Challenging Corporate 'Humanity': Legal Disembodiment, Embodiment and Human Rights
In: Human rights law review, Band 7, Heft 3, S. 511-543
ISSN: 1744-1021
29 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Human rights law review, Band 7, Heft 3, S. 511-543
ISSN: 1744-1021
In: Journal of human rights and the environment 3.2012, Special issue
In: Global ethics series
In: Human rights quarterly, Band 40, Heft 3, S. 710-716
ISSN: 1085-794X
In: Science, technology, & human values: ST&HV, Band 43, Heft 1, S. 129-145
ISSN: 1552-8251
The much-lamented anthropocentrism of human rights is misleading. Human rights anthropocentrism is radically attenuated and reflects persistent patterns of intra- and interspecies injustice and binary subject–object relations inapt for twenty-first-century crises and posthuman complexities. This article explores the possibility of reimagining the "human" of human rights in the light of anti- and post-Cartesian analyses drawing—in particular—upon Merleau-Ponty and on new materialism. This article also seeks to reimagine human rights themselves as responsibilized, injustice-sensitive claim concepts emerging in the "midst of" lively materialities and the uneven global dynamics of twenty-first-century predicaments.
In: Human rights law review, Band 15, Heft 3, S. 607-611
ISSN: 1744-1021
In: (2014) 5 Special Edition Journal of Human Rights and the Environment 103-133.
SSRN
In: Oñati Socio-Legal Series, Band 3, Heft 5
SSRN
In: 46/3 Law Teacher 239-254 (2012)
SSRN
Working paper
In: Oñati Socio-Legal Series, Band 3, Heft 5
SSRN
In: M Fineman and A Grear (eds) Vulnerability: Critical Reflections on a Thesis (Ashgate, Forthcoming).
SSRN
Working paper
In: Law Critique, Band 17, S. 171-199
SSRN
The issue is no longer whether climate change is happening; it is rather what we should now be doing about it. Drawing together key thinkers and policy experts, this unique volume - also a Special Issue of the Journal of Human Rights and the Environment - engages with the human dimensions of climate change, offering a timely intervention into contemporary debates about the challenging relationship between law and society in a time of climate crisis. The result is an imaginative, well-informed and provocative collection of contemporary engagements with the greatest challenge of the age, concerned not only to understand the current crisis but to offer perspectives on how it can be addressed. At the heart of this volume is the conviction that change is urgent, possible and morally imperative.
In: The journal of military history, Band 69, Heft 4, S. 1221-1222
ISSN: 1543-7795
In: The journal of military history, Band 69, Heft 4, S. 1221
ISSN: 0899-3718