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Human Rights Law Review Advance Access originally published online on February 13, 2009
Human Rights Law Review 2009 9(1):1-35; doi:10.1093/hrlr/ngn043
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© The Author [2009]. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Of Shaming and Bargaining: African States and the Universal Periodic Review of the United Nations Human Rights Council

Allehone Mulugeta Abebe*

*Allehone Mulugeta Abebe is First Secretary at the Permanent Mission of Ethiopia in Geneva, Switzerland, and a specialist on human rights and humanitarian affairs (allehone{at}gmail.com).

The Universal Periodic Review (UPR) of the United Nations Human Rights Council promises to be a useful tool for examining human rights situations in states in an objective, non-selective, universal and transparent manner. It is an undertaking imbued with a shift from the former Commission's policies and practice of shaming to a new consensual and cooperative model of human rights evaluation. The experience of African countries, both during the negotiation over its normative and institutional framework and in the two sessions of the Working Group on UPR, lays bare the challenges to the new human rights body and its unique peer review mechanism. The article critically examines the participation of African countries in the UPR and highlights some of the issues that deserve, at this early stage, the attention of all those who mind to see the objectives of the UPR fully realised.


He participated both in the negotiations on the institution-building text of the Human Rights Council and the first two sessions of the Working Group on Universal Periodic Review (UPR). Special thanks to Mr Yared Getachew, Ms Rachel Brett and Dr Fikremarkos Merso for their invaluable comments. Any remaining errors are the author's responsibility. Views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the position of either the Permanent Mission or that of the Government of Ethiopia.


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