Power of Human Rights/The Human Rights of Power

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Anna Selmeczi
Anna Selmeczi b
Ariadna Estevez
Bhopal Survivors
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CEDAW
CEDAW Committee
CEDAW Report
Circuitous Process
Collective Political Subject
Community Land Trusts
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Daniel Tagliarina
empirical human rights analysis
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EU Member State
Eva Hilberg
Global south
governmentality
Human Rights
Human Rights Paradigm
indeterminacy
India's Legal Profession
India’s Legal Profession
IP Regime
IP System
Jane K. Cowan a
Jarmila Rajas
Joe Hoover
Judith Renner
Julie Billaud b
Kennedy Road Settlement
Lara Montesinos Coleman
Louiza Odysseos a
Mathias Grossklaus
National DNA Database
National Human Rights Council
neoliberalism critique
NGO Report
Past Human Rights Violations
postcolonial studies
Power
Raffaela Puggioni
Reconciliation Discourse
rights struggles
Serif Onur Bahcecik
Shadi Mokhtari
social theory
South African Shack Dwellers
subjectification
Third World Quarterly
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Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138292147
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Mar 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The contributions to this volume eschew the long-held approach of either dismissing human rights as politically compromised or glorifying them as a priori progressive in enabling resistance. Drawing on plural social theoretic and philosophical literatures – and a multiplicity of empirical domains – they illuminate the multi-layered and intricate relationship of human rights and power. They highlight human rights’ incitement of new subjects and modes of political action, marked by an often unnoticed duality and indeterminacy. Epistemologically distancing themselves from purely deductive, theory-driven approaches, the contributors explore these linkages through historically specific rights struggles. This, in turn, substantiates the commitment to avoid reifying the ‘Third World’ as merely the terrain of ‘fieldwork’, proposing it, instead, as a legitimate and necessary site of theorising. This book was originally published as a special issue of Third World Quarterly.

Louiza Odysseos is Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Sussex and Deputy Director of the Sussex Rights and Justice Research Centre. She is the author of The Subject of Coexistence: Otherness in International Relations (2007) and numerous articles on ethics, rights and resistance. She has also co-edited Gendering the International (2002), The International Political Theory of Carl Schmitt (2007) and Heidegger and the Global Age (2017). She is currently researching a monograph entitled The Reign of Rights in Global Politics.

Anna Selmeczi is a Postdoctoral Research Fellow of the African Centre for Cities at the University of Cape Town, South Africa. Her current research focuses on knowledge dynamics in urban social movements, particularly the pedagogical aspects of grassroots political practices.