> Details
Chase, Anthony Tirado
[Editor];
Mahdavi, Pardis
[Editor];
Banai, Hussein
[Editor];
Gruskin, Sofia
[Other]
Human rights at the intersections
- [First edition]
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- Media type: E-Book
- Title: Human rights at the intersections : transformation through local, global, and cosmopolitan landscapes
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Contains:
Section 1: Introduction / by Chase, Gruskin, and Mahdavi -- Section 2: Exploding the Global/Local Binary in 'Cosmopolitan' Human Rights. 1. LaDawn Haglund (Arizona State University), 'Cosmopolitan Human Rights and Local Transformation: In Tension or in Tandem'? ; 2. Shareen Hertel (University of Connecticut), 'Mobilizing Empathy for a Truly Cosmopolitan Human Rights.' ; 3. Kristi Kenyon (University of Winnipeg), Relationship-based Cosmopolitanism Is Key to Meaningful but Messy Rights Protections. ; 4. Joe Hoover, (University of London), 'Cosmopolitanism's Abstractions Can Blind Us to Damaging Hierarchies of Humanity.' ; 5. Hussein Banai, (Indiana University) 'Everyday Cosmopolitanism.' ; 6. Bahey Eldin Hassan (Cairo Institute of Human Rights Studies): 'On Global Norms Sustaining Local Human Rights Movements in the Arab World' ; 7. Pablo Abitbol (Montes de Mará, Colombia, Historic Memory Project): 'Rural Colombia and Global Norms: Building Peace from the Ground Up.' -- Section 3: Human Rights and Sub-state Actors: Cities and Global Norms. 1. Nelson Camilo Sanchez (University of Virginia), 'Cosmopolitan Cities in an Illiberal World.' ; 2. Michael Goodhart (University of Pittsburgh): 'The Future of Human Rights is Local: Human Rights Cities and Local Politics' ; 3. Anthony Tirado Chase, 'Truth and Accountability in Los Angeles: Global Norms Informing City Reckoning Around Racial Justice' ; 4. Gaea Morales (University of Southern California), 'Cities and International Relations' ; 5. Erin Bromaghim and Angela Kim (Los Angeles Mayor's Office): 'The Sustainable Development Goals and City Policy in Los Angeles' ; 6. Thalia Gonzĺez (Occidental College), 'Cities and Human Rights in the United States' -- Section 4: Sexuality, Sexual Rights, and Reproductive Rights. 1. Rajat Khosla /Kate Gilmore (Amnesty International), 'Sex, sexuality, and sexual and reproductive health: the role of human rights' ; 2. Momin Rahman (Trent University), 'The homocolonialist' test for global LGBTQ+ & SOGIE rights strategies ; 3. Mauro Cabral (GATE/Argentina) 'The reform of medical protocols and law reform in light of the changes to the ICD: Improving the health and rights of transgender populations' ; 4. Morgan Carpenter (Intersex Australia), 'Intersex Health and Human Rights') ; 5. Vera Paiva (Professor, University of Säo Paulo) ; 6. Pascale Allotey (Director of United Nations University Institute for Global Health, Malaysia) -- Section 5: Feminism and the Triple Bind. 1. William Simmons (University of Arizona), 'Paternal Ignorance in Human Rights Devalues Knowledge of Marginalized Populations' ; 2. Dolores Trevizo (Occidental College), 'What Can Intersectional Approaches Reveal About Violence'? ; 3. Lara Stemple (UCLA), 'Claiming Gender for 'women only' Runs Counter to Fundamental Notions of Equality' ; 4. Amr Shalakany (American University in Cairo), 'Thinking Feminism and Feminist Movements and the Arab Spring' ; 5. Kathy Spillar (Executive Director of Feminist Majority Foundation and Ms. Magazine) ; 6. Gloria Steinem feminist social commentator and author -- Section 6: Concluding Roundtable -- Index.
