Acta Universitatis Carolinae Iuridica (AUCI) is the main journal of the Faculty of Law of Charles University. It has been published since 1954 and is one of the traditional law journals with a theoretical focus.
As a general law journal, it publishes longer studies and shorter articles on any relevant issues in legal theory and international, European and national law. AUCI also publishes material relating to current legislative issues. AUCI is a peer-reviewed journal and accepts submissions from both Czech and international authors. Contributions by foreign authors are published in their original language – Slovak, English, German, French.
AUCI is a theoretical journal for questions of state and law. It is published by Charles University in Prague, Faculty of Law, through Karolinum Press. It is published four times a year, the dates of publication can be found here.
Articles published in AUCI undergo an independent peer review process, which is anonymous on both sides. Reviewers from the field give their opinion on the scientific quality of the paper and the suitability of publication in the journal. In the case of comments, the opinion is sent back to the author with the possibility of revising the text (see Guidelines for Authors – Per Review Process for more details).
The AUCI journal (ISSN 0323-0619) is registered in the Czech National Bibliography (kept by the National Library of the Czech Republic) and in the Index to Foreign Legal Periodicals (kept by the American Association of Law Libraries). AUCI has been assigned a periodical registration number MK E 18585.
In 2021 the journal AUCI was the first journal of the Faculty of Law of Charles University to be included in the prestigious international database Scopus. This Elsevier database is the largest abstract and citation database of peer-reviewed literature in the world. The editors of the journal expect from the inclusion in the elite Scopus database not only an increase in the readership of the journal, but also an increase in interest in the publication of papers by both Czech and foreign authors.
AUCI is an open journal and all its content is published both on the faculty website and on the Karolinum Press website. Access to it is free of charge. The homepage of AUCI is on the Karolinum Press website.
The AUCI journal uses the Creative Commons license: CC BY 4.0.
Long-term archiving of the digital content of the journal is provided by Portico.
AUC IURIDICA, Vol 44 No 3 (1998), 39–57
Lidská práva žen na prahu 21. století: světová a evropská perspektiva
[Human Rights of Women at the Beginning of the 21th Century: The Global and European Perspective]
Stanislava Hýbnerová
DOI: https://doi.org/10.14712/23366478.2025.265
published online: 31. 03. 2020
abstract
The efforts to improve the situation of women are a part of the wider emancipation process aimed at the preservation and development of human society in the changing conditions of the civilization. In the contemporary international law and especially in the international law of human rights this relation and interaction are reflected through a legal doctrine, through the process of creating standards and by the effectivity of the accepted legal instruments. The international legal protection can be understood as an open system integrating into its sphere, besides traditional forms, new forms of discrimination and inequality due to sex. Thus it reflects the social demand, based on experiences and mediated by gender studies, on the factual and legal situation of women in individua! countries as well as in whole regions. This information increases the competency of the control mechanisms in judging the practices of states in relation to women in the sphere regulated by international obligations. The aim of the study is to stress the above mentioned aspects of the international legal protection of human rights of women such as they express themselves in the world-wide and European scale in the perspective exceeding the 20th century. First of all the conceptual development has to be mentioned which passes from the equal status of women to elimination of all forms of discrimination of women. The Convention on Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination of Women represents a new legal strategy since it determines the elimination of women’s discrimination as a legal norm. The Convention detaches itself from the non-discrimination based on the neutralization of sex. On the contrary, it emphasizes different characteristics of women which expose them to discrimination in a way requiring a special legal expression. The duty of states, to identify and eliminate all forms of discrimination, justifies the existence of gender women studies as well of a gender sensitive analysis of law, on international as well as on domestic levels. Both contribute, besides other, to a critical evaluation of the dichotomy of the public and private spheres which has serious consequences from the point of view of the women’s situation. Every way forward requires most of all improvement of the state practice. The direction of such efforts has been indicated by the final documents of the 4th World Conference on Women in 1995 which declare human rights of women as a non-separable, integral part of the fundamental human rights and freedoms, and women’s rights as human rights. There is, however, another question: to what extent the international legal protection of women has the force to change the discrimination practice. The Convention is a base for creating structures and mechanisms which would secure both safety and space for women’s universal self-realization in the domestic sphere. Effective monitoring of the accepted obligations, which is in the competence of CEDA W, has a non-replacable role in this sphere. The quality of the control mechanisms can be largely improved by the activities of non-governmental organizations which are able to be more critical than state organs designed to control the Convention. The international law of human rights is a product of a collective vision of states and their coinciding practice. This is testified by the European system of the protection of human rights. The equality of men and women is declared as democratic value and as the European variant of the parity democracy. The required standard of equality of men and women is a matter of a legal strategy which has its international and national levels. The unification of the domestic legal regulations and harmonization of the procedures of attaining the required aims is a precondition for including the rights of men and women into the category of rights protected by the Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms. Both legal and conceptual aspects testify the suitability of this procedure. For the new member states the concept of equality of men and women represents a challenge which they cannot marginalize or ignore unless they would get into the undesirable position of infringing the European democratic priorities and obligations in the sphere of human rights. Even the obligations, which are included in the recommendations, have a function in effective securing the obligations of international conventions on human rights and as such they have to be realized in good faith.
Lidská práva žen na prahu 21. století: světová a evropská perspektiva is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
230 x 157 mm
periodicity: 4 x per year
print price: 65 czk
ISSN: 0323-0619
E-ISSN: 2336-6478