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.
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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...
Tracey Skillington "UN genocide commemoration, transnational scenes of mourning and the global project of learning from atrocity." The British Journal of Sociology 64, no. 3 (2013): 501-525.
This paper offers a critical analytic reconstruction of some of the main symbolic properties of annual UN Holocaust and Rwandan genocide commemorations since 2005. Applying a discourse‐historical approach (Wodak and Meyer 2010), it retraces how themes of guilt, responsibility, evil...
Adriana Kemp, Nelly Kfir "Wanted workers but unwanted mothers: Mobilizing moral claims on migrant care workers’ families in Israel." Social Problems 63, no. 3 (2016): 373-394.
Literature on global care work deals with biopolitical tensions between care markets and exclusionary migration regimes leading to the formation of transnational families. Nevertheless, it disregards how these tensions produce “illegal” families within countries of destination, catalyzing the mobilization of...
Nicole Fox, Hollie Nyseth Brehm "“I decided to save them”: Factors that shaped participation in rescue efforts during genocide in Rwanda." Social Forces 96, no. 4 (2018): 1625-1648.
Collective action scholars have long examined why people choose to participate in social movements. This article argues that this body of scholarship can be productively applied to understanding rescue efforts during genocide, which have typically been associated with altruism and...
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