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Chapter 5. Whose Utopia? Gender, Ideology, and Human Rights at the 1975 World Congress of Women in East Berlin
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Celia Donert
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Chapter 1. The Return of the Prodigal: The 1970s as a Turning Point in Human Rights History 1
- Chapter 2. The Dystopia of Postcolonial Catastrophe: Self-Determination, the Biafran War of Secession, and the 1970s Human Rights Moment 15
- Chapter 3. The Disenchantment of Socialism: Soviet Dissidents, Human Rights, and the New Global Morality 33
- Chapter 4. Dictatorship and Dissent: Human Rights in East Germany in the 1970s 49
- Chapter 5. Whose Utopia? Gender, Ideology, and Human Rights at the 1975 World Congress of Women in East Berlin 68
- Chapter 6. “Magic Words” The Advent of Transnational Human Rights Activism in Latin America’s Southern Cone in the Long 1970s 88
- Chapter 7. Shifting Sites of Argentine Advocacy and the Shape of 1970s Human Rights Debates 107
- Chapter 8. Oasis in the Desert? America’s Human Rights Rediscovery 125
- Chapter 9. Human Rights and the U.S. Republican Party in the Late 1970s 146
- Chapter 10. The Polish Opposition, the Crisis of the Gierek Era, and the Helsinki Process 166
- Chapter 11. “Human Rights Are Like Coca-Cola” Contested Human Rights Discourses in Suharto’s Indonesia, 1968–1980 186
- Chapter 12. Why South Africa? The Politics of Anti-Apartheid Activism in Britain in the Long 1970s 204
- Chapter 13. The Rebirth of Politics from the Spirit of Morality: Explaining the Human Rights Revolution of the 1970s 226
- Notes 261
- Contributors 327
- Index 329
- Acknowledgments 339
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Chapter 1. The Return of the Prodigal: The 1970s as a Turning Point in Human Rights History 1
- Chapter 2. The Dystopia of Postcolonial Catastrophe: Self-Determination, the Biafran War of Secession, and the 1970s Human Rights Moment 15
- Chapter 3. The Disenchantment of Socialism: Soviet Dissidents, Human Rights, and the New Global Morality 33
- Chapter 4. Dictatorship and Dissent: Human Rights in East Germany in the 1970s 49
- Chapter 5. Whose Utopia? Gender, Ideology, and Human Rights at the 1975 World Congress of Women in East Berlin 68
- Chapter 6. “Magic Words” The Advent of Transnational Human Rights Activism in Latin America’s Southern Cone in the Long 1970s 88
- Chapter 7. Shifting Sites of Argentine Advocacy and the Shape of 1970s Human Rights Debates 107
- Chapter 8. Oasis in the Desert? America’s Human Rights Rediscovery 125
- Chapter 9. Human Rights and the U.S. Republican Party in the Late 1970s 146
- Chapter 10. The Polish Opposition, the Crisis of the Gierek Era, and the Helsinki Process 166
- Chapter 11. “Human Rights Are Like Coca-Cola” Contested Human Rights Discourses in Suharto’s Indonesia, 1968–1980 186
- Chapter 12. Why South Africa? The Politics of Anti-Apartheid Activism in Britain in the Long 1970s 204
- Chapter 13. The Rebirth of Politics from the Spirit of Morality: Explaining the Human Rights Revolution of the 1970s 226
- Notes 261
- Contributors 327
- Index 329
- Acknowledgments 339