The New Haven Approach
This intellectual framework is universal in its applicability and its values.2 It has been applied in the elaboration of the 2005 Miami Declaration of Principles on Human Trafficking,3 and developed in greater scholarly detail by the facilitator of that Declaration, Professor Roza Pati.4 It lies at the foundation of this interdisciplinary Spring School on Human Trafficking, Public Health and the Law.
Literature
[Gelöschtes Bild: /icon_teaser.gif Alternativtext: Literatur Bildunterschrift: ] [1] For details, see Harold D. Lasswell & Myres S. McDougal, Jurisprudence for a Free Society: Studies in Law, Science and Policy (1992); W. Michael Reisman, Siegfried Wiessner & Andrew R. Willard, The New Haven School: A Brief Introduction, 32 Yale Journal of International Law 575 (2007).
[Gelöschtes Bild: /icon_teaser.gif Alternativtext: Literatur Bildunterschrift: ] [2] Siegfried Wiessner, The New Haven School of Jurisprudence: A Universal Toolkit for Understanding and Shaping the Law, 18 Asia Pacific Law Review 45 (2010).
[Gelöschtes Bild: /icon_teaser.gif Alternativtext: Literatur Bildunterschrift: ] [3] 1 Intercultural Human Rights Law Review 11 (2006); cf. Roza Pati, The Miami Declaration of Principles on Human Trafficking: Its Genesis and Purpose, 1 Intercultural Human Rights Law Review 5 (2006).
[Gelöschtes Bild: /icon_teaser.gif Alternativtext: Literatur Bildunterschrift: ] [4] Roza Pati, Trading in Humans: A New Haven Perspective, 20 Asia Pacific Law Review 135 (2012).