
Bringing Human Rights Home
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The first volume provides a historical perspective on the United States' ambivalent relationship with the international human rights movement. It examines the implications of recognizing domestic rights violations as a matter of international concern and the relationship between international and domestic law. It also addresses the role the Cold War and Southern opposition to international scrutiny of its Jim Crow policies and segregation played in shaping U.S. attitudes toward human rights generally and social and economic rights in particular. These factors forced social justice organizations to largely abandon employing a human rights framework in their domestic work and had a lasting impact on U.S. perspectives about fundamental rights and the role of government. The set also chronicles current domestic human rights work. Volumes two and three consider why domestic activists currently are using human rights and the tactical advantages and practical challenges posed by such strategies. These volumes cover everything from globalization to terrorism and the erosion of civil rights protections that led to a renewed interest in human rights; human rights versus civil rights strategies; and the different ways human rights can support social activism.
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![Cover: Bringing Human Rights Home [3 volumes] - Praeger Publishers Inc](https://content.schweitzer-online.de/static/catalog_manager/live/media_files/representation/A1383792/445515_l_1.jpg)
Persons
Catherine Albisa is Executive Director of the National Economic and Social Rights Initiative (NESRI) and a consitutional and human rights lawyer with a background on the right to health. Ms. Albisa also has significant experience working in partnership with community organizers in the use of human rights standards to strengthen advocacy in the United States. Ms. Albisa co-founded NESRI along with Sharda Sekaran and Liz Sullivan in order to build legitimacy for human rights in general, and economic and social rights in particular, in the United States. She is committed to a community centered and participatory human rights approach that is locally anchored but universal and global in its vision.
Martha F. Davis is Professor of Law at Northeastern University Law School, and Co-Director of its Program on Human Rights and the Global Economy. Her scholarly writing and legal work focus on human rights, poverty and women's rights, and she lectures widely on these issues. Her book, Brutal Need: Lawyers and the Welfare Rights Movement, 1960-1973, received the Reginald Heber Smith Award for distinguished scholarship in the area of equal access to justice and a citation in the American Bar Association's Silver Gavel competition.
Content
- Intro
- HOW TO GO TO YOUR PAGE
- Foreword by Louise Arbour
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Volume 1 - A History of Human Rights in the United States
- Contents: Volume 1
- Introduction to Volume 1
- Chapter 1 A Human Rights Lens on U.S. History: Human Rights at Home and Human Rights Abroad
- Chapter 2 FDR's Four Freedoms and Wartime Transformations in America's Discourse of Rights
- Chapter 3 Louis Henkin and Human Rights: A New Deal at Home and Abroad
- Chapter 4 A "Hollow Mockery": African Americans, White Supremacy, and the Development of Human Rights in the United States
- Chapter 5 "New" Human Rights: U.S. Ambivalence Toward the International Economic and Social Rights Framework
- Chapter 6 Blazing a Path from Civil Rights to Human Rights: The Pioneering Career of Gay McDougall
- Appendixes
- Index: Volume 1
- Volume 2 - From Civil Rights to Human Rights
- Contents: Volume 2
- Introduction to Volume 2
- Chapter 1 Against American Supremacy: Rebuilding Human Rights Culture in the United States
- Chapter 2 Economic and Social Rights in the United States: Six Rights, One Promise
- Chapter 3 First-Person Perspectives on the Growth of the Movement: Ajamu Baraka, Larry Cox, Loretta Ross, and Lisa Crooms
- Chapter 4 Human Rights and the Transformation of the "Civil Rights" and "Civil Liberties" Lawyer
- Chapter 5 "Going Global": Appeals to International and Regional Human Rights Bodies
- Chapter 6 Thinking Globally, Acting Locally: States, Municipalities, and International Human Rights
- Chapter 7 The Impact of September 11 and the Struggle against Terrorism on the U.S. Domestic Human Rights Movement
- Chapter 8 Bush Administration Noncompliance with the Prohibition on Torture and Cruel and Degrading Treatment
- Chapter 9 Trade Unions and Human Rights
- Index: Volume 2
- Volume 3 - Portraits of the Movement
- Contents: Volume 3
- Introduction to Volume 3
- Chapter 1 Coalition of Immokalee Workers: "¡Golpear a Uno Es Golpear a Todos!" To Beat One of Us Is to Beat Us All!
- Chapter 2 From Sanctuary to Shaping International Law: How Unauthorized Immigrant Workers in America Are Advocating Beyond U.S. Borders
- Chapter 3 Securing Human Rights of American Indians and Other Indigenous Peoples Under International Law
- Chapter 4 Human Rights Advocacy in United States Capital Cases
- Chapter 5 Ensuring Rights for All: Realizing Human Rights for Prisoners
- Chapter 6 Housing Rights and Wrongs: The United States and the Right to Housing
- Chapter 7 Fixing the U.S. Health care System: What Role for Human Rights?
- Chapter 8 Strategic Uses of a Human Rights Framework to Guarantee Reproductive Health and Rights in the States: Two Case Studies
- Chapter 9 The Right to Social Security in the United States: Ending Welfare as We Know It
- Chapter 10 Acting on Principle: Opportunities and Strategies for Achieving Environmental Justice through Human Rights Laws and Standards
- Chapter 11 A Call for the Right to Return in the Gulf Coast
- Index: Volume 3
- About the Editors and Contributors
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