伊拉克库尔德斯坦切割女性生殖器官的民间社会和法治的演变。

R. Cardone
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摘要

国际人权法依靠国家主权,通过编纂和执行使建议的政策本地化,试图调和普遍性与特殊性。然而,在冲突后国家建设和自决带来的国内治理发展中,政府的不稳定使国际人权的优先事项复杂化,而且往往忽视了更有形的国内基础设施,如基本的人类需求,而不是看似建议的权利理想。但是,这并没有削弱人权的重要性,例如,人权与儿童权利有关,通过消除切割女性生殖器官来解决基于性别的暴力。虽然以国家为中心的本地化目前是实施国际法的优先事项,但法治除了法律领域外,还在整个社会结构、文化和制度领域得到了更多的整合。如果法律领域因不稳定、暴力和不连续性而受到破坏,那么随着时间的推移,社会如何内化和整合国际人权法?在不稳定的情况下,它能否持续下去?本研究以伊拉克库尔德斯坦从1988年两伊战争结束至2013年库尔德斯坦地区政府议会成立初期的女性生殖器切割(FGM)为例,评估了法治的发展及其有效性。全面的法治演变可以通过比较以国家为中心的政策和执行(或缺乏)与文化内部化和非政府参与的国内法律发展来衡量。通过研究伊拉克库尔德斯坦过去二十年来法律和文化领域与反女性生殖器切割话语的相互作用,本研究将确定一个由断断续续的法律结构覆盖的连续社会在与普遍人权谈判文化相对性的可持续性中的作用。
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The evolution of civil society and the rule of law regarding female genital mutilation in Iraqi Kurdistan.
International human rights law relies on state sovereignty to localize suggested policy with codification and enforcement in an attempt to reconcile universalism with particularity. However, amidst domestic governance developments from postconflict state building and self-determination, governmental instability complicates and often overlooks priorities of international human rights for more tangible domestic infrastructure, such as basic human needs rather than seemingly suggested rights ideals. This does not diminish the significance of human rights, though, pertaining to the rights of the child in addressing gender-based violence through the elimination of female genital mutilation, for example. While state-centric localization is currently prioritized for implementing international law, the rule of law is more integrated throughout the realms of societal structure, culture, and institutions in addition to the legal realm. If the legal realm is disrupted with instability, violence, and discontinuity, how does society internalize and integrate international human rights law over time, and can it be sustainable despite instability? This research evaluates the development of the rule of law, and its effectiveness, regarding female genital mutilation (FGM) as a case study in Iraqi Kurdistan from the end of the Iran-Iraq War in 1988 until 2013, the early years of the Kurdistan Regional Government’s parliament. Comprehensive rule of law evolution can be measured through comparing domestic legal developments through state-centric policy and enforcement, or lack thereof, with cultural internalization and non-governmental engagements. By studying the legal and cultural realms’ interaction with the anti-FGM discourse over Iraqi Kurdistan’s past two decades, this research will determine the role of a continuous society overlaid by intermittent legal structures in the sustainability of negotiating cultural relativity with universal human rights.
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