Arabic: "من الأفكار إلى التأثير": دليل لتأثير وتنفيذ التغيير - لقاء مع المؤلف في مكتبة الأمم المتحدة في المقر الرئيسي
中文:“从思念到影响”:影响和实施变革手册——在联合国总部书店举行的作者见面会
nglish: IPI President Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein spoke in six languages and answered questions during an author meet-and-greet at the United Nations Bookshop.
French : « De l'idée à l'impact » : Un manuel pour influencer et mettre en œuvre le changement - Rencontre avec l'auteur à la librairie du siège de l'ONU
Russian: «От идеи к результату»: руководство по влиянию и внедрению изменений - встреча с автором в книжном магазине штаб-квартиры ООН
Spanish: "De la idea al impacto": Un manual para influir y aplicar el cambio - Encuentro con el autor en la librería de la sede de la ONU
Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein assumed his functions as United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights on 1 September 2014, following the General Assembly’s approval on 16 June 2014 of his appointment by the United Nations Secretary-General. He is the sixth High Commissioner to lead the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) and the first Asian, Muslim and Arab to do so.
A veteran multilateral diplomat, Zeid was previously Jordan’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations in New York, a post he held from September 2010 until July 2014, and which he also held from 2000 to 2007. From 2007 to 2010 he was Jordan’s Ambassador to the United States of America. He served as Jordan’s Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN, with the rank of Ambassador, from 1996 to 2000. In January 2014, he was President of the UN Security Council and chaired the Security Council’s 1533 and 1521 committees with regard to two sanctions regimes regarding the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Liberia.
Zeid’s professional experience demonstrates his long familiarity with international criminal justice, international law, UN peacekeeping, post-conflict peace-building, international development, and counter- nuclear terrorism. He played a central role in the establishment of the International Criminal Court, chairing the complex negotiations regarding the elements of individual offences amounting to genocide; crimes against humanity; and war crimes. Courts around the world now cite as authoritative the definition for ‘crimes against humanity’ refined by the ‘elements’.