. S. "Historical and legal overview of the State and Advocacy interaction within the system of human rights and freedoms protection". Bulletin of Kharkiv National University of Internal Affairs 102, n.º 3 (Part 2) (4 de octubre de 2023): 11–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.32631/v.2023.3.23.

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The article examines the interaction between the State and the Advocacy as a human rights protection organisation from the historical and legal perspective. At all times of its formation and development, the Advocacy has operated within a certain system of state and social relations and was called upon to promote the protection of human interests in accordance with the laws of the State in which it operated. The activities of the Advocacy have always been multifaceted, and therefore the article describes various methods of studying the interaction between the State and the Advocacy from the historical and legal perspective. The necessity of studying the interaction between the State and the Advocacy to refer to the legal documents of the past which regulated the activities of the Advocacy and its relationship with the State is emphasised. It is demonstrated that at all times the institution of human rights protection, which is now perceived as the Advocacy, has not acted in isolation, but has been a component of the society system, acting in accordance with the laws and in accordance with the procedure established by the State. The Advocacy functions in the unified legal system of the state together with the state authorities, central executive bodies and their local bodies and institutions, local self-government bodies, and civil society institutions. Therefore, when analysing the interaction between the state and the Advocacy, characterising the activities of the Advocacy in the protection of human rights and freedoms, it is necessary to consider the activities of the subjects of power in the protection of human rights and freedoms. Interaction between the State and the Advocacy is a social interaction. It is emphasized that in the process of social interaction, social, statutory, socio-legal actions of partners take place, and mutual adaptation of actions of each of them, which leads to the use of various research methods in the process of historical and legal review of interaction between the State and the Advocacy.
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44

Plutalov, Ivan Yur'evich. "To the question on classification of constitutional rights and freedoms for application by the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Russian Federation". Право и политика, n.º 7 (julio de 2020): 124–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.7256/2454-0706.2020.7.32776.

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The subject of this research is the constitutional human rights and freedoms in the Russian Federation. The goal is to substantiate their most rational classification for application in human rights advocacy of the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Russian Federation. The author conducts the analysis of these rights and freedoms, as well as underlines the need for their classification for the purpose of application by the Commissioner for Human Rights of the Russian Federation. Various approaches within modern national legal literature towards such classification. The author also presents an original approach based on the quantitative criterion &ndash; degree of perception of rights and freedoms by population of the country. The proposed new classification significantly differs from the officially accepted in its commitment to results of human rights advocacy of the for Human Rights of the Russian Federation.
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45

Bysaga, Y. M., D. M. Byelov y S. S. Kalyniuk. "The constitutional right of a person and a citizen to legal aid and its implementation by refugees with the help of the advocacy institute". Uzhhorod National University Herald. Series: Law 2, n.º 76 (14 de junio de 2023): 191–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.24144/2307-3322.2022.76.2.32.

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It is indicated that, despite the importance of socio-economic, ideological, political guarantees, the main ones are undoubtedly the legal ones (the guarantee of constitutional rights and freedoms and the impossibility of their cancellation and limitation, the guarantee of judicial protection of rights and freedoms, the right of everyone to know their rights and obligations , the right to legal assistance, etc.).The authors conclude that the institution of advocacy in the mechanism of protection of human and citizen rights and freedoms acts as one of the means for self-limitation of state power through the creation and active functioning of an independent human rights institution, which is an active actor in the process of implementing the main constitutional function of the Ukrainian state - the implementation and protection of rights and freedoms person and citizen. The constitutional and legal status of the bar allows it to actively ensure the rights of not only every person, but also of the entire civil society, to effectively implement the human rights function of the state by ensuring proper interaction in the activities of state authorities and civil society. The main features of advocacy in the mechanism of refugee rights protection, which reveal its essence in the mechanism of providing legal aid, are: 1) advocacy acts as a separate human rights institution for refugee rights; 2) the status of the bar is specifically defined in the Constitution of Ukraine; 3) the bar actively interacts with state authorities and institutions of civil society as an equal partner in the mechanism of protection of refugees’ rights; 4) as part of their professional duty to protect the rights and interests of refugees, as their clients, lawyers play an essential role in the fair administration of justice. Being an active participant in the mechanism of law enforcement, occupying an independent place in the mechanism of justice, the bar performs (should perform) an important function of public control in this area.
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46

Sagala, R. Valentina. "Disseminating International Human Rights Instruments: a Study of Legal Policies that Violates Women’s Human Rights". Jurnal Perempuan 20, n.º 2 (1 de mayo de 2015): 81–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.34309/jp.v20i2.30.

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This paper paper examines human rights including women’s human rights (women’s rights), the adoption of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), and other international human rights instruments. Referring to CEDAW’s principles together with human rights principles, States are urged to create law that promotes women’s perspective. Unfortunately until now, there are many policies and laws, at any levels— national and province/district/city—discriminate against women. Regarding this, this paper will focus to list on Bills which become the advocacy priority for women’s movement in Indonesia.
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47

Mayer, Benoit. "Human Rights in the Paris Agreement". Climate Law 6, n.º 1-2 (6 de mayo de 2016): 109–17. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18786561-00601007.

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The Paris Agreement contains the first mention of human rights in a climate change treaty. This article recounts the build-up of human rights advocacy since the Cancun Agreements. It then discusses the significance of the inclusion of a provision on human rights in the preamble to the Paris Agreement and explores other relevant provisions adopted at the 21st Conference of the Parties to the un Framework Convention on Climate Change in Paris in December 2015.
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48

Budabin, Alexandra C. y Joel R. Pruce. "The Elite Politics of Media Advocacy in Human Rights". New Political Science 40, n.º 4 (2 de octubre de 2018): 744–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07393148.2018.1528062.

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Laville, Helen. ""Stay Involved": Transnational Feminist Advocacy and Women's Human Rights". Journal of Women's History 24, n.º 4 (2012): 222–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/jowh.2012.0039.

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50

Murdie, Amanda, David R. Davis y Baekkwan Park. "Advocacy output: Automated coding documents from human rights organizations". Journal of Human Rights 19, n.º 1 (1 de enero de 2020): 83–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14754835.2019.1671173.

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