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Mapping the Shift: Human Rights and Criminal Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 March 2019

Karen Engle*
Affiliation:
University of Texas School of Law.

Extract

In 2015, the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS)—a progressive think tank on U.S. domestic and foreign policy—awarded its annual human rights awards to two criminal lawyers. The domestic award went to Daryl Atkinson, who advocates for the rights of convicted felons. Its international award went to Almudena Bernabeu, for what the IPS called her “successful prosecution of several of the worst Latin American perpetrators of crimes against humanity.” I do not think that the IPS was trying to be balanced by picking a lawyer working on behalf of the rights of the formerly incarcerated, on one hand, and a prosecutor, on the other. Rather, the organization sought to honor those it sees as promoting human rights. In the context of U.S. law, that means fighting for the rights of defendants and the convicted. For international law, it means the opposite.

Type
Criminalization and International Human Rights: A Roundtable of Perspectives on the Uneasy Linkages, with Attention to the Regulation of Sexuality, Gender, and Reproduction
Copyright
Copyright © by The American Society of International Law 2019 

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References

1 Velásquez Rodríguez v. Honduras, Judgment (Inter-Am. Ct. Hum. Rts. July 29, 1988).