One: Human Rights against the Maelstroms
Two: Human Rights, Capitalism, and the Ends of Economic Life
Three: Remaking Sovereignty in the Image of Human Rights
Four: Human Rights beyond the Rule of Law
Five: Decolonizing Human Rights
Six: Human Rights Otherwise
Seven: The Subjects of Human Rights
Eight: Human Rights in a G20 World
Mark Goodale is Professor of Cultural and Social Anthropology at the University of Lausanne. He is the author of A Revolution in Fragments (2019), Anthropology and Law (2017), and Surrendering to Utopia (Stanford, 2009), among other works.
"Reinventing Human Rights is a major original statement that
transcends old debates and opens tremendous new possibilities. Mark
Goodale's ambitious, intrepid move is to neither embrace nor vilify
human rights but to demand a new vision of them, for a translocal
and transformative politics in a diverse and unequal world."—Samuel
Moyn, Yale University, author of Not Enough: Human Rights in an
Unequal World
"Reinventing Human Rights captures the emergent conditions we must
address—whether we want to or not. Mark Goodale opens us up to
settings often overlooked, but that increasingly signal their
presence."—Saskia Sassen, Columbia University, author of
Expulsions: Brutality and Complexity in the Global Economy
"Goodale... articulates a new vision for conceptualizing human
rights, aiming to inspire fresh thinking and approaches to
contemporary problems. His approach challenges claims of
universality, which have long been a theoretical and practical
stumbling block for human rights scholars and practitioners, and
emphasizes what he calls translocality to create broader, though
still nuanced, alliances among people across tribes, cultures, and
nations. ... Recommended."—A. G. Reiter, CHOICE
"Reinventing Human Rights... presents an eloquently argued 'only
way forward'... in redefining the framework for seeking justice
globally. The tenor is normative, earnestly looking for betterment
in the world, even as it draws on critical scholarship, showcasing
several titles from the Stanford Studies in Human Rights edited by
the author."—Harri Englund, Journal of the Royal Anthropological
Institute
"Goodale's book offers a penetrating critique of human rights in
their conception and application through international bodies since
1947."—Denys P. Leighton, Jindal Global Law Review
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