Masterarbeit, 2017
78 Seiten, Note: 2.0-2.2
This work aims to analyze the extent to which India's national policies and legislation comply with international standards on child marriage. It examines the issue within its international legal framework, considering cultural relativism and universalism. The study focuses on India's national level responses to child marriage, assessing its compliance with international human rights standards.
Chapter I: Framing the issue of child marriage: This chapter establishes a foundation for understanding child marriage. It defines the practice, explores the reasons for its condemnation, highlighting the magnitude of the problem, its causes, and devastating consequences. It grapples with the theoretical complexities of cultural relativism versus universalism in addressing this issue, setting the stage for a discussion on the international and national legal frameworks to address this complex global issue.
Chapter II: International legal framework on child marriage: This chapter details the international legal landscape surrounding child marriage. It examines the minimum age for marriage, consent issues, and the classification of child marriage as a harmful traditional practice, and a clear violation of fundamental human rights. It thoroughly explores the relevant human rights principles, including the best interests of the child, equality, non-discrimination, the right to life and development, the right to health, and the right to protection from violence, establishing a benchmark against which national legislation can be measured.
Chapter III: Addressing child marriage at a sub-regional level: South Asia: This chapter shifts the focus to the South Asian context, examining human rights protection mechanisms within the region and the efforts of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC). It reviews regional legal and regulatory frameworks related to child marriage, including conventions and statements aiming to improve child welfare. The chapter analyzes the effectiveness of these regional initiatives in combating child marriage within South Asia, providing a regional perspective before zooming in on the national case study of India.
Chapter IV: Addressing child marriage at the national level of India: This chapter delves into the Indian context, analyzing India's international commitments and domestic legal system. It examines personal laws (Hindu, Muslim, and Christian) concerning marriage and assesses the legal framework and policies aimed at tackling child marriage. It also examines the roles of various national human rights institutions, such as the National Human Rights Commission and the National Commission for Women, in addressing this issue and selected case studies illustrating the complexities of legal processes and challenges in addressing child marriage at the national level.
Child marriage, human rights, international law, India, South Asia, cultural relativism, universalism, legal framework, policy analysis, compliance assessment, national human rights institutions.
This document is a comprehensive preview of a work analyzing the extent to which India's national policies and legislation comply with international standards on child marriage. It examines the issue within its international legal framework, considering cultural relativism and universalism, and focuses on India's national-level responses.
The table of contents covers an introduction, four main chapters, and a conclusion. Chapter I frames the issue of child marriage, defining it, exploring its causes and consequences, and addressing the theoretical challenge of cultural relativism versus universalism. Chapter II details the international legal framework, including minimum age stipulations, consent, and human rights violations. Chapter III addresses child marriage at a sub-regional level in South Asia, focusing on regional cooperation and legal frameworks. Chapter IV focuses on India's national level response, examining its legal system, policies, and the roles of national human rights institutions. Chapter V assesses India's compliance with international standards on child marriage.
The key objectives are to analyze India's compliance with international standards on child marriage, examine the issue within its international legal framework, and assess India's national-level responses. Key themes include the definition and prevalence of child marriage; international human rights law and its application; India's legal and policy frameworks; analysis of India's compliance; and the role of national human rights institutions.
Chapter I lays the groundwork for understanding child marriage. Chapter II outlines the international legal framework surrounding child marriage. Chapter III examines regional efforts to address child marriage in South Asia. Chapter IV delves into India's national-level response, including its legal system, policies, and the role of national human rights institutions. Chapter V assesses the compliance of India's policies and legislation with international human rights standards.
Key words include child marriage, human rights, international law, India, South Asia, cultural relativism, universalism, legal framework, policy analysis, compliance assessment, and national human rights institutions.
The document examines India's international commitments and domestic legal system, including personal laws (Hindu, Muslim, and Christian) concerning marriage. It also assesses the legal framework and policies aimed at tackling child marriage and the roles of various national human rights institutions.
The document acknowledges the theoretical complexities of cultural relativism versus universalism in addressing child marriage, framing the discussion within the context of international human rights law and its applicability to cultural practices.
The study primarily focuses on India at the national level, but it also provides a broader perspective by examining the sub-regional context of South Asia and its regional cooperation efforts.
The preview doesn't explicitly state a conclusion, but it implies that the full document will provide a detailed assessment of India's compliance with international human rights standards concerning child marriage.
Based on the preview, the full study will likely utilize international human rights law documents, national legislation, policy documents, reports from national human rights institutions, and possibly case law related to child marriage in India.
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