Reimagining the Future of Human Rights: Social Justice, Environmental Justice, and Democracy in...

Registro bibliográfico

  • Título: Reimagining the Future of Human Rights: Social Justice, Environmental Justice, and Democracy in the Global South
  • Autor: Corredor Villamil, Jessica; Viegas e Silva, Marisa; Monsalve F., Ezequiel A.; Nammour, Karim; Magalhães de Oliveira, Rodrigo; Kodiveri, Arpitha; Najle, Yamile E.; Ellimah, Richard; Zec, Slavenska; Becker Castellaro, Sebastián; Köstepen, Enis; Belyakov, Evgeny; Alfakih, Osamah; Dumas, Mary Louise
  • Publicación original: Bogotá: DeJusticia, 2022-06
  • Descripción física: PDF
  • Nota general:
    • Argentina; Ghana; Líbano; India; Filipinas; Argentina; Yemen; Rusia; Venezuela
  • Notas de reproducción original: Digitalización realizada por la Biblioteca Virtual del Banco de la República (Colombia)
  • Notas:
    • Resumen: The authors of this book question traditional methods and explore new ways and visions of the advance in Human Rights amidst the troubled context in which we live today. Do the struggles of small-scale miners in Ghana, the use of strategic litigation in Lebanon, and the recognition of the rights of nature in India represent evidence for the hope? Or is the opposite true, and, as shown in the chapters of martial law in the Philippines, the treatment of waste water in Argentina, and the internal armed conflict in Yemen, Human Rights have failed to deliver on their promise? Whatever the answer is, Reimagining the Future of Human Rights invites us to reflect on the work of Human Rights in different contexts and the challenges that activists face, but also the progress they have made. The chapters in this book offer a snapshot of the current state of Human Rights that can help guide our work as activists and researchers. Descripción tomada de: https://www.dejusticia.org/en/publication/reimagining-the-future-of-human-rights/
    • Resumen: Introduction: Human Rights Have a Future. Page. 10 Chapter 1 The Dark Cloud and Lack of Air. Page. 14 Chapter 2 Venezuela’s Judiciary under the “Bolivarian Revolution”. Page. 28 Chapter 3 The Advent of Philosopher-Judges as an Alternative Form of Democratic Expression. Page. 48 Chapter 3 “We Used to Have Clean Water”: The Fishers of Juá and the Challenge for Human Rights. Page. 68 Chapter 4 Notions of the “Sacred”: A Tale of Two Cases of the Right to Nature in India. Page. 84 Chapter 5 “I Go to the Toilet and the Crap Disappears”. Page. 96 Chapter 6 Sitting by the River and Washing Your Hands with Spittle: The Story of Informal Miners of Obuasi. Page. 108 Chapter 7 Human Rights Has a Case of COVID-19. Page. 120 Chapter 8 Operation Hurricane: Digital Surveillance Aimed at Criminalizing the Mapuche Cause. Page. 134 Chapter 9 Bakur: Chronicles of Unrealized Futures. Page. 154 Chapter 10 The Rise of Autocracy in Hungary. Page. 170 Chapter 11 Tolls of Victims, Zero Accountability. Page. 184 Chapter 12 Tagged for Slaughter: To Be a Human Rights Worker under a Dictatorship. Page. 198 Contributors. Page. 208
    • © Derechos reservados - Dejusticia
  • Forma/género: texto
  • Idioma: castellano
  • Institución origen: Biblioteca Virtual del Banco de la República
  • Encabezamiento de materia:

Web semántica