Political Science 3388E Chapter : Donnelly CH 10- The Priority of National Action

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International action and the creation of authoritative international hr norms, has had an important, but subsidiary role to the fate of hr. The fate of hr- their implementation, abridgement, protection, violation, enforcement, denial, or enjoyment- is largely a matter of national, not international, action: the limits of multilateral action. Multilateral actions are largely restricted to promotional activities, rooted primarily with information gathering and with limited monitoring powers. Complaint systems have very limited coverage and in the end do not (except for in europe) lead to enforceable judgments against states: international reporting procedures. Reporting procedures are at the heart of multilateral implementation systems and are essentially on self-criticism and good faith efforts (crawford) obvious limitations with this. Committees cannot always ensure hat the required reports are even submitted. States need not respond to particular questions during their public hearings or respond to the committee in a manner that is adequate.

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