2015
DOI: 10.12893/gjcpi.2015.1.1
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The evolution of civil society and the rule of law regarding female genital mutilation in Iraqi Kurdistan.

Abstract: 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 post-conflict 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 no… Show more

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