Modern history

The Human Rights Revolution: An International History

The Human Rights Revolution: An International History

Between the Second World War and the early 1970s, political leaders, activists, citizens, protestors. and freedom fighters triggered a human rights revolution in world affairs. Stimulated particularly by the horrors of the crimes against humanity in the 1940s, the human rights revolution grew rapidly to subsume claims from minorities, women, the politically oppressed, and marginal communities across the globe. The human rights revolution began with a disarmingly simple idea: that every individual, whatever his or her nationality, political beliefs, or ethnic and religious heritage, possesses an inviolable right to be treated with dignity. From this basic claim grew many more, and ever since, the cascading effect of these initial rights claims has dramatically shaped world history down to our own times.

The contributors to this volume look at the wave of human rights legislation emerging out of World War II, including the UN Declaration of Human Rights, the Nuremberg trial, and the Geneva Conventions, and the expansion of human rights activity in the 1970s and beyond, including the anti-torture campaigns of Amnesty International, human rights politics in Indonesia and East Timor, the emergence of a human rights agenda among international scientists, and the global campaign female genital mutilation. The book concludes with a look at the UN Declaration at its 60th anniversary. Bringing together renowned senior scholars with a new generation of international historians, these essays set an ambitious agenda for the history of human rights.

Introduction: Human Rights as History

Part I: The Human Rights Revolution

Chapter 1. The Recent History of Human Rights

Chapter 2. The Holocaust and the “Human Rights Revolution”: A Reassessment

Chapter 3. “Constitutionalizing” Human Rights: The Rise and Rise of the Nuremberg Principles

Chapter 4. Human Rights and the Laws of War: The Geneva Conventions of 1949

Chapter 5. Grams, Calories, and Food: Languages of Victimization, Entitlement, and Human Rights in Occupied Germany, 1945–1949

Chapter 6. Are Women “Human”? The UN and the Struggle to Recognize Women’s Rights as Human Rights

Part II: The Globalization of Human Rights History

Chapter 7. Imperialism, Self-Determination, and the Rise of Human Rights

Chapter 8. “The First Right”: The Carter Administration, Indonesia, and the Transnational Human Rights Politics of the 1970s

Chapter 9. Anti-Torture Politics: Amnesty International, the Greek Junta, and the Origins of the Human Rights “Boom” in the United States

Chapter 10. From the Center-Right: Freedom House and Human Rights in the 1970s and 1980s

Chapter 11. “For Our Soviet Colleagues”: Scientific Internationalism, Human Rights, and the Cold War

Chapter 12. Principles Overwhelming Tanks: Human Rights and the End of the Cold War

Chapter 13. The Right to Bodily Integrity: Women’s Rights as Human Rights and the International Movement to End Female Genital Mutilation, 1970s–1990s

Chapter 14. Is History a Human Right? Japan and Korea’s Troubles with the Past

Chapter 15. Approaching the Universal Declaration of Human Rights

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