Human rights from a Third World perspective : critique, history and international law /
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Imprint: | Newcastle upon Tyne, UK : Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013. |
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Description: | 1 online resource (ix, 453 pages) |
Language: | English |
Subject: | |
Format: | E-Resource Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11235429 |
Table of Contents:
- Decolonial strategies and dialogue in the human rights field / José-Manuel Barreto
- Who speaks for the "human" in human rights? / Walter Mignolo
- Provincializing human rights? The Heideggerian legacy from Charles Malik to Dipesh Chakrabarty / Martin Woessner
- The legacy of slavery: white humanities and its subject: a manifesto / Sabine Broeck
- "Moral optics": biopolitics, torture and the imperial gaze of war photography / Eduardo Mendieta
- Imperialism and decolonization as scenarios of human rights history / José-Manuel Barreto
- Las Casas, Vitoria and Suárez, 1514-1617 / Enrique Dussel
- The dual Haitian revolution and the making of freedom in modernity / Anthony Bogues
- Love, justice and natural law: on Martin Luther King, Jr. and human rights / Vincent W. Lloyd
- Human rights, southern voices: Yash Ghai and Upendra Baxi / William Twining
- The rule of law in India / Upendra Baxi
- Eddie Mabo and Namibia: land reform and precolonial land rights / Nico Horn
- Universalizing human rights: the role of small states in the construction of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights / Susan Waltz
- Forging a global culture of human rights: origins and prospects of the International Bill of Rights / Zehra F. Kabasakal Arat
- Mode d'assujetissement: Charles Malik, Carlos Romulo and the emergence of the United Nations human rights regime / Glenn Mitoma.