
NAINAKAPURLAW
NAINAKAPURLAW
1 Projects, page 1 of 1
Open Access Mandate for Publications and Research data assignment_turned_in Project2023 - 2026Partners:University of Lapland, University of Rome Tor Vergata, NAMITA WAHI, IIPE, NCKU +13 partnersUniversity of Lapland,University of Rome Tor Vergata,NAMITA WAHI,IIPE,NCKU,GU,NAINAKAPURLAW,University of Trento,University of Haifa,BBAU,UH,Stockholm University,NTUA,UM,ICSSR,UvA,Academia Sinica,CPRFunder: European Commission Project Code: 101094346Overall Budget: 2,998,490 EURFunder Contribution: 2,998,490 EURHuman Rights Justifications (HRJ) are when States use human rights to justify decisions. Human rights regimes operate on the presumptions that only individual persons can be in possession of human rights. The regulatory gaps occurring when the States use HRJ for their actions are two-fold, one in the regulation of the States’ use of HRJ and one in the individual human rights protection when States use HRJ. This activity is not regulated by any international, regional or national regime. In other words, significant and important gaps in human rights regulations has now been identified, which this project seeks to address. We will develop a theory of HRJ and a process for Systematic Ongoing Civil Society Engagement (ODCSE) as a tool for a gender and intersectional inclusive Civil Society engagement. Through ODCSE, we will identify gaps in human rights regulations and protection, serving as underpinning data for our recommendations to EU in support of a multinational human rights system and promotion of transnational democratic governance. ODCSE will also help us identify geopolitical elements that influence States’ use of HRJ. This will be done through 5 countries: Sweden, Finland, Taiwan, India and Ukraine, through three actions: human rights dialogue, inclusive democratic participations, and protection of human rights defenders, and operationalised through three themes: Covid, Migration and Climate.
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