Israeli discrimination laws in the light of international law
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11606/issn.2446-5240.malala.2015.101771Keywords:
International Law. State of Israel. Discriminatory laws.Abstract
From the creation of international law to the imposition of jus cogens norms, considerable developments have been observed in the logics of power in the international legal framework. This research summary seeks to elucidate at first the primeval and current fundamentals of international law, with respect to internal norm versus international norm conflict. To illustrate the theories, the paper bring the example of the State of Israel and the role of discriminatory laws present in its constitution, even if the State has being signatory of numerous international conventions of racial protection.Downloads
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
This journal offers free access to its content, following the principle that making free of charge-scientific knowledge available to the public provides greater worldwide democratization of knowledge. No fees will be charged for submitting work and/or publishing in the journal, as well as for reading, downloading, copying, distributing, printing, searching or referencing after publication. Readers and interested parties are free to share (copy or distribute the material in any media and format) and to transform or adapt parts of the material as long as it is for non-commercial use and the appropriate credit is given to the author and the journal, indicating how the data has been used and/or manipulated.