International Human Rights Law and Practice in Latin America

International Human Rights Law and Practice in Latin America (DOI: 10.1162/002081800551235) was written by Ellen Lutz and Kathryn Sikkink, and published in International Organization volume 54 (2000).

The authors discuss the causal link between international law and domestic law.

Torture

There is a substantial legal regime surrounding torture.

There's also a substantial amount of torture ongoing.

Forced Disappearance

There is less legalization surrounding forced disappearance.

The use of forced disappearance was a recent phenomena.

Democratic Government

There is little legalization for the right to democratic government.

"[E]very Latin American country except Cuba either retained or returned to electoral democracy between 1978 and 1991. ... Latin America today faces a new set of issues-not the problem of military coups, but the problems involved in expanding existing electoral regimes into fuller democracies."

Case Studies

The authors examine the comparative politics of Paraguay and Uruguay.

The authors examine the comparative politics of Argentina and Honduras.

The authors examine the comparative politics of Uruguay and Guatemala.


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InternationalHumanRightsLawAndPracticeInLatinAmerica (last edited 2024-02-03 17:45:03 by DominicRicottone)