Entries by promosaik

The Re-Invention of Hijab: How the Islamic Fashion Industry is dressing a new Islamic Modernity – an Indonesian Example – Luise Görlach

As much as the veil is a fabric or article of clothing, it is also a concept. It can be illusion, vanity, artifice, deception, liberation, imprisonment, euphemism, divination, concealment, hallucination, depression, eloquent, silence, holiness, the ethers beyond consciousness, the hidden hundredth name of God, the final passage into death, even the biblical apocalypse… Yet the […]

The Rise and Fall of Human Rights: Cynicism and Politics in Occupied Palestine by Lori Allen

The Rise and Fall of Human Rights provides a groundbreaking ethnographic investigation of the Palestinian human rights world—its NGOs, activists, and “victims,” as well as their politics, training, and discourse—since 1979. Though human rights activity began as a means of struggle against the Israeli occupation, in failing to end the Israeli occupation, protect basic human rights, […]

Dance, Human Rights, and Social Justice: Dignity in Motion by Naomi Jackson (Editor)

Dance, Human Rights, and Social Justice: Dignity in Motion presents a wide-ranging compilation of essays, spanning more than 15 countries. Organized in four parts, the articles examine the regulation and exploitation of dancers and dance activity by government and authoritative groups, including abusive treatment of dancers within the dance profession; choreography involving human rights as […]

The Breakthrough: Human Rights in the 1970s by Jan Eckel (Editor), Samuel Moyn (Editor)

Between the 1960s and the 1980s, the human rights movement achieved unprecedented global prominence. Amnesty International attained striking visibility with its Campaign Against Torture; Soviet dissidents attracted a worldwide audience for their heroism in facing down a totalitarian state; the Helsinki Accords were signed, incorporating a “third basket” of human rights principles; and the Carter […]

Human Rights as Social Construction by Benjamin Gregg

Most conceptions of human rights rely on metaphysical or theological assumptions that construe them as possible only as something imposed from outside existing communities. Most people, in other words, presume that human rights come from nature, God, or the United Nations. This book argues that reliance on such putative sources actually undermines human rights. Benjamin […]

Ethnicity and Human Rights in Canada by Evelyn Kallen

Kallen’s classic study reveals the ways in which human rights violations, by way of discrimination on the bases of race and ethnicity, create and sustain the marginalized status of diverse racial and ethnic groups in Canada. Minority rights issues central to the concerns of Canada’s three major ethnic constituencies are examined: Aboriginal peoples, Franco-Quebecois, and […]

Human Rights and Disability Advocacy by Maya Sabatello (Editor), Marianne Schulze (Editor)

The United Nations adoption of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) constituted a paradigm shift in attitudes and approaches to disability rights, marking the first time in law-making history that persons with disabilities participated as civil society representatives and contributed to the drafting of an international treaty. On the way, they […]