The Erosion of the Rule of Law in Eritrea: Silencing Freedom of ExpressionPromoting Citizenship and Preventing Statelessness in South Africa: A Practitioner's Guide
About the publication This report contains an in depth analysis of the muted right to freedom of expression in Eritrea. The number and forms of human rights violations related to the curtailing of free speech have been and continue to be well documented across the globe. This discourse identifies th...
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Authors: Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria and UN Mandated University for Peace, St Jose, Costa Rica auth University of Pretoria. Centre for Human Rights, author. The Erosion of the Rule of Law in Eritrea: Silencing Freedom of ExpressionPromoting Citizenship and Preventing Statelessness in South Africa: A Practitioner's Guide Erosion of the Rule of Law in Eritrea Pretoria University Law Press (PULP) 2015 text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Preface -- List of abbreviations -- List of Eritrean print and electronic media -- Acknowledgements -- Executive summary English -- Executive summary French -- Executive summary Tigrinya -- Executive summary Arabic -- Introduction -- Contextualising the rule of law in Eritrea -- Eritrea's human rights obligations and rule of law -- Suppression of free expression as an attack on the rule of law in Eritrea -- Free expresion in Eritrea today: effects of widespread reprisals -- From arbitrary arrests to subtle control of the message -- Recommendations -- Annex I: Compilation of recorded human rights violations related to free speech -- Annex II: Report of the Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review: Eritrea. About the publication This report contains an in depth analysis of the muted right to freedom of expression in Eritrea. The number and forms of human rights violations related to the curtailing of free speech have been and continue to be well documented across the globe. This discourse identifies the right to free reception of information and expression as the bedrock to realising and maintaining the rule of law. Investigated herein is the historical background to the political evolution of the small African state and the social impact of the prevailing human rights violations. This report contains a compilation of human rights violations as determined by international treaty bodies, interviews with Eritrean witnesses and diaspora in exile and civil society reports on the human rights situation. It is argued in the report that the absence of the rule of law in Eritrea is directly attributed to the collapse of free expression as political forces see this right as a threat to their power base – a form of suppression that has nullified all human rights and freedoms and might well damage its people beyond repair. Table of Contents Preface List of abbreviations List of Eritrean print and electronic media Acknowledgments Executive summary English Executive summary French Executive summary Tigrinya Executive summary Arabic Introduction Contextualising the rule of law in Eritrea Eritrea’s human rights obligations and rule of law Non-Implementation of the Eritrean Constitution Suppression of free expression as an attack on the rule of law in Eritrea Prelude to dictatorship: Human rights before September 2001 The Crackdown of September 2001 Free expression in Eritrea today: Effects of widespread reprisals Closure of non-state media houses Collapse of the journalistic profession in Eritrea Internet censorship From arbitrary arrests to subtle control of the message Pervasive editorial spin The ‘03’ rumour system Suppression of foreign and diaspora media Reporting the work of the courts Eritrea’s international relations Awareness of the dangers of refugee flight Rebirth of independent journalism Recommendations Annex I: Compilation of recorded human rights violations related to free speech Arbitrary arrest and detention Torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment Death in custody Annex II: Report of the Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review: Eritrea I. Recommendations accepted II. Recommendations that do not enjoy the support of Eritrea English Rule of law Eritrea. Freedom of expression Eritrea. Human rights Eritrea. Freedom of expression. fast (OCoLC)fst01200263 Human rights. fast (OCoLC)fst00963285 Rule of law. fast (OCoLC)fst01101218 Eritrea. fast (OCoLC)fst01266183 human rights human rights violations freedom of expression Eritrea violations 1-920538-37-2 University for Peace, author. |
language |
English |
format |
eBook |
author |
