

President Richard Nixon in 1971, the 1988 Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances and the increasing militarization of the conflict in many Latin American countries, seems to be a strong candidate for inclusion in an updated volume of Tuchman’s book. Drug policies developed globally since 1912 through the International Opium Convention signed at the Hague, including the 1961 United Nations Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, the war on drugs declared by former U.S. This refers to situations where, in retrospect, the chosen solution seems to have no concrete relationship with the interests of those who select the policy. Tuchman tries to explain why “those with political decision-making power so frequently act in a manner contrary to that dictated by reason and their own interests” (TUCHMAN, 1996, p.4). The March of Folly is the title of the classic book by Barbara Tuchman, in which the author traces the true history of human folly “from Troy to Vietnam”. Weldehaimanot The Role of the Universalization of Human Rights and Migration in the Formation of a New Global GovernanceĪndré Luiz Siciliano Conversations Views on the special police units for neighborhood pacification (UPPs) in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil


Marta Rodriguez de Assis Machado, José Rodrigo Rodriguez, Flavio Marques Prol, Gabriela Justino da Silva, Marina Zanata Ganzarolli, Renata do Vale Elias The ACHPR in the Case of Southern Cameroons Patricio Galella, Carlos Espósito A Challenge to Those Working in the Field of Genocide Prevention and Responseīridget Conley-Zilkic Law Enforcement at Issue Manuel Tufró The Current Agenda of Security and Human Rights in ArgentinaĬELS Essays Extraordinary Renditions in the Fight Against Terrorism Gino Costa Civic Participation, Democratic Security and Confl ict Between Political Cultures + ARTICLES x SUR file on Citizen Security and Human Rights Citizen Security and Transnational Organized Crime in the Americas
