Marsha A. Freeman, Senior Fellow, University of Minnesota Human Rights Center; Director, International Women's Rights Action Watch,Christine Chinkin, Professor of International Law, London School of Economics and Political Science; Professor of International Law, London School of Economics andPolitical Science;,Beate Rudolf, Director of the German Institute for Human Rights
Marsha A. Freeman is Director of the International Women's Rights Action Watch and a Senior Fellow at the University of Minnesota Human Rights Center. IWRAW is an international women's human rights resource centre and pioneered the shadow reporting to the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women. Dr. Freeman is the editor of Assessing the Status of Women, a guide to using the CEDAW Convention, and author of Women's Economic, Cultural and Social Rights, a manual for working with the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. She teaches at the University of Minnesota Law School.
Christine Chinkin has law degrees from the universities of London and Sydney and Yale Law School. She has taught international law in Singapore, Australia and the United States as well as in the United Kingdom. She is a member of Matrix Chambers and the author of many articles on international human rights law, especially relating to women's human rights. She has been a consultant to the United Nations Division for the Advancement of Women and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
Since 1 January 2010, Professor Beate Rudolf has been the Director of the German Institute for Human Rights. Prior to that, she was a junior professor for public law and equality law at the faculty of law of Freie Universitat Berlin and director of the research project "Public International Law Standards for Governance in Weak and Failing States" within the Research Center "Governance in Areas of Limited Statehood". Her research focuses on human rights and legal principles on state structures under public international law, European law and German constitutional law as well as from a comparative law perspective.
1. Introduction, Christine Chinkin and Marsha A. Freeman 2. Preamble, Christine Chinkin and Beate Rudolf 3. Article 1, Andrew Byrnes 4. Article 2, Andrew Byrnes 5. Article 3, Christine Chinkin 6. Article 4, Frances Raday 7. Article 5, Rikki Holtmaat 8. Article 6, Janie Chuang 9. Article 7, Sarah Wittkopp 10. Article 8, Sarah Wittkopp 11. Article 9, Savitri W.E. Goonesekere 12. Article 10, Fareda Banda 13. Article 11, Frances Raday 14. Article 12, Rebecca J. Cook and Veronica Undurraga 15. Article 13, Beate Rudolf 16. Article 14, Fareda Banda 17. Article 15, Savitri W.E. Goonesekere 18. Article 16, Marsha A. Freeman 19. Violence Against Women, Christine Chinkin 20. Article 17, Ineke Boerefijn 21. Article 18, Ineke Boerefijn 22. Article 19, Ineke Boerefijn 23. Article 20, Ineke Boerefijn 24. Article 21, Ineke Boerefijn 25. Article 22, Ineke Boerefijn 26. Article 23, Andrew Byrnes 27. Article 24, Andrew Byrnes 28. Article 25, Susann Kroworsch 29. Article 26, Susann Kroworsch 30. Article 27, Susann Kroworsch 31. Article 28, Jane Connors 32. Article 29, Susann Kroworsch 33. Article 30, Susann Kroworsch 34. Optional Protocol, Jane Connors
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