A Warm Welcome from the Editors
An Essential Guide to Use of Our Book
About the Authors
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
PART I. ISSIES
Chapter 1. International Human Rights: Issues and Overviews
1. Burns H. Weston, Human Rights: Concept and Content
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
2. Anna Grear, Framing the Project of International Human Rights Law: Reflections on the Dysfunctional Family of the Universal Declaration
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
3. Martha C. Nussbaum, Capabilities, Human Rights, and the Universal Declaration
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
4. Burns H. Weston, Universalism Versus Cultural Relativism: An Appeal for Respectful Decision-Making
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
5. Robert McCorquodale and Richard Fairbrother, Globalization and Human Rights
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
6. Ratna Kapur, Human Rights in the Twenty-First Century: Take a Walk on the Dark Side
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
7. Margaret R. Somers and Christopher N. J. Roberts, Toward a New Sociology of Rights: A Genealogy of Buried Bodies of Citizenship and Human Rights
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
Chapter 2. Basic Decencies
8. Claudia Card, Genocide
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
9. Jonathan Todres, Law, Otherness, and Human Trafficking
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
10. Jeremy Waldron, Torture and Positive Law
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
Chapter 3. Participatory Rights
11. Richard B. Lillich, Civil Rights
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
12. Daniel Moeckli, Equality and Non-Discrimination
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
13. Ineke van der Valk, Racism: A Threat to Global Peace
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
14. Fiona Beveridge and Siobhan Mullally, International Human Rights and Body Politics
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
15. Seyla Benhabib, Borders, Boundaries, and Citizenship
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
Chapter 4. Basic Human Needs as Security Rights
16. Scott Leckie, Another Step Toward Indivisibility: Key Features of Violations of Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
17. Judy Fudge, The New Discourse of Labor Rights: From Social to Fundamental Rights?
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
18. Paul Hunt, The Right to Health: Key Objectives, Themes, and Interventions
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
19. Hannah Wittman, Food Sovereignty: A New Rights Framework for Food and Nature
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
20. Richard Pierre Claude and Felisa L. Tibbitts, The Right to Education and to Human Rights Education
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
21. Cindy Holder, Culture as an Activity and Human Right
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
Chapter 5. Community and Group Rights-Solidarity Rights
22. Karen Engle, On Fragile Architecture: The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples in the Context of Human Rights'
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
23. Bonny Ibhawoh, The Right to Development: The Politics and Polemics of Power and Resistance
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
24. Conor Gearty, Do Human Rights Help or Hinder Environmental Protection?
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
25. Douglas Roche, Peace: A Sacred Right
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
26. Susan Marks, What Has Become of the Emerging Right to Democratic Governance?
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
PART II. ACTION
Chapter 6. International Human Rights: Action Overviews
27. Burns H. Weston, Human Rights: Prescription and Enforcement
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
28. Harold Hongju Koh, How Is International Human Rights Law Enforced?
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
29. Wade M. Cole, Human Rights as Myth and Ceremony? Reevaluating the Effectiveness of Human Rights Treaties, 1981-2007
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
Chapter 7. Public Sector Approaches to International Human Rights Implementation
30. Stephen P. Marks, The United Nations and Human Rights
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
31. Dinah L. Shelton, Breakthroughs, Burdens, and Backlash: What Future for Regional Human Rights Systems?
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
32. Richard A. Falk, Searching for a Jurisprudence of Conscience: International Criminal Accountability and Humanitarian Intervention
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
33. Anna Grear and Burns H. Weston, Human Rights Accountability in Domestic Courts: Corporations and Extraterritoriality
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
Chapter 8. Private Sector Approaches to International Human Rights Implementation
34. Richard Pierre Claude, What Do Human Rights NGOs Do?
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
35. Penelope Simons, International Law's Invisible Hand and the Future of Corporate Accountability for Violations of Human Rights
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
36. Jordan J. Paust, The Human Right to Revolution
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
Chapter 9. Global Trajectories, Global Futures
37. Michael Ignatieff, American Exceptionalism and Human Rights
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
38. Anna Grear, Corporations, Human Rights, and the Age of Globalization: Another Look at the Dark Side in the Twenty-First Century
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
39. Tony Evans, Citizenship and Human Rights in the Age of Globalization
-Questions for Reflection and Discussion
Postscript: Human Rights, Humane Governance, and the Future
Documentary Appendix A. Select Instruments (see www.uichr.org/Weston-Grear)
Documentary Appendix B: Select Citations (see www.uichr.org/Weston-Grear)
Select Bibliography (see www.uichr.org/Weston-Grear)
Select Filmography (see www.uichr.org/Weston-Grear)
Supplemental Readings (see www.uichr.org/Weston-Grear)
Index