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  1. The Power of Human Rights. International Norms and Domestic Change. Search within full text. Get access. Cited by 1462. Edited by Thomas Risse, European University Institute, Florence, Stephen C. Ropp, University of Wyoming, Kathryn Sikkink, University of Minnesota. Publisher:

  2. Universal Declaration of Human Rights. “The power of the Universal Declaration is the power of ideas to change the world. It inspires us to continue working to ensure all people can gain freedom, equality and dignity."

  3. A milestone document in the history of human rights, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights set out, for the first time, fundamental human rights to be universally protected.

  4. The power of the Universal Declaration is the power of ideas to change the world. It inspires us to continue working to ensure all people can gain freedom, equality and dignity. Article 1. Free and equal. All human beings are born free and equal and should be treated the same way. All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.

  5. This book serves two purposes, one empirical, the other theoretical. First, we want to understand the conditions under which international human rights regimes and the principles, norms, and rules embedded in them are internalized and implemented domestically and, thus, affect political transformationprocesses.

  6. THE PERSISTENT POWER OF HUMAN RIGHTS. Th e Power of Human Rights (published in 1999) was an innovative and infl u-ential contribution to the study of international human rights. At its center was a “spiral model” of human rights change which described the various socialization processes through which international norms were inter-nalized ...