The United Nations was established to 
safeguard world peace and security, development, and human rights, yet 
it is undeniable that it sometimes fails to protect the rights of a 
great many people. This book aims to look at the reasons for that 
failure. Rosa Freedman offers explanations of how and why the organisation is unable, at best, or unwilling, at worst, to protect human rights. Ben Warwick recommends this read for the understanding of global inaction on grave rights abuses it brings.
Failing to Protect: The UN and the Politicisation of Human Rights. Rosa Freedman. C Hurst & Co. May 2014.
Imagine a family sitting warm, safe, and comfortable at home, when 
the six o’clock news beams pictures of desperation and gross human 
rights violations in to their living room. “Switch that off; change the 
channel”, someone says. “I don’t want to think about that while I eat my
 dinner”.
A stark, unpleasant, and disturbing picture. Yet Rosa Freedman, in Failing to Protect: The UN and the Politicisation of Human Rights,
 forces us consider whether the United Nations also ‘changes the 
channel’ when it is presented with accounts of systematic rights abuses.
 Freedman, a senior lecturer at the University of Birmingham, is the 
author of authoritative works on the UN Human Rights Council
 and is very well placed to guide readers through the UN’s complexities.
 Freedman uses this expertise to uncover the conspicuous contrasts 
between the calculating, paralysing politics of countries at the UN, and
 the horrific violations of human rights they discuss. This book 
shatters any illusion that the UN as it currently stands is a wholly 
benign agent for change.
Designed to be accessible to non-specialists, the book avoids the 
endless acronyms, committee names and document numbers that are often a 
feature of works in this area The aim of the text is to encourage the 
public-at-large to ‘start asking questions’ (p. xi), and it remains true
 to this aim by equipping readers with the information needed to engage 
in central debates. Freeman details the relevant sources of law, and 
gives user-friendly analogies with domestic legal situations to make the
 complexities of international law comprehensible. The book is rich with
 examples of past failures of the UN, and reflects the author’s clear 
understanding of the finest details of UN architecture. Freedman also 
analyses the UN human rights machinery, and key conceptual debates (such
 as those surrounding cultural relativism (ch. 5)), in a way that 
empowers the reader to form their own view and become involved in the 
reform projects.
READ MORE..... 
  
International and Global Studies, Sociology and Human Rights: This is the course website taught by Tugrul Keskin
“We are beckoned to see the world through a one-way mirror, as if we are  threatened and innocent and the rest of humanity is threatening, or  wretched, or expendable. Our memory is struggling to rescue the truth  that human rights were not handed down as privileges from a parliament,  or a boardroom, or an institution, but that peace is only possible with  justice and with information that gives us the power to act justly.”   
― John Pilger
― John Pilger
Thursday, July 24, 2014
A New Book: Failing to Protect The UN and the Politicisation of Human Rights
By Rosa Freedman
Every year tens of millions of individuals suffer grave abuses of 
their human rights. These violations occur worldwide, in war-torn 
countries and in the wealthiest states. Despite many of the abuses being
 well-documented, little seems to be done to stop them from happening. 
The United Nations was established to safeguard world peace and 
security, development, and human rights yet it is undeniable that 
currently it is failing to protect the rights of a great many people –– 
from the victims of ethnic cleansing, to migrants, those displaced by 
war and women who suffer horrendous abuse. This book looks at the 
reasons for that failure. Using concrete examples intertwined with 
explanations of the law and politics of the UN, Rosa Freedman offers 
clear explanations of how and why the Organisation is unable, at best, 
or unwilling, at worst, to protect human rights. Written for a 
non-specialist audience, her book also seeks to explain why certain 
countries and political blocs manipulate and undermine the UN’s human 
rights machinery. Failing to Protect demonstrates the urgent need for radical reform of the machinery of human rights protection at the international level.
READ MORE.....
READ MORE.....
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
A New Website: Teaching Human Rights
An International Student-Teacher Collaboratory 
Understanding world issues through interdisciplinary lenses. The Summer Intensive in Human Rights will continue the discussion of international human rights in the 21st century, considering broad perspectives on what constitutes human rights in an increasingly diverse and global society. In addition to selecting from the courses below, students also have the opportunity to attend a speaker series and engage with a scholar-in-residence.
http://www.teachinghumanrights.org/node
Understanding world issues through interdisciplinary lenses. The Summer Intensive in Human Rights will continue the discussion of international human rights in the 21st century, considering broad perspectives on what constitutes human rights in an increasingly diverse and global society. In addition to selecting from the courses below, students also have the opportunity to attend a speaker series and engage with a scholar-in-residence.
http://www.teachinghumanrights.org/node
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