International Law and Human Rights: Diverging and Converging Histories
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Jean H. Quataert
Abstract
This article explores ways to think about the historical intersections of international law and human rights visions and principles in a global context. It catalogues an intertwining of new historiographies, notably the recent convergence of research interests of historians and international lawyers that draws attention to non-linear analyses; the role of social movements in understanding developments in the law; and the importance of historical contexts for interpretation. It sketches one promising analytical framework to assess the dynamic interconnections of international law and human rights from the mid-nineteenth century through the formal creation of the human rights system under U.N. auspices between 1945 and 1949. It concludes with a case study of gender tensions in more recent human rights global politics to provide historically-specific examples of the new possibilities of bringing historical interpretations to the study of international law and human rights.
© 2012 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co.
Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- NGOs and Development Reconsidered
- Editors' Forum: Law and Human Rights in Global History
- Prefatory Note
- International Law and Human Rights: Diverging and Converging Histories
- The History of Human Rights: The Big Bang of an Emerging Field or Flash in the Pan?
- Stigmas and Memory of Slavery in West Africa: Skin Color and Blood as Social Fracture Lines
- Counter-Elites Swimming Up-Stream: The Challenge of Pursuing a Political Rights Agenda where Economic Rights Trump
- Decision-Makers in the Dock: How Trials, Human Rights Advocacy and International Law are Shaping the Justice Norm
- Book Reviews
- Review of Jürgen Osterhammel, Die Verwandlung der Welt. Eine Geschichte des 19. Jahrhunderts
- Review of Noel Salazar's Envisioning Eden
Articles in the same Issue
- Article
- NGOs and Development Reconsidered
- Editors' Forum: Law and Human Rights in Global History
- Prefatory Note
- International Law and Human Rights: Diverging and Converging Histories
- The History of Human Rights: The Big Bang of an Emerging Field or Flash in the Pan?
- Stigmas and Memory of Slavery in West Africa: Skin Color and Blood as Social Fracture Lines
- Counter-Elites Swimming Up-Stream: The Challenge of Pursuing a Political Rights Agenda where Economic Rights Trump
- Decision-Makers in the Dock: How Trials, Human Rights Advocacy and International Law are Shaping the Justice Norm
- Book Reviews
- Review of Jürgen Osterhammel, Die Verwandlung der Welt. Eine Geschichte des 19. Jahrhunderts
- Review of Noel Salazar's Envisioning Eden