The Wretched of the Global South Critical Approaches to International Human Rights Law
The books aims to discuss and present an alternative epistemology of human rights, against the background of the globalization from below. The interdependent network of transnational networks, ranging from social movements, NGOs, and other groupings, questions the neoliberal paradigm and a particula...
Other Authors: | , |
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Format: | eBook |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Singapore
Springer Nature Singapore
2024, 2024
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Edition: | 1st ed. 2024 |
Series: | International Law and the Global South, Perspectives from the Rest of the World
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | |
Collection: | Springer eBooks 2005- - Collection details see MPG.ReNa |
Table of Contents:
- Introduction by editors
- The discursive dissociation of human rights and justice: Experiences of Afro-Colombian displaced women from Colombia
- Seeking intersectionality in the Inter-American System jurisprudence on land rights
- The rights of indigenous and quilombola communities in the context of environmental challenges in Brazil
- The Struggles for Corporate Accountability in the UN: A Global South Perspective
- Strategies for Including LGBT as an “Ethnical Group” under the Genocide Article of the Rome Statute
- Prior consultation in Colombia and its postcolonial legacies: an exclusion/inclusion policy
- Impacts of Sinosphere on ensuring equal rights of ethnic minority women in Southeast Asian countries: Barriers, challenges and recent developments
- Human Rights as a calculus of unfreedom
- Manual Scavenging as an Unhygienic Occupation: An Untold Story
- Analysing the Symbiotic Relation Between the Concept of Resistance and Counter-hegemonic Practices of Human Rights
- The Utility of International Law in Solving the Palestinian Question Insights from Complexity Theory
- Using Law to Prevent Further Unequal Access to Food in North Korea
- Vernacularising Human Rights in ASEAN Regionalism
- A Critical Appraisal of The Human Rights Based Approach to NCD Prevention and Control in the Caribbean Region
- International Criminal Court: A Critical Analysis
- Contradictions and opportunities for national liberation in human rights law and practice