Selected byChoicemagazine as a Outstanding Academic Book for 2000
Nelson Mandela once said, Human rights have become the focal point of international relations. This has certainly become true in American relations with the People's Republic of China. Ann Kent's book documents China's compliance with the norms and rules of international treaties, and serves as a case study of the effectiveness of the international human rights regime, that network of international consensual agreements concerning acceptable treatment of individuals at the hands of nation-states.
Since the early 1980s, and particularly since 1989, by means of vigorous monitoring and the strict maintenance of standards, United Nations human rights organizations have encouraged China to move away from its insistence on the principle of noninterference, to take part in resolutions critical of human rights conditions in other nations, and to accept the applicability to itself of human rights norms and UN procedures. Even though China has continued to suppress political dissidents at home, and appears at times resolutely defiant of outside pressure to reform, Ann Kent argues that it has gradually begun to implement some international human rights standards.
Kent combines primary and secondary research into a detailed case study that tells us important things about both China's relations with the external world and the strengths and limits of contemporary multilateral human rights institutions. —Jack Donnelly, University of Denver
Acknowledgments
Introduction
The UN Human Rights Regime and China's
Participation Before
China, the UN Commission on Human Rights, and the UN Sub-Commission on Human Rights
China and Torture: Treaty Bodies and Special Rapporteurs
China and the UN Specialized Agencies: The
International Labor Organization
Theory, Policy, and Diplomacy before Vienna
The UN World Human Rights Conference at Vienna
After Viennal~