This book elucidates why human rights still matter in contemporary global affairs, and what can lead to better protection of international human rights in a post-liberal order.
Mahmood Monshipouri is Professor of International Relations at San Francisco State University and a Lecturer of Middle Eastern Politics at the Global Studies/International and Area Studies, University of California, Berkeley, USA.
List of Contributors Acknowledgements 1. Why Human Rights Still Matter in Contemporary World Affairs Part I: Framing the Human Rights Discourse 2. How Do Human Rights Matter? 3. Broadening Human Rights: The Case for a Pluralistic Approach 4. Making Human Rights Meaningful Through Practice: Lessons From the Middle East 5. Assessing Regional Human Rights Systems: from Convergence to Divergence Part II: Human Rights Practice: Legal and Moral Responsibility 6. State Responsibility and International Law 7. Human Rights and Humanitarian Action Will Endure: The Case of International Committee of the Red Cross 8. Denial and Debilitation: Environmental Rights and the Harm of Climate Change Denial 9. Transitional Justice: From Accountability to Peace Part III: Protecting Economic Rights in a Globalizing World 10. Labor Rights as Human Rights: Theoretical Foundations and Practical Implications 11. The Trajectory of the Right to Food in Brazil: The Debate Between Means and Access 12. Social Movements, Development Policy, and Human Rights 13. Migrant Workers and Human Rights in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) Countries 14. Human Rights and Inequality Part IV: Human Rights Challenges in a Fractured, Violent, and Intolerant World 15. Threats to Freedom of the Press 16. Addressing Religious Intolerance in an Increasingly Illiberal World 17. Neoliberalism and Women's Rights 18. Climate Refugees, Forced Migrants, and the Syrian Crisis Part V: The Way Forward 19. The Resilience of Rights in a Post-Liberal World Selected Bibliography Index