In this chapter I will explore the discrepancy between Arendt’s and Agamben’s pessimism concerning human rights, and the determined optimism of ‘well-meaning idealists’. I will explore the cosmopolitan project to abolish the distinction between citizens and non-citizens through human rights from a sociological perspective. As sociologists we are well-equipped to study how the legalisation of human rights works in practice. In the following section I consider how the legalisation of human rights is working in terms of what sociologists have traditionally seen as the three dimensions of citizenship within national states: civil, political and social rights. I will then go on to consider in more detail a critical example concerning the civil r...
Why are sociologists increasingly interested in human rights? Once we understand human rights as so...
The key theme in this essay is the rethinking of the human, as inspired by the work of Giorgio Agamb...
In this chapter I want briefly to explore how a critical Sociology of human rights might approach th...
Arendt’s reflections on the critical issues of Human Rights still hold relevance after seventy years...
Human rights are enshrined in numerous human rights documents produced by the United Nations, most n...
In The Origins of Totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt is famously scathing of the societies established b...
This article explores the effects of the legalization of international human rights on citizens and ...
In The Origins of Totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt criticises the “abstract nakedness” of human rights...
CITATION: Botha, H. 2013. The rights of foreigners: Dignity, citizenship and the right to have right...
The assumption that human rights and citizenship are two distinct orders of reality that frequently ...
In this paper, I focus on the story of Omar Khadr, a Canadian minor who was held captive in Guantana...
As it is widely accepted, human rights are inalienable and equal rights that we have simply because ...
In The Origins of Totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt criticises the “abstract nakedness” of human rights...
Human rights law has redefined the concepts of sovereignty and citizenship. Just as transnationaliza...
Human rights are, literally, the rights we have simply because we are human. They are equal rights: ...
Why are sociologists increasingly interested in human rights? Once we understand human rights as so...
The key theme in this essay is the rethinking of the human, as inspired by the work of Giorgio Agamb...
In this chapter I want briefly to explore how a critical Sociology of human rights might approach th...
Arendt’s reflections on the critical issues of Human Rights still hold relevance after seventy years...
Human rights are enshrined in numerous human rights documents produced by the United Nations, most n...
In The Origins of Totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt is famously scathing of the societies established b...
This article explores the effects of the legalization of international human rights on citizens and ...
In The Origins of Totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt criticises the “abstract nakedness” of human rights...
CITATION: Botha, H. 2013. The rights of foreigners: Dignity, citizenship and the right to have right...
The assumption that human rights and citizenship are two distinct orders of reality that frequently ...
In this paper, I focus on the story of Omar Khadr, a Canadian minor who was held captive in Guantana...
As it is widely accepted, human rights are inalienable and equal rights that we have simply because ...
In The Origins of Totalitarianism, Hannah Arendt criticises the “abstract nakedness” of human rights...
Human rights law has redefined the concepts of sovereignty and citizenship. Just as transnationaliza...
Human rights are, literally, the rights we have simply because we are human. They are equal rights: ...
Why are sociologists increasingly interested in human rights? Once we understand human rights as so...
The key theme in this essay is the rethinking of the human, as inspired by the work of Giorgio Agamb...
In this chapter I want briefly to explore how a critical Sociology of human rights might approach th...