Search results for ""author united nations: general assembly""
United Nations United Nations Environment Programme: report of the United Nations Environment Assembly of the United Nations Environment Programme, fourth session (Nairobi, 11-15 March 2019)
This is the official report of the United Nations Environment Assembly of the United Nations Environment Programme submitted to the General Assembly on its fourth session in Nairobi (11-15 March 2019).
£20.30
United Nations Report of the International Law Commission: sixty-eighth session (2 May - 10 June and 4 July - 12 August 2016)
Official Records of the Report of the International Law Commission Sixty-seventh session 2 May-10 June and 4 July-12 August 2016
£47.22
United Nations Report of the Committee on Contributions: seventy-ninth session (1-23 June 2019)
This is the official report to the General Assembly of the Committee on Contributions on its seventy-ninth session dated 3 to 21 June 2019.
£20.30
Bodleian Library Universal Declaration of Human Rights: Proclaimed by the United Nations General Assembly, Paris, December 1948
‘There are few historical developments more significant than the realisation that those in power should not be free to torture and abuse those who are not.’ – Amal Clooney On 10 December 1948, in Paris, the United Nations General Assembly adopted an extraordinarily ground-breaking and important proclamation: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This milestone document, made up of thirty Articles, sets out, for the first time, the fundamental human rights that must be protected by all nations. The full text of the document is reproduced in this book following a foreword by human rights lawyer Amal Clooney and a general introduction which explores its origins in the ‘Four Freedoms’ described by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt, the role his wife Eleanor Roosevelt took on as chair of the Human Rights Commission and of the drafting committee, and the parts played by other key international members of the Commission. It was a pioneering achievement in the wake of the Second World War and continues to provide a basis for international human rights law, making this document’s aims ‘as relevant today as when they were first adopted a lifetime ago.’
£7.74