Introduction : intersections and transformations / Anthony Tirado Chase, Sofia Gruskin, and Pardis Mahdavi
Exploding the global-local binary in "cosmopolitan" human rights
"A band aid on a bullet wound" : cosmopolitan desire in a pluriversal world / Joe Hoover
Snapshot #1 : localism vs globalism : authoritarianism's battlefield in the Arab region / Bahey eldin Hassan
Relishing the roots : the promise and peril of decentralizing human rights discourse / Kristi Heather Kenyon
The future of human rights is local / Michael Goodhart
Snapshot #2 : global-local intersections to advance accountability in post-conflict Côte d'Ivoire / Cristián Correa
Human rights at the intersections of structural and cultural violence / LaDawn Haglund
Everyday cosmopolitanism and human rights / Huss Banai
Who cares? : exclusion, empathy and solidarity / Shareen Hertel
Human rights, the city, and "local" actors
Fom rebels to rocks : cities as anchors in turbulent times / Gaea Morales
Snapshot #3 : global human rights norms and city policy in Los Angeles / Erin Bromaghim and Angela Kim
Resourcing rights : how sub-state actors can use local fiscal policy to counteract democratic erosion / Sergio Chaparro Hernández and Nelson Camilo Sánchez -
Truth-in-Los Angeles : "reimagining and rejuvenating global norms at the city level" / Anthony Tirado Chase
Snapshot #4 : racial justice in Los Angeles : what can global truth-telling norms offer? / Brenda Shockley and Zita Davis
Localizing international human rights norms through participatory video with people affected by leprosy in Niger, Nigeria, and Mozambique / Yohanna Abdou, Shehu Sarkin Fada, Paulo E. Hansine, Jone A. José, and William Paul Simmons
The complex intersection of legacies of violence and legacies of resistance in Montes de María, Colombia / Pablo Abitbol Piñeiro
Sexuality and sexual rights
Sex, sexuality, and sexual and reproductive health : the role of human rights? / Kate Gilmore and Rajat Khosla
Snapshot #5 : global-local intersections to change politics and public policy on sexuality in Brazil / Vera Paiva
Navigating homocolonialism in LGBTQ2+ rights strategies : sexual and political possibilities beyond the current framing of international queer rights / Momin Rahman and Adnan Hossain
Snapshot #6 : glocalization and sexual rights / Pascale Allotey
Intersex human rights in a time of instrumentalization and backlash / Morgan Carpenter
Eppur si muove4dreflections on human rights and trans depathologization in ICD-11 / Mauro Cabral
Feminism and the "triple bind"
Whose gender is it? : inclusion versus exclusion in global feminist movements / Lara Stemple
What can intersectional approaches reveal about violence? / Dolores Trevizo
Thinking feminism and its discontents / Alison Brysk
Why does sexual difference matter in the legal paradigm of equality? : human rights violations of migrant women in immigration detention in Mexico / Alethia Fernández de la Reguera
Snapshot #7 : feminism and its discontents : a conversation with Gloria Steinem and Gloria Feldt Pardis Mahdavi
Conclusion : human rights in motion / Hussein Banai.
- Contributor: Chase, Anthony Tirado [Editor]; Mahdavi, Pardis [Editor]; Banai, Hussein [Editor]; Gruskin, Sofia [Other]
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Published:
London; New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2022
- Issue: First edition
- Extent: 1 Online-Ressource (xx, 267 Seiten)
- Language: English
- DOI: 10.5040/9781350268692
- ISBN: 9781350268678; 9781350268692; 9781350268685
- Identifier:
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RVK notation:
MD 4700 : Menschenrechte
- Keywords: Human rights movements ; Cosmopolitanism ; Human rights movements Case studies ; Cosmopolitanism Case studies.l ; Human rights ; Human rights Case studies ; Human rights workers ; Menschenrecht ; Menschenrechtspolitik ; Implementation ; Lokalisation ; Nichtstaatliche Organisation ; Geschlechterrolle ; Gruppe ; Rechtsstellung ; Feminismus ; Comparative politics ; Globalization ; Erde
- Origination:
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Footnote:
Includes index
Barrierefreier Inhalt: Compliant with Level AA of the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines. Content is displayed as HTML full text which can easily be resized or read with assistive technology, with mark-up that allows screen readers and keyboard-only users to navigate easily
- Description: "At a time when states are increasingly hostile to the international rights regime, human rights activists have forged alliances with non-state and sub-state actors as a point of entry for the implementation of human rights law. These recent developments complicate conventional analysis of relationships between local actors, global norms, and cosmopolitanism. The "lived realities of human rights" explored centrally in this book are shown to exist outside of human rights' traditional state-centrism and beyond a local-cosmopolitan binary. The contributions in this collection critically engage with debates on localism and cosmopolitanism, weaving insights from social sciences, humanities, and medicine into a broader call for interdisciplinary scholarship informed by practice. Chapters draw together theoretical frameworks on localism and cosmopolitanism, with case studies ranging from the #metoo movement and Black Lives Matter to the human rights implications of Covid-19. Overall, the contributors argue that much of the work to be done centres on how human rights approaches can be better integrated across local and global institutions and better targeted towards grassroots-informed structural reform."--
- Access State: Open Access