Human Rights: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) 2nd Edition
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Human Rights: A Very Short Introduction (Very Short Introductions) 2nd Edition

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Product ID: 38913537
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S**K

Highly Recommend!!

Thorough and enjoyable at the same time!!

G**L

Item as described.

Item as described.

C**N

Human Rights

Informative and challenging, though sometimes could do with some more pictures. A good philosophical overiew in an accessible format. Recommend.

W**R

Five Stars

book in very good condition

M**G

Human Rights - whitewashing, justification or fundamental law?

It is obvious that the origin of Human Rights is the European, Greek and Christian idea that every single person is of endless value. She is born as God's child. The whole idea of civilization and humanity has through history been used for different purposes along with conflicting themes as slavery and violence. In a world of postcolonialism, wars and economic exploitation Human Rights has two functions. The first is to justify policies, the second is setting up moral guidelines for good policies.The idea of being able to follow an accompanying website is very good. Justification for Human Rights seems easy to many of us in the western realm because this is the very top of values in the hiearchy of humanism.This book has a good introduction to Human Rights. It always has good articles leading to the necessary question: What can we use Human Rights for?We shouldn't stop here. Maybe Orientalism or "Les Damnés de la Terre" are not the whole thing. A post marxian approach might be good add on

P**E

HUMAN RIGHTS: AN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE:

HUMAN RIGHTS: AN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE:AN EXCELLENT PUBLIC LEGAL EDUCATION (PLE) TOOL - ALL YOU NEED TO KNOW IN LESS THAN 200 PAGESAn appreciation by Phillip Taylor MBE and Elizabeth Taylor of Richmond Green ChambersAndrew Clapham brings together the differing contemporary strands of human rights issues we face today and does a great service to us with the launch of the concept of Public Legal Education (PLE) in austerity-hit Britain. He does so brilliantly with human rights, explaining the subject-matter in a very matter-of-fact way for the second edition. He makes the introduction just for the individual interested reader with his excellent ‘very short’ book format from OUP which is set out in a quick and readable fashion.He covers such fascinating issues as the controversial incarceration of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, to the brutal ethnic cleansing being practiced in Darfur, to the widespread denial of equal rights to women in many areas of the world, and human rights violations which remain a constant presence in rolling news items and in our everyday lives at home and at work.Clapham gives an international perspective to the task facing him, and focusing on highly topical issues such as torture, arbitrary detention, privacy, health, and discrimination topics relevant to all. This “Very Short Introduction on Human Rights” does assist readers to understand for themselves the controversies and complexities behind this vitally relevant issue.The author looks at the philosophical justification for rights, the historical origins of human rights and how they are formed in law. He also explains what our human rights actually are, what they might be, and where the human rights movement is heading at the moment which will benefit a wide range of his readership.This short book covers one main area of current interest very well: how the human rights movement has gained increasing attention internationally. The author explains the scope of human rights today, and how they are used in both national and international law.The work is completely up-to-date. Human rights remain a most topical and controversial issue for all of us and recent national and world events mean that they have been regularly invoked and analysed.Clapham looks at the past, the present, and the future of human rights, especially relevant in a general election year in the UK. Questions of whether human rights are under threat as they come to be seen by some as obstacles to peace, development and security are also well covered.In the wider community, ties in law, philosophy, and politics, reveal the role played by human rights in the contemporary world and has a special significance for Clapham as he was, for six years, the Representative of Amnesty International at the United Nations in New York.Today it’s usually not long before a problem gets expressed as a human rights issue even with the threat of major reform of the law under way! Taking this into account, an appeal to human rights in the face of injustice can be a heartfelt and morally justified demand for some, while for others it remains merely an empty slogan. Such a balance is well presented here in a most succinct manner!These “Very Short Introductions” books form a series from OUP which present themselves as excellent primers for undergraduates. The series contains hundreds of titles in almost every conceivable subject area. These pocket-sized books are the perfect way to get ahead in a new subject quickly. OUP has brought together expert authors who combine facts, analysis, perspective, new ideas, and enthusiasm to make interesting and challenging topics highly readable.We feel they are highly suitable starting points for students of law, moral and ethical philosophy, history and politics. And, of course, activists in civil society movements or those who seek an accessible introduction to human rights and their relevance to current events.So “Clapham on Human Rights” can be summed up as one of the best titles we have read yet from OUP in this series, but we would say that because we are lawyers! The publication date for the second edition is 2015.

N**S

Deeply Myopic View of the History of Human Rights

I get that it's a very short introduction, and that reality of human rights recognition outside of the past few hundreds years is briefly touched upon, but I can't help but feel the treatment of human rights in this work is incredibly short sighted.It is incredibly frustrating to read a text that claims to be about human rights, and yet only a few pages in everything outside of human in rights in the Western European tradition in the past few hundred years is excluded. Are we really to believe there's nothing worth discussing in detail prior to the Magna Carta? That a history of human rights should focus 90% or more of it's attention to the past few hundred years in Europe? Surely it would be more worthwhile to discuss in detail the diverse traditions regarding human rights. Each culture throughout history has had some conception of human rights, however limited, no? Why not discuss this at least in some length before jumping into the philosophy of the Enlightenment. The language and vocabulary may be at the post-graduate or graduate level, but the insight and focus is of that of high school freshman.Should have been a called "Modern Human Rights" or "Human Rights in Modernity." Also, not "very short" (nearly 200 pages all told), and the print is unnecessarily small in order to maintain the illusion of brevity.

N**2

Great Book

The book is great for looking at human rights and international law. It can drag along at times, but overall wonderful information.

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