The virtual human rights library brings together resources from multiple libraries and information services, both internal and external, to create an online hub dedicated to the study of human rights. This curation is unique in its interdisciplinary concerns and focuses on writings and research from social sciences, humanities, and law.
The virtual library is continually updated with the latest academic research in issue areas, as well as with relevant films, recorded conversations, and other forms of media.
Searchable Database
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Sylvia Walby "The Myth of the Nation-State:: Theorizing Society and Polities in a Global Era." Sociology 37, no. 3 (2003): 529-546.
The analysis of globalization requires attention to the social and political units that are being variously undermined, restructured or facilitated by this process. Sociology has often assumed that the unit of analysis is society, in which economic, political and cultural...
Martha Albertson Fineman "The Neutered Mother," University of Miami Law Review Vol. 46, 1992
“The Neutered Mother” scrutinizes the definitions of family and mother throughout the volume while paying close attention to issues of race, class and sexuality. In addition, Fienman convincingly contests society’s refusal to dignify, support and respond to the needs of...
Gunnar Boman "The Ongoing Story of the Bacille Calmette-Guérin (BCG) Vaccination" Acta Paediatr, vol. 105,12, (2016): pp. 1417-1420
Albert Calmette (1863–1933) was a well-known French physician and bacteriologist. He started his career as a naval medical officer and participated in several expeditions to the French colonies, including Saint-Pierre et Miquelon and Gabon. In 1891, he founded the Pasteur...
Jamie Longazel, Jake Berman, Benjamin Fleury‐Steiner "The pains of immigrant imprisonment." Sociology Compass 10, no. 11 (2016): 989-998.
The immigrant detention system in the United States is civil, rather than criminal, and therefore nonpunitive. However, in practice, detained immigrants lacking many basic constitutional protections find themselves in facilities that are often indistinguishable from prisons and jails. In this...
Kate Nash "The Pinochet case: cosmopolitanism and intermestic human rights ." The British Journal of Sociology 58, no. 3 (2007): 417-435.
This article explores the Pinochet case, widely heralded as a landmark, as a case of ‘intermestic’ human rights that raises difficult normative and empirical questions concerning cosmopolitan justice. The article is a contribution to the sociology of human rights from...
Lisa Wade "The Politics of Acculturation: Female Genital Cutting and the Challenge of Building Multicultural Democracies." Social Problems 58, no. 4 (2011): 518-537.
Understanding how the idea of culture is mobilized in discursive contests is crucial for both theorizing and building multicultural democracies. To investigate this, I analyze a debate over whether we should relieve the “cultural need” for infibulation among immigrants by...
Martti Koskenniemi "The Politics of International Law—Twenty Years Later" European Journal of International Law Vol. 20, no. 1 (2009), pp. 7-19
The essay examines some of the changes in the author’s thinking about the politics of engaging in international law since the original publication of the article that opened the first issue of EJIL in 1990. The essay points to the change...
Alexander Kentikelenis, Leonard Seabrooke "The politics of world polity: Script-writing in international organizations." American Sociological Review 82, no. 5 (2017): 1065-1092.
Sociologists have long examined how states, intergovernmental organizations (IGOs), international nongovernmental organizations (INGOs), and professional groups interact in order to institutionalize their preferred norms at the transnational level. Yet, explanations of global norm-making that emphasize inter-organizational negotiations do not adequately...
Nancy Scheper-Hughes "The Primacy of the Ethical: Propositions for a Militant Anthropology" CURRENT ANTHROPOLOGY Volume 36, Number 3
In bracketing certain "Western" Enlightenment truths we hold and defend as self-evident at home in order to engage theoretically a multiplicity of alternative truths encoded in our reified notion of culture, anthropologists may be "suspending the ethical" in our dealings...
Bryan Turner "The problem of cultural relativism for the sociology of human rights: Weber, Schmitt and Strauss." Journal of Human Rights 1, no. 4 (2002): 587-605
This paper explores various aspects of the problem of perspectivism in Max Weber’s soci- ology as a component of the legacy of Friedrich Nietzsche in order to examine the contri- bution, if any, of sociological thinking to the understanding of...
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