Human Rights

Forecasting Genocide

Charles Butcher • Jun 2 2012 • Articles

While it might seem optimistic to think that a tool for forecasting genocide can break down the political calculations that so often seem to obstruct effective responses to genocide, it is surely a hope worth chasing.

Depletion: The Costs of Unpaid Domestic Work

How is it possible to know if the non-recognition of the value of domestic work undermines the possibilities for achieving gender justice?

Syrians Are Paying the Price of NATO Excesses in Libya

Ramesh Thakur • Mar 2 2012 • Articles

The China–Russia veto does not prove the irrelevance of the UN Security Council. Rather, it proves that the politics of the Security Council must be got right before an R2P military intervention; and the political equilibrium should be maintained during the operation.

The ICTY and the Challenges of Reconciliation in the Former Yugoslavia

Janine Natalya Clark • Jan 23 2012 • Articles

The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) has issued 161 indictments since its establishment in 1993. But has it had a positive impact on peace and reconciliation?

Religion and Human Rights: A Dialectical Relationship

Bas de Gaay Fortman • Dec 5 2011 • Articles

The real challenge is one of how to get global faith in a dignified and well-protected existence for everyone, rooted in all hearts and minds. This tends to entail periods of sharp confrontation with the powers that be, as the recent Arab Spring has markedly illustrated.

Political Economy of Human Rights: The Quest for Relevance and Realization

Bas de Gaay Fortman • Aug 18 2011 • Articles

Advancing human rights to the level of global justice requires more than the current circus of councils, commissions, and committees with tedious documents deliberated in lengthy meetings. Coming closer to people in their daily pursuit of liberties and livelihoods is the most productive perspective for progress in the 21st century.

Premature Adulation in Sudan

Rebecca Tinsley • Aug 16 2011 • Articles

On July 9th diplomats celebrated the birth of Africa’s newest country, South Sudan, like over-stimulated toddlers at a party. The media followed suit, with trivial and sometimes patronising stories about the new national anthem and flag, and the admittedly strange plan to create cities in the shapes of African animals. Sadly, those involved should have focused on the agenda items they failed to address before sending out the independence day invitations.

Where the Anti-Muslim Path Leads

Anya Cordell • Aug 1 2011 • Articles

Since 9/11, the anti-Muslim drumbeat has impacted vast numbers of innocent Muslims, Sikhs, Hindus, Arabs, South Asians and others. We, who despair when our children are teased and bullied, are accepting and repeating despicable slurs about others, ricocheting through our culture. I felt compelled to stand up against people being attacked, even murdered on the basis of snap judgments

Human Rights in the Context of International Relations

Bas de Gaay Fortman • Jul 30 2011 • Articles

In the struggle for public justice, international human rights provide not just legal resources as based on positive law, but also political means anchored in public legitimacy. Additionally, human rights function not merely to protect people with regard to the freedoms and entitlements they have already acquired, but in their emancipatory struggles for socio-political transformation as well.

“Shooting yourself in the foot”: The Anti-Boycott Law

Tanzil-Zaman Chowdhury • Jul 23 2011 • Articles

In this bastion of democracy amongst an otherwise hostile terrain of authoritarian regimes and despotism, how do we reconcile natural democratic values of expression with this draconian law? Human rights organisations have begun to battle, but as the years unfold it remains to be seen how such a law will pan out and how Israel will maintain its democracy.

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