Protecting Human Rights - train the trainer
Friday 29 August 2008 and
Friday 10 October 2008
Both in the Sydney CBD. Download flyer: Protecting Human Rights - train the trainer for more information
Friday 29 August 2008 and
Friday 10 October 2008
Both in the Sydney CBD. Download flyer: Protecting Human Rights - train the trainer for more information
Hilary Charlesworth is an Australian Research Council Federation Fellow, Professor in RegNet and Director of the Centre for International Governance and Justice, ANU. She also holds an appointment as Professor of International Law and Human Rights in the ANU College of Law. Her research interests are in international law and human rights law. She was the inaugural President of the Australian and New Zealand Society of International Law (1997-2001).
Hilary Charlesworth was Co-Editor of the Australian Yearbook of International Law from 1996 to 2006 and a member of the Board of Editors of the American Journal of International Law since 1999. She has worked with various non-governmental human rights organisations on ways to implement international human rights standards and was chair of the ACT Government’s inquiry into an ACT bill of rights, which culminated in the adoption of the ACT Human Rights Act 2004. She is Patron of the ACT Women’s Legal Service and a patron of the Victorian Foundation for Survivors of Torture.
WHEN: Monday 21 July, 2008 - 5.30 for 6.00pm
WHERE: Corr Chambers Westgarth, Level 32, Governor Phillip Tower, 1 Farrer Place, Sydney
TO BOOK: (02) 9252.3366 or mail@thesydneyinstitute.com.au
Article by George Williams and Nicola McGarrity in the Sydney Morning Herald, July 16, 2008:
The protesters have won this round. Next time they are not likely to be so fortunate. The Federal Court decision illuminates the fragile nature of freedom of speech in Australia. The right deserves better protection than the legal presumption that Parliament does not intend to breach the right unless it sets this out in clear terms. It is long past time that such an important freedom was safeguarded in a national charter of human rights. full article
Dr. Lesley Cannold, Sun Herald, 13 July 2008.
YOU might think I am the sort of person who has always favoured a charter of human rights, but it isn’t so.
Having come of age in America, I had seen first-hand the social ructions caused by the Supreme Court’s invalidation of laws that violated the bill of rights. I watched my country struggle to come to terms with that court’s banning of unconstitutional racially segregated schools, its upholding of the separation of church and state and its striking down of laws banning abortion.
In principle I agreed with each one of these decisions, yet as a new migrant to Australia in the early 1990s I thought this nation’s more incrementalist approach to social change had much to commend it …. Don’t trust politicians with your human rights