Human Rights at the Intersections: Transformation through Local, Global, and Cosmopolitan Challenges

Author:   Anthony Tirado Chase (Occidental College, USA) ,  Dr. Pardis Mahdavi (Arizona State University, USA) ,  Hussein Banai (Indiana University, USA) ,  Sofia Gruskin (University of Southern California, USA)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
ISBN:  

9781350268708


Pages:   288
Publication Date:   22 August 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Human Rights at the Intersections: Transformation through Local, Global, and Cosmopolitan Challenges


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Author:   Anthony Tirado Chase (Occidental College, USA) ,  Dr. Pardis Mahdavi (Arizona State University, USA) ,  Hussein Banai (Indiana University, USA) ,  Sofia Gruskin (University of Southern California, USA)
Publisher:   Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint:   Bloomsbury Academic
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.454kg
ISBN:  

9781350268708


ISBN 10:   1350268704
Pages:   288
Publication Date:   22 August 2024
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

"""This book offers a rich repertoire of theoretical and pragmatic tools to address mounting economic, social, political, cultural, and environmental challenges and crises. It makes a compelling call for the need of innovation, experimentation, cross-sectoral collaboration, and multidisciplinary approaches. A must-read for anyone in civil society, academia, or subnational, regional, and national governments grappling with the need for new solutions and analytical frames. Besides constituting a practical toolkit, the case studies and snapshots from across the globe are also a timely and compelling case for the potential utility of human rights on the ground at a moment in which their relevance and impact are questioned."" --Claudia López Hernández, Mayor of Bogotá ""This volume assembles a diverse array of experience and expertise that compels a re-imagination of human rights to help analysts and practitioners escape conventional boundaries imposed by powerful groups working to divide communities and otherwise preserve the status quo. By questioning state-centrism and the issue silos that compartmentalize policy processes and social movements, contributors address the structural foundations of human rights and point to productive and novel solutions. A range of timely cases shows how human rights advocates are engaging in innovative and replicable strategies to build power, using the largely untapped normative and institutional resources of human rights to respond to deep-seated problems like structural racism, COVID-19, climate change, and austerity."" --Jackie Smith, Professor of Sociology University of Pittsburgh, USA, and Co-ordinator of the U.S. Human Rights City Alliance ""This volume aims high in terms of both substance and structure. And it achieves. The through-lines of ""intersections"" and ""transformations"" link chapters grouped around the themes of cosmopolitanism, the city, sexual rights, and feminism. The deft introductions by the editors bring these chapters into illuminating conversation. Short snapshots throughout the volume ground the theoretical discussions in the empirical realities out in the world. At a time when human rights are under stress from a rise in global authoritarianism and rejection of the rule of law, these chapters underscore human rights' dynamism and resilience. The result is stimulating, essential reading for those interested in navigating the current challenges to human rights theory and practice."" --Martha F. Davis, University Distinguished Professor of Law, Northeastern University ""Most studies of human rights have been concerned with the vernacularization of the global - that is, with the making of the lingua franca of international human rights and its contested adoption at the local scale. We need to be equally concerned with the globalization of the vernacular - that is, with the legal and political processes whereby local actors, including subaltern groups, introduce modifications and neologisms into the vocabulary and even the grammar of human rights. This volume gives us precisely this type of well-rounded and complex account of human rights. Rather than remaining in the comfort of partial views of the movement, it embraces the messiness of the practice of rights and the possibilities of this transitional moment. And it rekindles our imagination at a time when we need it most."" --César Rodríguez-Garavito, Professor of Clinical Law, Faculty Director and Chair of the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU School of Law, USA"


This book offers a rich repertoire of theoretical and pragmatic tools to address mounting economic, social, political, cultural, and environmental challenges and crises. It makes a compelling call for the need of innovation, experimentation, cross-sectoral collaboration, and multidisciplinary approaches. A must-read for anyone in civil society, academia, or subnational, regional, and national governments grappling with the need for new solutions and analytical frames. Besides constituting a practical toolkit, the case studies and snapshots from across the globe are also a timely and compelling case for the potential utility of human rights on the ground at a moment in which their relevance and impact are questioned. * Claudia López Hernández, Mayor of Bogotá * This volume assembles a diverse array of experience and expertise that compels a re-imagination of human rights to help analysts and practitioners escape conventional boundaries imposed by powerful groups working to divide communities and otherwise preserve the status quo. By questioning state-centrism and the issue silos that compartmentalize policy processes and social movements, contributors address the structural foundations of human rights and point to productive and novel solutions. A range of timely cases shows how human rights advocates are engaging in innovative and replicable strategies to build power, using the largely untapped normative and institutional resources of human rights to respond to deep-seated problems like structural racism, COVID-19, climate change, and austerity. * Jackie Smith, Professor of Sociology University of Pittsburgh, USA, and Co-ordinator of the U.S. Human Rights City Alliance * This volume aims high in terms of both substance and structure. And it achieves. The through-lines of “intersections” and “transformations” link chapters grouped around the themes of cosmopolitanism, the city, sexual rights, and feminism. The deft introductions by the editors bring these chapters into illuminating conversation. Short snapshots throughout the volume ground the theoretical discussions in the empirical realities out in the world. At a time when human rights are under stress from a rise in global authoritarianism and rejection of the rule of law, these chapters underscore human rights’ dynamism and resilience. The result is stimulating, essential reading for those interested in navigating the current challenges to human rights theory and practice. * Martha F. Davis, University Distinguished Professor of Law, Northeastern University * Most studies of human rights have been concerned with the vernacularization of the global – that is, with the making of the lingua franca of international human rights and its contested adoption at the local scale. We need to be equally concerned with the globalization of the vernacular – that is, with the legal and political processes whereby local actors, including subaltern groups, introduce modifications and neologisms into the vocabulary and even the grammar of human rights. This volume gives us precisely this type of well-rounded and complex account of human rights. Rather than remaining in the comfort of partial views of the movement, it embraces the messiness of the practice of rights and the possibilities of this transitional moment. And it rekindles our imagination at a time when we need it most. * César Rodríguez-Garavito, Professor of Clinical Law, Faculty Director and Chair of the Center for Human Rights and Global Justice at NYU School of Law, USA *


Author Information

"Anthony Tirado Chase is a professor at Occidental College, USA, and Chair of its Young Initiative on the Global Political Economy. Pardis Mahdavi is Provost and Executive Vice President of the University of Montana, USA. Hussein ""Huss"" Banai is an associate professor of International Studies in the Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies at Indiana University, Bloomington, USA. Sofia Gruskin is a professor in the Keck School of Medicine and Gould School of Law, and Director USC Institute on Inequalities in Global Health, University of Southern California, USA."

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