Bibliografia

Principal

  • Staub, E. (2013) Building a Peaceful Society. Origins, Prevention, and Reconciliation After Genocide and Other Group Violence. American Psychologist, Vol. 68, no. 7, 576-589 DOI: 10.1037/a0032045. Stover, E. (2007). The Witness. War crimes and the promise of justice in the Hague. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania press. Chapter 1, 2, 3.:

Secundária

  • The Advocates for Human Rights (2015). Advocacy. In The Advocates for Human Rights (Eds.), Human Rights Tools for a Changing World: A Step-by-step Guide to Human Rights Fact-finding, Documentation, and Advocacy, pp 97-145, http://www.theadvocatesforhumanrights.org/uploads/chapter_7.pdf Alston, P. (2017). The populist challenge to human rights. Journal of Human Rights Practice, 9(1), 1-15. Amon, J. J., Wurth, M., & McLemore, M. (2015). Evaluating human rights advocacy on criminal justice and sex work. Health & Hum. Rts. J., 17, 91. Dudai, R. (2017). Human rights in the populist era: Mourn then (re) organize. Journal of Human Rights Practice, 9(1), 16-21. Dudai, R. (2014). Introduction—Rights Choices: Dilemmas of Human Rights Practice. Journal of Human Rights Practice, 6(3), 389-398. Lewis, D. (2003). Theorizing the organization and management of non-governmental development organizations: Towards a composite approach. Public Management Review, 5(3), 325-344. Staub, E. (2013) Building a Peaceful Society. Origins, Prevention, and Reconciliation After Genocide and Other Group Violence. American Psychologist, Vol. 68, no. 7, 576?589 DOI: 10.1037/a0032045. 13 pages.: