This article addresses what is increasingly perceived as a crisis of human rights. While contemporary critiques of human rights address a diverse set of challenges and issues, this article focuses specifically on the "populist" demagogic challenge to human rights within those notionally liberal-democratic societies in which human rights have been typically considered most secure. While agreeing with those who have argued that human rights is in crisis, in part, because of its relationship with neoliberalism, this article goes beyond this argument and outlines a way of understanding that relationship through identifying what I term the "gentrification of human rights." This article outlines the concept of the gentrification of human rights, ...
This Article argues that international human rights law, and the human rights movement more generall...
Using the accounts of Gewirth and Griffin as examples, the article criticises accounts of human righ...
This article identifies and considers the existence of a manifest, though often overlooked, paradox ...
Do human rights offer the potential to challenge neo-liberalism? I argue that rather than understan...
The challenge that human rights face today have not come out of the blue. Rather they are the result...
The commonly shared sentiment that human rights have reached a crisis in the form of a populist back...
Human rights are increasingly described as in crisis. The rising populist tide that puts nation, rel...
There is a marked disjuncture today between the generalized critique and rejection of human rights b...
With the commodification of rights as private privileges under neoliberal capitalism, movements in t...
This article examines what it means to teach and research human rights and development now, within t...
Human rights are under increased threat as the world faces economic insecurity, financial volatility...
A “crisis” of international human rights is under way. This article focuseson the “neoliberalism and...
This article examines the tensions between the presently dominant form of globalisation, which will ...
Summaries This article shows the intimate links between human?rights discourses today and globalisa...
After the Helsinki Accords, the collapse of the Soviet Union and its empire, and the collapse of sta...
This Article argues that international human rights law, and the human rights movement more generall...
Using the accounts of Gewirth and Griffin as examples, the article criticises accounts of human righ...
This article identifies and considers the existence of a manifest, though often overlooked, paradox ...
Do human rights offer the potential to challenge neo-liberalism? I argue that rather than understan...
The challenge that human rights face today have not come out of the blue. Rather they are the result...
The commonly shared sentiment that human rights have reached a crisis in the form of a populist back...
Human rights are increasingly described as in crisis. The rising populist tide that puts nation, rel...
There is a marked disjuncture today between the generalized critique and rejection of human rights b...
With the commodification of rights as private privileges under neoliberal capitalism, movements in t...
This article examines what it means to teach and research human rights and development now, within t...
Human rights are under increased threat as the world faces economic insecurity, financial volatility...
A “crisis” of international human rights is under way. This article focuseson the “neoliberalism and...
This article examines the tensions between the presently dominant form of globalisation, which will ...
Summaries This article shows the intimate links between human?rights discourses today and globalisa...
After the Helsinki Accords, the collapse of the Soviet Union and its empire, and the collapse of sta...
This Article argues that international human rights law, and the human rights movement more generall...
Using the accounts of Gewirth and Griffin as examples, the article criticises accounts of human righ...
This article identifies and considers the existence of a manifest, though often overlooked, paradox ...