Authors: Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria and UN Mandated University for Peace, St Jose, Costa Rica |
spellingShingle |
Authors: Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria and UN Mandated University for Peace, St Jose, Costa Rica The Erosion of the Rule of Law in Eritrea: Silencing Freedom of ExpressionPromoting Citizenship and Preventing Statelessness in South Africa: A Practitioner's Guide Preface -- List of abbreviations -- List of Eritrean print and electronic media -- Acknowledgements -- Executive summary English -- Executive summary French -- Executive summary Tigrinya -- Executive summary Arabic -- Introduction -- Contextualising the rule of law in Eritrea -- Eritrea's human rights obligations and rule of law -- Suppression of free expression as an attack on the rule of law in Eritrea -- Free expresion in Eritrea today: effects of widespread reprisals -- From arbitrary arrests to subtle control of the message -- Recommendations -- Annex I: Compilation of recorded human rights violations related to free speech -- Annex II: Report of the Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review: Eritrea. |
author_facet |
Authors: Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria and UN Mandated University for Peace, St Jose, Costa Rica University for Peace, University of Pretoria. Centre for Human Rights, University for Peace, |
author_variant |
c f h r u o p a u m u f p s j c r a cfhruopaumufpsjcr cfhruopaumufpsjcra |
author2 |
University for Peace, |
author2_role |
TeilnehmendeR |
author_corporate |
University of Pretoria. Centre for Human Rights, University for Peace, |
author_corporate_role |
VerfasserIn VerfasserIn |
author_sort |
Authors: Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria and UN Mandated University for Peace, St Jose, Costa Rica |
title |
The Erosion of the Rule of Law in Eritrea: Silencing Freedom of ExpressionPromoting Citizenship and Preventing Statelessness in South Africa: A Practitioner's Guide |
title_full |
The Erosion of the Rule of Law in Eritrea: Silencing Freedom of ExpressionPromoting Citizenship and Preventing Statelessness in South Africa: A Practitioner's Guide |
title_fullStr |
The Erosion of the Rule of Law in Eritrea: Silencing Freedom of ExpressionPromoting Citizenship and Preventing Statelessness in South Africa: A Practitioner's Guide |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Erosion of the Rule of Law in Eritrea: Silencing Freedom of ExpressionPromoting Citizenship and Preventing Statelessness in South Africa: A Practitioner's Guide |
title_auth |
The Erosion of the Rule of Law in Eritrea: Silencing Freedom of ExpressionPromoting Citizenship and Preventing Statelessness in South Africa: A Practitioner's Guide |
title_alt |
Erosion of the Rule of Law in Eritrea |
title_new |
The Erosion of the Rule of Law in Eritrea: Silencing Freedom of ExpressionPromoting Citizenship and Preventing Statelessness in South Africa: A Practitioner's Guide |
title_sort |
the erosion of the rule of law in eritrea: silencing freedom of expressionpromoting citizenship and preventing statelessness in south africa: a practitioner's guide |
publisher |
Pretoria University Law Press (PULP) |
publishDate |
2015 |
contents |
Preface -- List of abbreviations -- List of Eritrean print and electronic media -- Acknowledgements -- Executive summary English -- Executive summary French -- Executive summary Tigrinya -- Executive summary Arabic -- Introduction -- Contextualising the rule of law in Eritrea -- Eritrea's human rights obligations and rule of law -- Suppression of free expression as an attack on the rule of law in Eritrea -- Free expresion in Eritrea today: effects of widespread reprisals -- From arbitrary arrests to subtle control of the message -- Recommendations -- Annex I: Compilation of recorded human rights violations related to free speech -- Annex II: Report of the Working Group on the Universal Periodic Review: Eritrea. |
isbn |
1-920538-37-2 |
callnumber-first |
K - Law |
callnumber-label |
KRN202 |
callnumber-sort |
KRN 3202 U55 42015 |
geographic |
Eritrea. fast (OCoLC)fst01266183 |
geographic_facet |
Eritrea. |
illustrated |
Not Illustrated |
dewey-hundreds |
300 - Social sciences |
dewey-tens |
340 - Law |
dewey-ones |
342 - Constitutional & administrative law |
dewey-full |
342.085 |
dewey-sort |
3342.085 |
dewey-raw |
342.085 |
dewey-search |
342.085 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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The Erosion of the Rule of Law in Eritrea: Silencing Freedom of ExpressionPromoting Citizenship and Preventing Statelessness in South Africa: A Practitioner's Guide |
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