13124. HUMAN RIGHTS AND INTERNATIONAL LAW. This report traces the growing tension between the norms of sovereignty in international law and the claims for self-determination and concern for human rights; considers whether the accommodation of human rights under international law presents an insoluble problem; and deliberates whether the activities of governments in wartime should be subject to different human rights standards than governments' activities in peacetime. 13 pages, 31 footnotes, 7 bibliographic sources.