Human Rights in a Post Human World: Critical Essays
Price: 465.00 INR
ISBN:
9780198061762
Publication date:
29/04/2009
Paperback
268 pages
216x140mm
Price: 465.00 INR
ISBN:
9780198061762
Publication date:
29/04/2009
Paperback
268 pages
Upendra Baxi
Major work by a world-renowned scholar in the field,Sequel to The Future of Human Rights,Original critique of thinking on the right to development
Rights: World Rights
Upendra Baxi
Description
This work is described by its distinguished author as a sequel to The Future of Human Rights. It is an analysis of the state of human rights in a 'post human' and 'machinistic' world almost overwhelmed by security concerns, 'terrorist threats', and technoscience. It begins with a series of questions: Are there now two different realms of human rights: human rights in times of peace and human rights in the 'state of exception'? Does such a distinction affect the nascent jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court? In what way do these impact on global social policy concerning development? The book goes on to present a critique of approaches towards a theory of human rights proposed by Amartya Sen and Sen's emphasis on the ethical, as opposed to juridical, nature of such rights. Focusing on the human right to development, the author examines why the UN Declaration on the Human Right to Development has not attracted more attention and goes on to highlight the work of Arjun Sengupta and its implications for the human right to development. It goes on to examine how in the current world scenario the 'emancipatory potential' of human rights may be carried forward in theoretical work and through activism.
About the Author
Upendra Baxi, Professor, University of Warwick
Upendra Baxi
Table of contents
Preface;
1.: Why Theory, Especially of Human Rights?
2.: Amartya Sen and Human Rights
3.: Reading Development, Writing Development
4.: Towards the Development of the Right to Development?
5.: Human Rights in Times of Terror and the Death of Genocide 6. The Post Human and Human Rights; Index of Names; Theme Index
Upendra Baxi
Description
This work is described by its distinguished author as a sequel to The Future of Human Rights. It is an analysis of the state of human rights in a 'post human' and 'machinistic' world almost overwhelmed by security concerns, 'terrorist threats', and technoscience. It begins with a series of questions: Are there now two different realms of human rights: human rights in times of peace and human rights in the 'state of exception'? Does such a distinction affect the nascent jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court? In what way do these impact on global social policy concerning development? The book goes on to present a critique of approaches towards a theory of human rights proposed by Amartya Sen and Sen's emphasis on the ethical, as opposed to juridical, nature of such rights. Focusing on the human right to development, the author examines why the UN Declaration on the Human Right to Development has not attracted more attention and goes on to highlight the work of Arjun Sengupta and its implications for the human right to development. It goes on to examine how in the current world scenario the 'emancipatory potential' of human rights may be carried forward in theoretical work and through activism.
About the Author
Upendra Baxi, Professor, University of Warwick
Table of contents
Preface;
1.: Why Theory, Especially of Human Rights?
2.: Amartya Sen and Human Rights
3.: Reading Development, Writing Development
4.: Towards the Development of the Right to Development?
5.: Human Rights in Times of Terror and the Death of Genocide 6. The Post Human and Human Rights; Index of Names; Theme Index
Corruption and Human Rights in India
C. Raj Kumar
Challenges to Civil Rights Guarantees in India
Noorani, SAHRDC
Handbook of Human Rights and Criminal Justice in India
South Asia Human Rights Documentation Centre
Human Rights and Humanitarian Law
South Asia Human Rights Documentation
Human Rights, Justice and Constitutional Empowerment
C. Raj Kumar, D. Chockalingam
The Future of Disability Law in India
Jayna Kothari
Corporations and Disability Rights
Neha Pathakji
The Contradiction in Disability Law
Smitha Nizar
The Right to Education in India
Florian Matthey-Prakash

