Community of Rights - Rights of Community

"This book is a major contribution to a new discourse on the notion of rights in relation to community."—Roger Clark, former Secretary General of Amnesty International

"This important book on the recovery of community rights shows how we lost our collective freedoms and how we can reclaim them."—Vandana Shiva, author

Why has the individual largely superseded community as the privileged focus of rights discourse? How have contemporary notions of community betrayed the very origins of the term in the name of exploitative economic and political practices? Is it possible to re-conceive rights discourse in ways that acknowledge the diverse communities from which they arise?

Following on the dialogue they initiated in Eduardo Galeano: Through the Looking Glass and The Concise Guide to Global Human Rights, Daniel Fischlin and Martha Nandorfy examine the assumptions made about community and expose the impact they have on human rights debates. This final volume of the trilogy looks beyond the framework that bankrupts rights of any real meaning and thus reaffirms the power and agency of communities in the face of neo-liberal discourses of privatization.

This book will be on the shelves of rights activists everywhere as an inspiration to their own work in building better communities.

Daniel Fischlin and Martha Nandorfy both teach at the University of Guelph.

1104658716
Community of Rights - Rights of Community

"This book is a major contribution to a new discourse on the notion of rights in relation to community."—Roger Clark, former Secretary General of Amnesty International

"This important book on the recovery of community rights shows how we lost our collective freedoms and how we can reclaim them."—Vandana Shiva, author

Why has the individual largely superseded community as the privileged focus of rights discourse? How have contemporary notions of community betrayed the very origins of the term in the name of exploitative economic and political practices? Is it possible to re-conceive rights discourse in ways that acknowledge the diverse communities from which they arise?

Following on the dialogue they initiated in Eduardo Galeano: Through the Looking Glass and The Concise Guide to Global Human Rights, Daniel Fischlin and Martha Nandorfy examine the assumptions made about community and expose the impact they have on human rights debates. This final volume of the trilogy looks beyond the framework that bankrupts rights of any real meaning and thus reaffirms the power and agency of communities in the face of neo-liberal discourses of privatization.

This book will be on the shelves of rights activists everywhere as an inspiration to their own work in building better communities.

Daniel Fischlin and Martha Nandorfy both teach at the University of Guelph.

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Community of Rights - Rights of Community

Community of Rights - Rights of Community

Community of Rights - Rights of Community

Community of Rights - Rights of Community

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Overview

"This book is a major contribution to a new discourse on the notion of rights in relation to community."—Roger Clark, former Secretary General of Amnesty International

"This important book on the recovery of community rights shows how we lost our collective freedoms and how we can reclaim them."—Vandana Shiva, author

Why has the individual largely superseded community as the privileged focus of rights discourse? How have contemporary notions of community betrayed the very origins of the term in the name of exploitative economic and political practices? Is it possible to re-conceive rights discourse in ways that acknowledge the diverse communities from which they arise?

Following on the dialogue they initiated in Eduardo Galeano: Through the Looking Glass and The Concise Guide to Global Human Rights, Daniel Fischlin and Martha Nandorfy examine the assumptions made about community and expose the impact they have on human rights debates. This final volume of the trilogy looks beyond the framework that bankrupts rights of any real meaning and thus reaffirms the power and agency of communities in the face of neo-liberal discourses of privatization.

This book will be on the shelves of rights activists everywhere as an inspiration to their own work in building better communities.

Daniel Fischlin and Martha Nandorfy both teach at the University of Guelph.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781551643687
Publisher: Black Rose Books
Publication date: 12/06/2011
Pages: 342
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 8.90(h) x 1.00(d)

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements vii

Foreword Upendra Baxi xi

Introduction 3

Section 1 'All life being one life': The 'Common' Good, Rights, and the Meaning of Community 31

Section 2 'None can survive unless all survive': Community, Story, Land-Making the Connections 129

Section 3 'Freedom ... to rise above a cruel planet': The Paradox of Global Community - Neo-Colonialism Versus Evolving Ecologies 209

Section 4 'Choice words set a seed in the child': Event Horizons of the Possible and Kiviuq's Story 277

Works Cited 297

Index 319

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