Human Rights: An IntroductionHuman Rights: An Introduction is an important text that provides a comprehensive overview of human rights and related issues from a social science perspective. First, this book does more than discuss theory, it uses case studies and personal testimonies in the debate. Human rights as an area of academic interest cannot be easily divorced from human rights struggles and the reality of contemporary conditions. Second, the book is aimed at what is an emerging and growing cross-disciplinary field of study. Human rights issues are increasingly coming to the fore in a number of academic debates. Whereas the study of human rights has traditionally been included in departments of law, international relations and philosophy, a number of courses are now being set up in departments of sociology and anthropology. Consequently, there is an increasing need to bring these disparate approaches together. |
Contents
Are human rights universal? | |
Ethics and social practice | |
Further Information | |
Human rights and the | |
Essay questions | |
Chapter Three Censorship | |
The experience of Death | |
Further information | |
Gender and apartheid | |
Race citizenship and slavery | |
The state slavery and human rights | |
A brief history of genocide | |
Political genocide | |
Essay questions | |
The theoretical discourse on censorship | |
Chapter Four Political prisoners | |
Exile and house arrest | |
A brief history of torture | |
Understanding torturers | |
What is the death penalty? | |
Understanding the death penalty | |
Further information | |
Refugees and border controls | |
Further information | |
Business and human rights | |
Further information | |