A “crisis” of international human rights is under way. This article focuseson the “neoliberalism and human rights” debate. It argues that thecurrent human rights crisis hinges on the evolution of neoliberalism as a“totalizing project”. A way out may be provided by the notion of the“human person” conceived as the individual in his/her uniqueness andcomplexity against any form of (market-induced or other) massification.The article concludes by suggesting that we place the (decommodified)human person, empathy, and school/education center stage
Neoliberal ideologies have powered the international processes of liberalization since the 1980s, a ...
This article shows the intimate links between human-rights discourses today and globalisation. It hi...
Lecture delivered at the European University Institute in Florence on 19 March 2014In the 1970s huma...
The article aims to analyse the transformation in the global governance of human rights under neolib...
This article examines what it means to teach and research human rights and development now, within t...
With the commodification of rights as private privileges under neoliberal capitalism, movements in t...
This article examines the tensions between the presently dominant form of globalisation, which will ...
This article is a commentary on the article: “What do Human Rights Do? An Anthropological Inquiry” b...
There are no doubt human rights advocates who would baulk at the claim that somehow human rights ser...
This article addresses what is increasingly perceived as a crisis of human rights. While contemporar...
Do human rights offer the potential to challenge neo-liberalism? I argue that rather than understan...
Article first published online: 28 Sep 2011How should we understand the cultural politics that has s...
The article aims to describe how the measurement and monitoring of human rights have been changed an...
Our contemporary era has a critical focus on globalization. However, notwithstanding the necessary i...
How should we understand the cultural politics that has surrounded the development of international ...
Neoliberal ideologies have powered the international processes of liberalization since the 1980s, a ...
This article shows the intimate links between human-rights discourses today and globalisation. It hi...
Lecture delivered at the European University Institute in Florence on 19 March 2014In the 1970s huma...
The article aims to analyse the transformation in the global governance of human rights under neolib...
This article examines what it means to teach and research human rights and development now, within t...
With the commodification of rights as private privileges under neoliberal capitalism, movements in t...
This article examines the tensions between the presently dominant form of globalisation, which will ...
This article is a commentary on the article: “What do Human Rights Do? An Anthropological Inquiry” b...
There are no doubt human rights advocates who would baulk at the claim that somehow human rights ser...
This article addresses what is increasingly perceived as a crisis of human rights. While contemporar...
Do human rights offer the potential to challenge neo-liberalism? I argue that rather than understan...
Article first published online: 28 Sep 2011How should we understand the cultural politics that has s...
The article aims to describe how the measurement and monitoring of human rights have been changed an...
Our contemporary era has a critical focus on globalization. However, notwithstanding the necessary i...
How should we understand the cultural politics that has surrounded the development of international ...
Neoliberal ideologies have powered the international processes of liberalization since the 1980s, a ...
This article shows the intimate links between human-rights discourses today and globalisation. It hi...
Lecture delivered at the European University Institute in Florence on 19 March 2014In the 1970s huma...