The Subject of Human Rights
In: Stanford Studies in Human Rights Ser.
Cover -- Contents -- Foreword -- Introduction: Bringing the Subject of Human Rights into Focus -- PART I: WHO IS THE SUBJECT OF HUMAN RIGHTS? -- 1 The Relational Self As the Subject of Human Rights -- 2 The Misbegotten Monad: Anthropology, Human Rights, Belonging -- 3 "Are Women Animals?": The Rise and Rise of (Animal) Rights -- 4 Indigenous Peoples As the Subject of Human Rights -- 5 "Escaped": Gendered Precarity and Human Rights Recognition -- PART II: WHO IS SUBJECT TO HUMAN RIGHTS? -- 6 Training Subjects for Human Rights -- 7 Who Deserves Inalienable Rights?: The Subjectivity of Violent State Officials and the Implications for Human Rights Protection -- 8 Human Rights As Therapy: The Healing Paradigms of Transitional Justice -- 9 Cinematic Aesthetics and the Subjects of Human Rights: On Eliane Caffé's Era o Hotel Cambridge -- PART III: HOW DO HUMAN RIGHTS MAKE SUBJECTS? -- 10 Human Rights As Spiritual Exercises -- 11 The Child Subject of Human Rights -- 12 The Secular Subject of Human Rights -- 13 The Subject of Human Rights: An Interview with Samuel Moyn -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Contributors -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- J -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- Y -- Z.