This article presents a critical analysis of the UN Human Rights Council’s (HRC) engagement with the challenges which recognising cultural practices raises for human rights norms. The importance of culture for human rights and of the necessity of individuals’ enjoyment of human rights to culture has achieved growing recognition within the global human rights community in recent years. Theorists and practitioners of human rights are increasingly seeking to move beyond the stark polarity of the debate between universalism and cultural relativity. We endorse this aspiration towards a far more constructive universalist engagement with cultural practices. Institutional practitioners have a key role to play in such a constructive endeavour. Given...