The politics of LGBQT: human rights in the United Nations system
(2019)
Book Chapter
McGoldrick, D. (2019). The politics of LGBQT: human rights in the United Nations system. In D. Haider-Markel, & C. Ball (Eds.), Oxford Encyclopedia of LGBT Politics and Policy. Oxford University Press (OUP). https://doi.org/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.013.1305
All Outputs (6)
Human rights -the struggle for recognition of LGBTQ rights from a transnational perspective (2019)
Book Chapter
MCGOLDRICK, D. (2019). Human rights -the struggle for recognition of LGBTQ rights from a transnational perspective. In H. Chiang (Ed.), Global encyclopedia of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) history, 759-67. Charles Scribner's Sons
The struggle for recognition of LGBTQ rights from a transnational perspective (2019)
Book Chapter
McGoldrick, D. (2019). The struggle for recognition of LGBTQ rights from a transnational perspective. In H. Chiang (Ed.), Global encyclopedia of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer history. Gale
Religious symbols and state regulation: assessing the strategic role of the European Court of Human Rights (2017)
Book Chapter
McGoldrick, D. Religious symbols and state regulation: assessing the strategic role of the European Court of Human Rights. In J. Gunn, T. Jeroen, & E. Malcolm (Eds.), 50 years after Kokkinakis v Greece. Brill. Manuscript submitted for publication
Religious Rights and the Margin of Appreciation (2017)
Book Chapter
McGoldrick, D. (2017). Religious Rights and the Margin of Appreciation. In P. Agha (Ed.), Human rights between law and politics: the margin of appreciation in post-national contexts. Hart
Affording states a margin of appreciation: comparing the European Court of Human rights and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights (2016)
Book Chapter
McGoldrick, D. (2016). Affording states a margin of appreciation: comparing the European Court of Human rights and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights. In C. M. Buckley, A. Donald, & P. Leach (Eds.), Towards Convergence in International Human Rights Law. BrillWe live in an era of proliferating international legal domains and institutions, not least in the human rights field. For some, normative pluralism within human rights is inevitable, and even desirable. Others view it as a threat to the integrity and... Read More about Affording states a margin of appreciation: comparing the European Court of Human rights and the Inter-American Court of Human Rights.