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by Melvin I. Urofsky Virginia Commonwealth University |
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| Universal Human Rights: Origins and Development | |||
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Stephen James |
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James offers a comprehensive, interdisciplinary account of the origins and development of universal human rights from the earliest days to 1966, when the Covenants were added to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. His work has significance for debates about the universality of international human rights law in a culturally diverse world, and is a contribution to the defense of the universality of that body of law. The book challenges the view that the international human rights regime was a hegemonic imposition by the West, and is to that degree illegitimate today. The book demonstrates both the diverse origins of the regime, and the significant Western resistance to it. In each period the book examines, there was support for universal human rights from culturally diverse states, national and international NGOs, and activists. |
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| Stephen James BA(Hons)(Melb)MA(Princ)LLB(Hons)(Melb)PhD(Princ) holds a PhD in Politics from Princeton University, where he was a Princeton Wilson Fellow. He has taught at various institutions, including the University of Melbourne, La Trobe University, and Princeton University. He is currently in the School of Law, Victoria University (Melbourne, Australia). | |||
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viii, 294 pages. Index, bibliography. ISBN 9781593322090. $75. Published 2007. |
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