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NGO Participation in International Law and its Processes: An Eastern European Case Study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 February 2017

Abstract

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Type
On the Possibilities and Limitations of NGO Participation in International Law and its Processes
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 2001

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References

1 This paper followed presentation of a concept paper by Janet E. Lord.

2 Poverty, Education and Training, Health, Violence, Armed Conflict, Economy, Decision-making, Institutional Mechanisms, Human Rights, Media, Environment and the Girl Child.

3 UN Dep’t of Pub. Info., Platform For Action and the Beijing Declaration: Fourth World Conference on Women, Beijing, China, UN Sales No. E.DPI/1766 (1996).

4 Id. at 1-2.

5 Much of this presentation is taken from Marcia E. Greenberg, A Beijing +5 Success Story: Women from Eastern Europe Strengthening their Democracy Skills, Widtech Info. Bull. (Women in Development Technical Assistance Project, Washington, DC), Mar. 2001, at <http://www.widtech.org>.

6 Ideally, KARAT members would have been in Washington to represent themselves. Having worked with them since November 1999, the author has tried at least to share firsthand experience and observations.

7 Two other meetings took place within the next several weeks: women from Central Asia and the Caucasus met and endorsed the NGO statement, and official delegates from the region also met in Budapest and incorporated much of the NGO work.