Human Rights from a Third World Perspective: Critique, History and International Law
Edited by José-Manuel Barreto
Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2012
Globalization, interdisciplinarity, and the critique of the Eurocentric 
canon are transforming the theory and practice of human rights. This 
collection takes up the point of view of the colonized in order to 
unsettle and supplement the conventional understanding of human rights. 
Putting together insights coming from Decolonial Thinking, the Third 
World Approach to International Law (TWAIL), Radical Black Theory and 
Subaltern Studies, the authors construct a new history and theory of 
human rights, and a more comprehensive understanding of international 
human rights law in the background of modern colonialism and the 
struggle for global justice. An exercise of dialogical and 
interdisciplinary thinking, this collection of articles by leading 
scholars puts into conversation important areas of research on human 
rights, namely philosophy or theory of human rights, history, and 
constitutional and international law. This book combines critical 
consciousness and moral sensibility, and offers methods of 
interpretation or hermeneutical strategies to advance the project of 
decolonizing human rights, a veritable tool-box to create new 
Third-World discourses of human rights.
To Download the book.
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
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