human rights

PHRG - Peace Human Rights Governance: the June 2023 issue is out

Cover Peace Human Rights Governance Journal PHRG - 2017

The University of Padua's 'Antonio Papisca' Centre for Human Rights has published the first issue of the seventh volume of the scientific journal Peace Human Rights Governance (PHRG), a thematic issue on Human Security in the current global context.

Issue 7(1) includes the following research articles,:

Wolfgang Benedek, The War in Ukraine from a Human Security Perspective
Felicity Daly, Jacqui O'Riordan, Unintended Consequences: Divisions of Care within Ireland's Response to Ukranian Refugees and Impacts on Asylum seekers
Greta Albertari, Elena Principe, The Relevance of Perceptions over Temporariness of Emergency and Crafted ‘Migrant’ Identities in the European Response to Migration Originating from Conflict Situations. The case of Ukraine
Alfredo Rizzo, Human-security and its Multi-faceted Meaning under European Union Law. An Attempt for an Intersectoral Legal Approach
Lisa Heschl, A Refugee is a Refugee is … a Refugee? Differential Treatment of Persons in Need of Protection and Non-discrimination Law

It also includes a contribution by Kairat Abdrakhmanov, OSCE High Commissioner on National Minorities on Instrumentalization of Minorities vs. Instruments of Minority Rights. Conflict Prevention through Integration Based on Respect for Diversity and Minority Rights

PHRG is six-monthly and completely open access. It constitutes a new resource within the increasingly broad and multi-faceted scientific community engaged in the study of human rights, which aims to present original theoretical and empirical contributions on current human rights issues while fostering the development of a robust multi-disciplinary and multi-level approach to research and scholarly dissemination on these topics.

 

Below is the link to access the issue: https://phrg.padovauniversitypress.it/issue/7/1

 

Links

Keywords

War/Conflict migration refugees human security human rights national minorities university asylum research

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Human Rights Centre