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Human Rights from a Third World Perspective: Critique, History and International Law Unabridged edition [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 460 pages, kõrgus x laius: 212x148 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Mar-2013
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1443840580
  • ISBN-13: 9781443840583
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 460 pages, kõrgus x laius: 212x148 mm
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Mar-2013
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1443840580
  • ISBN-13: 9781443840583
Teised raamatud teemal:
Globalization, interdisciplinarity, and the critique of the Eurocentric canon are transforming the theory and practice of human rights. This collection takes up the point of view of the colonized in order to unsettle and supplement the conventional understanding of human rights. Putting together insights coming from Decolonial Thinking, the Third World Approach to International Law (TWAIL), Radical Black Theory and Subaltern Studies, the authors construct a new history and theory of human rights, and a more comprehensive understanding of international human rights law in the background of modern colonialism and the struggle for global justice. An exercise of dialogical and interdisciplinary thinking, this collection of articles by leading scholars puts into conversation important areas of research on human rights, namely philosophy or theory of human rights, history, and constitutional and international law. This book combines critical consciousness and moral sensibility, and offers methods of interpretation or hermeneutical strategies to advance the project of decolonizing human rights, a veritable tool-box to create new Third-World discourses of human rights.

An exercise of dialogical and interdisciplinary thinking, this collection of articles by leading scholars puts into conversation important areas of research on human rights, namely philosophy or theory of human rights, history, and constitutional and international law. This book combines critical consciousness and moral sensibility, and offers methods of interpretation or hermeneutical strategies to advance the project of decolonizing human rights, a veritable tool-box to create new Third-World discourses of human rights.

Arvustused

"The history of human rights is a subject that has been receiving a great deal of attention. Nevertheless, what is curious about some of this work is its provincial approach to an inherently cosmopolitan subject matter. This superb collection helps address the resulting problem, with outstanding essays that provide different accounts of the complex roles of the Third World and Third World thinkers in the history and development of international human rights law. It is an indispensable volume for anyone seeking to develop a global vision of international human rights law." Professor Tony Anghie, University of Utah."An extraordinarily rich and compendious volume, a kind of post-colonial 'book of hours' for human rights. The contributors' diverse critical perspectives historical, philosophical, cultural, aesthetic, literary as well as juridical together accomplish a polychromatic retelling of human rights history and reimagining of human rights discourse, and each contribution is a textured illumination in its own right." - Dr Scott Newton, SOAS, University of London"For too long human rights have arguably remained ambivalent instruments for the prevention and denunciation of genocides, violence and abuses to legal subjects, particularly at the heart of Western societies, while also becoming efficient tools in advancing cultural imposition and delegitimizing progressive struggles with alternative grammars of democracy. Instead of naively celebrating human rights, or simply dismissing them as purely European constructs or as liberal tools to prevent radical change, the contributors in this volume seek to identify alternative genealogies of and sources for thinking and rethinking human rights, while also providing new critical insights into standard human rights discourse. Here, we see a picture of what [ it] is to think of human rights from the Third World, including the Third World in the North. The book clarifies and potently restates the imperative of decolonizing human rights discourse, and in the process making it more useful for the urgent social struggles in the Third World and beyond. A must read for everyone interested in human rights, their legacy, and their relevance for today." - Professor Nelson Maldonado-Torres, University of California, Berkeley."These essays demonstrate that from the earliest expressions of humanism in the Sixteenth century, by dissidents such as Bartolomé de las Casas, to contemporary Southern authors such as Upendra Baxi, the discourse of human rights has always been a locus of popular struggle against oppression by privileged elites." - Professor Morton Emanuel Winston, The College of New Jersey.

Acknowledgements x
Introduction:Decolonial Strategies and Dialogue in the Human Rights Field 1(43)
Jose-Manuel Barreto
Part I Critique of the Theory of Human Rights
Chapter One Who Speaks for the "Human" in Human Rights?
44(21)
Walter Mignolo
Chapter Two Provincializing Human Rights? The Heideggerian Legacy from Charles Malik to Dipesh Chakrabarty
65(37)
Martin Woessner
Chapter Three The Legacy of Slavery: White Humanities and its Subject. A Manifesto
102(15)
Sabine Broeck
Chapter Four "Moral Optics": Biopolitics, Torture and the Imperial Gaze of War Photography
117(23)
Eduardo Mendieta
Part II Signposts for an Alternative History of Human Rights
Chapter Five Imperialism and Decolonization as Scenarios of Human Rights History
140(32)
Jose-Manuel Barreto
Chapter Six Las Casas, Vitoria and Suarez, 1514-1617
172(36)
Enrique Dussel
Chapter Seven The Dual Haitian Revolution and the Making of Freedom in Modernity
208(29)
Anthony Bogues
Chapter Eight Love, Justice and Natural Law: On Martin Luther King, Jr. and Human Rights
237(19)
Vincent W. Lloyd
Chapter Nine Human Rights, Southern Voices: Yash Ghai and Upendra Baxi
256(56)
William Twining
Part III Decolonizing Constitutional and International Human Rights Law
Chapter Ten The Rule of Law in India
312(24)
Upendra Baxi
Chapter Eleven Eddie Mabo and Namibia: Land Reform and Precolonial Land Rights
336(17)
Nico Horn
Chapter Twelve Universalizing Human Rights: The Role of Small States in the Construction of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
353(35)
Susan Waltz
Chapter Thirteen Forging a Global Culture of Human Rights: Origins and Prospects of the International Bill of Rights
388(31)
Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat
Chapter Fourteen Mode d'assujetissement: Charles Malik, Carlos Romulo and the Emergence of the United Nations Human Rights Regime
419(21)
Glenn Mitoma
Postface 440(1)
Contributors 441(3)
Index of Names 444
José-Manuel Barreto, PhD, is currently a Visiting Fellow at the Unit for Global Justice, Goldsmiths College, University of London. His research gravitates around the history and theory of human rights in the context of modern imperialism and colonial genocide, and one of his interests is to retrieve the Third-World tradition of human rights. He has published On Rights, Duties and Guarantees (Colombian Commission of Jurists, 1998) and his writing has appeared in works such as Critical Legal Theory (Routledge, 2011) and Critical International Law: Post-Realism, Post-Colonialism, and Transnationalism (Oxford University Press, 2012).